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blogging

Criminology
Captioned

Blogging and Social Media in Criminology

Sarah Turnbull and Ines Hasselberg, Centre for Criminology, give a talk for the Centre for Criminology seminar series on 5th June 2015.
Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

Concluding Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

Niki Seth-Smith and Stuart White launch the 'Democratic Wealth' e-book by openDemocracy and Politics in Spires
Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

How to blog effectively?

What do we know about audiences, readership and patterns of use of political analysis on-line?
Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

Why blog? (session one, part two)

Analysing the wider effects of blogging: what is at stake in contributing academic analysis on-line?
Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

Why blog? (session one, part one)

Exploring the phenomena of blogging – the motivations and the consequences – with UK academic blogs producers
Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

Introduction to Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age

Stuart White, Director of the Public Policy Unit, gives an introduction to Academic Blogging: Political Analysis in the Digital Age one day conference
Engage: Social Media Talks

Blogging and Twitter

Elizabeth Eva Leach, Tutorial Fellow in Music at Oxford, disseminates her research through her blog as well as using Twitter to encourage succinct scholarly exchange.
Engage: Social Media Talks

Copyright in the Digital Age

Emily Goodhand is the Copyright and Compliance Officer at the University of Reading. She has a strong Twitter presence as @copyrightgirl and is Vice-Chairman of the Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance (LACA).
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Rethinking impact with social media

Oxford-based researcher Nando Sigona started his blog "Postcards from..." in 2008. Since then his use of social media has expanded into Twitter and Podcasting to engage wider communities in his research on migration, asylum and minority issues.
Engage: Social Media Talks

Rethinking impact with social media

Oxford-based researcher Nando Sigona started his blog "Postcards from..." in 2008. Since then his use of social media has expanded into Twitter and Podcasting to engage wider communities in his research on migration, asylum and minority issues.
Engage: Social Media Talks

Is blogging and tweeting about research papers worth it?

Does using social media have an impact on disseminating your research papers? Dr Melissa Terras, UCL, gives her experiences and opinions on this question through her own personal findings.
Engage: Social Media Talks

Would you blog the truth?

Peter Gill discusses the power of the blog for knowledge exchange and communicating the truth behind health research findings to wider audiences.
Case Studies In Innovative Practice

23 Things: Oxford

Laura Wilkinson and Penny Schenk, librarians at the University of Oxford and members of the 23 Things Oxford Team, talk about their blog-based training programme to teach Web 2.0 skills to Oxford librarians.

Investigative Journalism in the Age of Digital Reproduction

Iain Overton, Manager Editor, Bureau of Investigative Journalism, gives a talk for the Reuters Institute on 11th May 2011.

From Weblogs to Twitter: How Did We Get Where We Are Today and What Are the Main Impacts To Date?

What are the most important milestones in the evolution of social media? What factors have shaped their successes and limitations?

The Growth of the Corporate Blog: 'Letting go' of Information Control or Maintaining the Official Line?

What do companies expect to gain from maintaining an online 'social media' presence? What are the implications of these trends for the development of traditional public relations strategies and business journalism?

Blogging at 20? The Future and Potential of Social Media

If social media are the defining advance of Web 2.0, whereby the network-as-platform enabled users not just to download content but to create it, tag it and share it ... what will the next decade hold? Will we continue to Tweet?
Entrepreneurship

Parties, Campaigns and Representation: The Political Impact of Blogs and Social Media

Panel discussion during the Oxford Social Media Convention 2009 on whether the outcome of political careers and even campaigns is increasingly dependent on the successful mastery of new communication tools including social media.
Entrepreneurship

Social Media, So What? Assessing the Impact of Blogs and Social Media

Panel discussion during the Oxford Social Media Convention 2009 on the socially egalitarian and politically democratic potential of social media. Have they lived up to the promises?
Entrepreneurship

Breaking News: The Changing Relationship Between Blogs and Mainstream Media

Panel discussion during the Oxford Social Media Convention 2008 on whether social media necessarily threaten traditional news media, and what, if anything they may have to offer in return.

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