„Kollaborativ FAIRe und offene Daten produzieren. Ein Hands-On Workshop mit Geovistory.”

Workshop by Dr. Joëlle Weis and David Knecht

Historische Kommission für Sachsen-Anhalt

Date:

20.09.2024

Place:

Conference "Digital History & Citizen Science"
Steintor Campus
Emil-Abderhalden-Str. 26/27
06108 Halle (Saale), Germany
E-Mail: digitalhistory [at] geschichte.uni-halle.de (digitalhistory[at]geschichte[dot]uni-halle[dot]de)

Categories:

Workshop

Contact:

Dr. Joëlle Weis
Conference: Digital History & Citizen Science / Celebration of 35 Years of CompGen, September 19–22, 2024, at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

As part of the conference Digital History & Citizen Science, Dr. Joëlle Weis and David Knecht will conduct a workshop titled „Kollaborativ FAIRe und offene Daten produzieren. Ein Hands-On Workshop mit Geovistory.”

The workshop is structured as a tutorial within the Geovistory research environment, with two main goals: 1) To familiarize participants with the principles of FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) data and the management of open research data, 2) To provide participants with insights into a FAIR data production workflow, using various modules of the Geovistory environment from data generation to publication, analysis, and reuse.

Digital History & Citizen Science.
Digitale Methoden und neue Erkenntnisse zwischen digitaler Quellenerschließung, Forschung und Bürgerwissenschaften

The conference is organized by the Historischen Datenzentrum Sachsen-Anhalt for the AG Digitale Geschichtswissenschaften des Verbandes der Historiker und Historikerinnen Deutschlands. In addition to the Historical Commission for Saxony-Anhalt, the event is supported by the Association for Computer Genealogy (CompGen), ICARUS, NFDI4Memory, the Saxony-Anhalt State Heritage Association, and the Institute for Regional History of Saxony-Anhalt.

The conference offers a rich program of scholarly presentations and discussion forums addressing various topics at the intersection of digital history and regional history, with a particular focus on the convergence of citizen science and public history. Issues of shared access to sources and methodological approaches are discussed alongside challenges in digital exploration, analysis, and the long-term archiving of citizen science collections and data. The event brings together many partners from the digital community, providing ample opportunities for networking and exchange. This environment is ideal for generating new ideas and joint projects.