Research Data Management for the Arts, Humanities, and Legal studies
Are you a researcher in Humanities, Arts or Legal studies, and think "research data" only applies to subjects like medicine, "hard sciences", and technology? This is the webinar for you!
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Main content
The term "research data" is burdened with heavy connotations to empirical approaches to science: Spreadsheets, numbers, and calculations are generated by standardised software, and easily distributed and shared across different file formats (.xls, .txt, .wtf.) But, what about researchers whose primary analytical focus lies elsewhere?
This webinar discusses how research data can be - to import a phrase from the ALLEA report on data sharing in the Humanities - perceived as "all materials and assets scholars collect, generate and use during all stages of the research cycle." By expanding our notion of how different materials and assets can be envisioned as research data, we can adopt research data management strategies that are beneficial for researchers in Arts, Humanities, and Legal studies.