Scholars are adopting digital tools and platforms to engage and share their expertise with a broader audience. This session will highlight how scholars have conceptualized, designed, and implemented digital publicly engaged scholarly projects, such as websites, podcasts, and digital archives, through an equity and anti-racism lens. Panelists will share how they have collaborated with campus and community partners to create sustainable and impactful digital projects.
Assistant Professor of Digital Humanities in the Department of Rhetoric & Communication Studies at the University of Richmond
PhD Candidate in History and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan
PhD Candidate in English and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan
Researcher at Cia Siab, Inc.
Researcher at Cia Siab, Inc.
The pandemic has been a catalyst for scholars to re-envision their work and social impact in a digital world. To support current and future public scholars, this online series will provide strategies for how to engage different publics in creating, disseminating, and applying scholarship for social change, and leveraging digital platforms and tools such as digital archives, podcasts, and social media.
Join us and engage with a multi-generational and multi-disciplinary scholarly community committed to advancing and disseminating scholarship to inform and influence social issues.
This series is sponsored by the National Center for Institutional Diversity, the Rackham Program on Public Scholarship, and the Office of the Vice President for Research at the University of Michigan. Additional co-sponsors noted for each session.