As Twitter moves to become a private company owned by the billionaire Elon Musk, Mark Carrigan, reflects on the increasing importance academic social media and academic twitter has secured in universities for building academic communities and for public engagement and impact. Assessing what the acquisition might mean in terms of relations on the platform, he argues universities should more carefully consider how they engage with social media platforms to achieve these aims
It is relatively rare for social scientists as individuals to break through into the mainstream medi...
Earlier this year the UK government Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport published an ‘O...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...
fter close to a decade of using twitter as an academic, Mark Carrigan reflects on why he has decided...
Two years ago, Andy Tattersall highlighted those Twitter accounts that offered some light relief fro...
Peer support, finding a place within academia, staying up to date with the latest research, communic...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
As the value of research with impact increases, so too does the importance of first gaining access t...
Social movement organisations (SMOs) remain under-examined in the burgeoning accounts of collective ...
© 2017, © 2017 Society for Research into Higher Education. Findings from interviews with mid-career ...
It has become increasingly clear that prevailing academic incentive structures have a potentially da...
As academic conferences and events re-emerge after a period of COVID-19 induced absence, Mark Carrig...
For what reasons do academics follow one another on Twitter? Robert Jäschke, Stephanie B. Linek and ...
This article examines the ways in which popular culture stages and supplies resources for agency in ...
Drawing on their experience in producing a new open access textbook/handbook of UK politics, Patrick...
It is relatively rare for social scientists as individuals to break through into the mainstream medi...
Earlier this year the UK government Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport published an ‘O...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...
fter close to a decade of using twitter as an academic, Mark Carrigan reflects on why he has decided...
Two years ago, Andy Tattersall highlighted those Twitter accounts that offered some light relief fro...
Peer support, finding a place within academia, staying up to date with the latest research, communic...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
As the value of research with impact increases, so too does the importance of first gaining access t...
Social movement organisations (SMOs) remain under-examined in the burgeoning accounts of collective ...
© 2017, © 2017 Society for Research into Higher Education. Findings from interviews with mid-career ...
It has become increasingly clear that prevailing academic incentive structures have a potentially da...
As academic conferences and events re-emerge after a period of COVID-19 induced absence, Mark Carrig...
For what reasons do academics follow one another on Twitter? Robert Jäschke, Stephanie B. Linek and ...
This article examines the ways in which popular culture stages and supplies resources for agency in ...
Drawing on their experience in producing a new open access textbook/handbook of UK politics, Patrick...
It is relatively rare for social scientists as individuals to break through into the mainstream medi...
Earlier this year the UK government Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport published an ‘O...
AI is forecast to become increasingly central to many aspects of life and work. The same trends can ...