Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke
Trusts in Latin America and the circulation of legal ideas: Part Two
Part Two: The Chilean fideicomiso and trusts in Latin America By León Carmona Fontaine, Assistant Professor of Private Law at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. In a previous entry published on this blog, I showed that there are compelling reasons to think that the fideicomiso provided for in the Chilean Civil Code of 1855 […]
🦋 KIPP Final Project Proposal - Final Version ver.1 - (Completed on 24 Aug, hasn't revised by Dr Hackl)
Competitive Algorithms, Cooperative Alternatives: Rethinking Evolutionary Logics in AI through Symbiogenesis and Human–Machine Collaboration Abstract This project interrogates how evolutionary algorithms (EA) embed Darwinian logics of competition into knowledge production and labour, and proposes cooperative alternatives inspired by symbiogenesis and human–machine co-flourishing. Focusing on NASA’s SPIKE telescope scheduling system and human data annotation, the […]
Publications
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/roythompson/home/publications/
Published articles 2026 174. Thompson, Roy Oil Story, The Scotsman Newspaper, p20, 17 Feb 2026. 2025 173. Thompson, Roy with Dearing and Willcock, Gradual v sudden collapse: what magnets teach us about climate tipping points. In The Conversation, July 30, 2025. Article 172. Thompson, Roy with Dearing, J. A., Tooke, K., & Willcock, S. (2025). […]
Dans l'air du Soir - Notes on Ambient Art
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/neilmulholland/2009/03/05/dans-lair-du-soir-notes-on-ambient-art/
“The world is full of objects, more or less interesting; I do not wish to add any more. I prefer, simply, to state the existence of things in terms of time and place.’’ Douglas Huebler (1970) The dematerialisation of art at the turn of the 1970s was connected to a zen-like desire to fast from […]
Dans l'air du Soir - Notes on Ambient Art
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/neil-mulholland-edx/dans-lair-du-soir-notes-on-ambient-art/
“The world is full of objects, more or less interesting; I do not wish to add any more. I prefer, simply, to state the existence of things in terms of time and place.’’ Douglas Huebler (1970) The dematerialisation of art at the turn of the 1970s was connected to a zen-like desire to fast from […]
Pandemics, COVID-19, and literary studies: past and present, by Nandini Sen
What made me write this essay: “For the past four years I have been writing a historical novel set in 1901 during what is known as the third plague pandemic, an outbreak of bubonic plague that killed millions of people in Asia but not very many in Europe. Over the last two months, friends and […]
Primary rights and liability in delict
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/private-law/2025/02/25/primary-rights-and-liability-in-delict/
By John MacLeod, Senior Lecturer in Private Law, University of Edinburgh Since the turn of the 21st century, Common Lawyers have discussed the basis of tortious liability extensively.[1] In particular, defences have been mounted against instrumentalism (i.e. considering law in terms of social policy). Much of the analysis turns on the idea that tort is […]
Improving website provision for taught postgraduate students user research playback (event summary)
We recently hosted an update event on the team’s research and design work over the summer and autumn of 2023 on the new programme page template for taught postgraduate programmes. This post summarises the event, with access to the event slides and recording for University of Edinburgh staff. Slides and recording Presentation slides (PowerPoint file […]
Learning Sprint #1 | Weird?
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/macat/?page_id=615
What is the Weird Sprint? ‘Weird?’ is a two-week learning sprint, in the 40 Credit Themes Course within the MA Contemporary Art Theory programme. This learning sprint is designed by Prof Neil Mulholland is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. The sprint incorporates elements of LARP workshops (See: Buckley 2020) […]
Copying Files, Flows, a Plan, SharePoint Lists and a Notebook from one Microsoft Team to another
A couple of weeks ago I discovered a University document called the New Learning Technologist Development Toolkit. And so I began a new project to follow it and develop my skills in Learning Technology. Obviously a project like this needed some way over the top organising… 😁 A while ago, I developed my own Microsoft […]
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