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Mashup Score: 1
Open data practices are largely conceived and managed in ways that support quantitative, rather than qualitative data. Susie Weller outlines how an ethics of care is essential to making open qualit…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 2Slavery and Britain’s industrial revolution - 6 month(s) ago
To what extent did the wealth derived from slavery contribute to Europe’s economic growth? Stephan Heblich, Stephen Redding and Hans-Joachim Voth find that slaveholding areas of Britain were less a…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 9How Private Finance is crippling health and social care - 7 month(s) ago
Private Finance Initiatives have resulted in NHS Trusts in England being locked into financial constraints for which they bear the full risk. New research reveals the full scale of the financial bu…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 4Could Bluesky be the replacement for Academic Twitter? - 7 month(s) ago
Elon Musk’s unanticipated acquisition of Twitter (X), and the rapid alterations he has instituted have led many academics to look for alternative social media platforms. Mark Carrigan, propos…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, General Journals & SocietTweet
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Mashup Score: 0How to make Theories of Change deliver societal impact - 7 month(s) ago
Theories of Change have become a popular mechanism for research funders to build impact into the design phase of research projects. Laurens Hessels, Fedes van Rijn, Stefan de Jong, Wendy Reijmerink…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, General Journals & SocietTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Four challenges for funding research with societal goals - 7 month(s) ago
Drawing on a recent study of systemic challenges to delivering research funding for societal change and evidence from a recent meeting of research funders, Andreas Kjær Stage, Carter Walter Bloch, …
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Double-anonymous review is an effective way of combating status bias in scholarly publishing - 7 month(s) ago
Discussions around improving peer review often focus on openness as a mechanism to reduce bias. Drawing on a recent study of double and single anonymisation at the British Ecological Society, Charl…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Preparing for the coming wave of generative AI in journalism - 8 month(s) ago
The release of popular generative AI technology to the public last year has created a range of responses, particularly in fields dependent on creativity and information processing. In this Q&A …
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Is sustainability research the victim or saviour of a broken academic publishing system? - 8 month(s) ago
Considering how sustainability research fits into the landscape of academic publishing and responding to a critique that half of sustainability research adds little to the field, Thomas Bauwens, De…
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 4
Knowledge Brokering Organisations (KBOs) play an important role in the interface between research and policy. Drawing on a study of comparable international organisations, Eleanor MacKillop, James …
Source: blogs.lse.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet
How can open data sharing policies be more attentive to qualitative researchers? https://t.co/KWS4ydw0pM via @DrSusieWeller1