This presentation will discuss the WARLUX project, a crowdsourcing campaign aimed at collecting and preserving personal war letters and documents from Luxembourg during WWII. The presentation will cover the goals of the project, the participatory aspect of working with volunteers and participants, as well as the post-processing and implementation of the collected data. The presentation will also highlight the challenges and ethical considerations. Additionally, the benefits of the project for both researchers and participants will be explored, including obtaining unique information and recognition for personal stories
Crowdsourcing in cultural heritage is rich in opportunities for collaborative, interdisciplinary res...
Impressions of building a community around people working on the digitization of historical ‘egodocu...
https://www.libcrowds.com/collection/playbills/projects Funktioniert ohne Anmeldung. #crowdsourcin
In February 2021, a team at the Centre for Contemporary and Digital History at the University of Lux...
In February 2021, a call for contributions was launched through the media (newspapers and radio) to ...
Author: Nina Janz, lecturer and postdoctoral researcher at the Luxembourg Centre for Digital and Con...
Data collections are essential for historical research. In addition to official archives and state i...
Letters as a study of the history of personal stories/fates. The Warlux project aims to collect the ...
Call for Contributions WARLUX - Tell us your story As part of the project “WARLUX - Soldiers and t...
The increasing interest in the centenary of the Great War 1914–1918 motivates the development of a d...
This paper outlines the journey that has been taken in developing the “Gathering the Voices Project”...
Project WARLUX - Soldiers and their communities in WWII: The impact and legacy of war experiences in...
In recent years, the growth of web-based social participation and the open source movement have prom...
In recent years, crowdsourcing has started to play an important role in community-driven knowledge p...
The digital exhibition Éischte Weltkrich: Remembering the Great War in Luxembourg is a project devel...
Crowdsourcing in cultural heritage is rich in opportunities for collaborative, interdisciplinary res...
Impressions of building a community around people working on the digitization of historical ‘egodocu...
https://www.libcrowds.com/collection/playbills/projects Funktioniert ohne Anmeldung. #crowdsourcin
In February 2021, a team at the Centre for Contemporary and Digital History at the University of Lux...
In February 2021, a call for contributions was launched through the media (newspapers and radio) to ...
Author: Nina Janz, lecturer and postdoctoral researcher at the Luxembourg Centre for Digital and Con...
Data collections are essential for historical research. In addition to official archives and state i...
Letters as a study of the history of personal stories/fates. The Warlux project aims to collect the ...
Call for Contributions WARLUX - Tell us your story As part of the project “WARLUX - Soldiers and t...
The increasing interest in the centenary of the Great War 1914–1918 motivates the development of a d...
This paper outlines the journey that has been taken in developing the “Gathering the Voices Project”...
Project WARLUX - Soldiers and their communities in WWII: The impact and legacy of war experiences in...
In recent years, the growth of web-based social participation and the open source movement have prom...
In recent years, crowdsourcing has started to play an important role in community-driven knowledge p...
The digital exhibition Éischte Weltkrich: Remembering the Great War in Luxembourg is a project devel...
Crowdsourcing in cultural heritage is rich in opportunities for collaborative, interdisciplinary res...
Impressions of building a community around people working on the digitization of historical ‘egodocu...
https://www.libcrowds.com/collection/playbills/projects Funktioniert ohne Anmeldung. #crowdsourcin