Michiel Bron, PhD candidate at the Managing Scarcity project, just published a fascinating Mosa Historia blog on the long entangled history of the oil industry and nuclear energy. For more info on the project: https://t.co/HjP3IHGUW5
New blog! @MonikaBarget reflects on how to work with complex historical datasets and introduces a low-maintenance alternative. She draws from experiences gained at the DigiKAR geohumanities project, on spatial relations in early modern Mainz and Saxony. https://t.co/kmEtgb2B8G
For this blog, Brigitte Le Normand draws from her research for the book Citizens Without Borders: Yugoslavia and Its Migrant Workers in Western Europe. https://t.co/G9CyBYQ3BU
How can you tell the difference between a refugee and an economic migrant? Are migrants most loyal to their places of origin or their host states? In the latest Mosa Historia blog, @blenormand explains why we are asking the wrong questions. https://t.co/2uQ7ph1Bge
In her latest @FasosMaastricht History Department blog, @lea_bei explains how microscope slide makers started to share and preserve their slides during the mid-nineteenth century, an important practice that shaped how scientists understood their world. https://t.co/5rfcpL6yYq
In the latest blog,@GeorgianaKotsou discusses the role of tourism in international scientific conferences as an community building mechanism. What can a lavish chemical congress from the 50s tell us about the contemporary needs of scientific gatherings? https://t.co/ZlBHIkpuFM
In his latest blog, @FasosMaastricht Camilo Erlichman discusses why historians seem to be reluctant to engage in collaborate forms of writing, although it nowadays seems to happen more often. https://t.co/B0wrRYPMtE
Last week our blog received the second prize for the annual @FasosMaastricht faculty valorization award! A great encouragement to further develop the blog next academic year. https://t.co/2FdQtYBJMz
Three of our @FasosMaastricht colleagues @FerencLaczo @Blatuyas and Camilo Erlichman discuss the state of Contemporary European History in their latest blog for @DebateEuropean Join the discussion!
EuropeDebate starts the new week with a fascinating contribution by Ferenc Laczó, Camilo Erlichman and Pablo del Hierro on the renewal of Euroean history as a field of research #twitterstorians @CESCritEuro @PHE_Munich @FerencLaczo @Blatuyas https://t.co/Xk63BrV3Rk
Very nice to see that the latest Mosa Historia blog by @monica_vasile on the Przewalski's horse and counting extinctions has been featured in the @NiCHE_Canada January 2021 reading list. A lot of interesting #EnvHist material to check out this month!
In the latest Mosa Historia blog @FasosMaastricht, @monica_vasile discusses the difficulties concerning documenting extinction. Even for species living in wide-open spaces, such as the Przewalski's horse in the Mongolian steppes, sightings were shrouded in controversy.
reminder that @FasosMaastricht History Dept @MosaHistoria is looking for a tenure-track assistant professor w/ background in digital historical research methods (preferably also background in heritage-museums-public history) 1/x
https://t.co/2PMXS7Dqcz
In a recent blog for @recetvienna @FerencLaczo discusses his edited volume on the legacy of 1989 and the East-West divide. The divide remains asymmetric, and the short-term period of optimism during the 1990's requires further contextualisation. https://t.co/dku5lMMF1e
In March 2020, Mark Rutte referred to 'hamsteren' as problematic hoarding in preparation of a lockdown. @rafdebont1 discusses in Mosa Historia the history of human interaction with hamsters, and how it became regarded as both cute and a problematic pest. https://t.co/XKOfzSY6TC
time for a reflexive ethnographic look at how funding, social media & systems of evaluation contribute (or don't, hopefully!) to the inflation of @_Nano_Bubbles
In the latest Mosa Historia blog @moneschleper @FasosMaastricht explains how Caribous can help us understand the long entangled history of wildlife conservation research and oil development in Alaska. https://t.co/eWH8JTpjea
one last try: we're looking to a PhD to work on the history of the Domaniale coal mine in the Dutch-German border region. the project could also go into the post-coal economy of the region and the #envhist surrounding the mine both before and after it closed
This week’s @vpro magazine presented a background article to Christian Ernsten’s ‘Voorland Groningen: Wandelingen door het antropoceen’ project. The first episode of the radio documentary will be aired on Radio Doc, @NPORadio1 on 21 June. https://t.co/rVv76q6OZe
The website of the @FasosMaastricht
Moving Animals project is now online! Keep updated on their research on the history of Animal movement, also via the twitter account @AnimalsMoving.