With large impacts on dissemination of research and significant benefits in terms of individual reputations, David McKenzie and Berk Özler conclude that blogging academic or research work results in positive spillover effects for academic bloggers and their institutions while also influencing attitudes and knowledge amongst readers
The purpose of this study was to discover if the blogging industry does have an effect on consumer b...
Blogs are now an established part of the chattersphere/public conversation, especially in internatio...
Health economist and editor of The Incidental Economist Austin Frakt takes five minutes to talk to L...
There is a proliferation of economics blogs, with increasing numbers of famous and not-so-famous eco...
In the second of a series of posts on the Impact of LSE Blogs project, Carlos Arrebola and Amy Molle...
Given the far-reaching attention of their paper on the nature of academic blogging, Inger Mewburn an...
Academic blogging can provide a forum to engage with new ideas and to critically analyse research, b...
We spoke to a real life ‘pracademic’ (n. someone working at the interface of research and practice) ...
Summarising a recent session on new trends in disseminating economics research, Diane Coyle looks at...
This thesis investigates how firms can measure and manage influence of IT-enabled communication medi...
Since launching in 2010, more than 2000 contributors have written for LSE’s public-facing academic b...
The number of scholarly blogs on the Web is increasing. In this article, a group of researchers are ...
Academic blogs are transient, ephemeral and present a problem for citation, but their faults are not...
Important emerging measures of academic impact are article download and citation rates. Yet little i...
Eager to find out what impact blogging and social media could have on the dissemination of her work,...
The purpose of this study was to discover if the blogging industry does have an effect on consumer b...
Blogs are now an established part of the chattersphere/public conversation, especially in internatio...
Health economist and editor of The Incidental Economist Austin Frakt takes five minutes to talk to L...
There is a proliferation of economics blogs, with increasing numbers of famous and not-so-famous eco...
In the second of a series of posts on the Impact of LSE Blogs project, Carlos Arrebola and Amy Molle...
Given the far-reaching attention of their paper on the nature of academic blogging, Inger Mewburn an...
Academic blogging can provide a forum to engage with new ideas and to critically analyse research, b...
We spoke to a real life ‘pracademic’ (n. someone working at the interface of research and practice) ...
Summarising a recent session on new trends in disseminating economics research, Diane Coyle looks at...
This thesis investigates how firms can measure and manage influence of IT-enabled communication medi...
Since launching in 2010, more than 2000 contributors have written for LSE’s public-facing academic b...
The number of scholarly blogs on the Web is increasing. In this article, a group of researchers are ...
Academic blogs are transient, ephemeral and present a problem for citation, but their faults are not...
Important emerging measures of academic impact are article download and citation rates. Yet little i...
Eager to find out what impact blogging and social media could have on the dissemination of her work,...
The purpose of this study was to discover if the blogging industry does have an effect on consumer b...
Blogs are now an established part of the chattersphere/public conversation, especially in internatio...
Health economist and editor of The Incidental Economist Austin Frakt takes five minutes to talk to L...