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23884 results for: ‘Department of The History of Art and Film’

  • Nielsen social media report 2012

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on December 18, 2012 Nielsen social media report 2012  , subtitled social media comes of age, focuses mainly on the USA & has good graphics showing total time spent and the most...

  • Do hate speech detectors discriminate against African Americans?

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on August 23, 2019 Shocking article on arXiv.org  from the at the Annual Meeting for the Association for Computational Linguistics 2019.

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  • Star Flaws the Skywalker twins drift apart

    In the original Star Wars trilogy, one of the big revelations is that main characters Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia are actually twins separated at birth.

  • Sisterhood and After

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on March 15, 2013 http://www.bl.uk/learning/histcitizen/sisterhood/about.html A website from the British Library developed in association with Sussex University and the Women’s library.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 35

    Academic Librarian.

  • Keep Calm and Scroll On! (Pt.4)

    Posted by Sarah Wood in Library Special Collections on May 7, 2020   One thing I’ve observed during the lockdown is how eerily quiet it is in the evenings!   With a reduction in the number of cars on the road, planes in the air, and trains on the tracks many people...

  • Sir David Attenborough returns to Leicester to officially open new fully-inclusive arts gallery

    The naturalist and long-running television personality Sir David Attenborough will be returning to the place of his Leicester childhood to open a new fully-inclusive gallery championed by his brother Lord Attenborough.

  • World Press Freedom Day…

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on May 10, 2013 … was celebrated on the 3rd May The official website has details of this year’s events, messages and full text UN documents associated with freedom of speech.

  • The forgotten success of penal transportation reform in late Imperial Russia: the lowering of prison

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on June 8, 2016 By Mikhail Nakonechny . The late Imperial Russian prison and exile system is almost unequivocally considered to be the traditional embodiment of brutality, institutional inhumanity and injustice.

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