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Notes
table of contents
Contributors
- Anne Beaulieu holds the Aletta Jacobs Chair of Knowledge Infrastructures at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, and is the author of Revealing Relations: Knowledge Infrastructures for Liveable Futures (2026).
- Kyle Booten is assistant professor in the Department of English at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.
- Ann Borda is ethics fellow at the Alan Turing Institute, London, associate professor in the Melbourne School of Population and Global Health at the University of Melbourne, and honorary senior research associate in the Department of Information Studies, University College London.
- Susan Brown is Canada Research Chair in Collaborative Digital Scholarship and professor of English at the University of Guelph. She codirects the Orlando Project and directs the Canadian Writing Research Collaboratory and the Linked Infrastructure for Networked Cultural Scholarship.
- Toby Burrows is senior honorary research fellow at the University of Western Australia. His recent projects include DigiSpec: Scoping Future Born-Digital Data Services for the Arts and Humanities and Mobilising Dutch East India Company Collections for New Global Stories.
- Ashley Caranto Morford is assistant professor of multiethnic American literature in the Department of English at Weber State University.
- Javier Cha is assistant professor of digital humanities in the Department of History at the University of Hong Kong. He specializes in the integration of graph database technology in historical scholarship and engages in experimental projects that address the challenges posed by big data and artificial intelligence in the humanities.
- Jing Chen is associate professor in the School of Art, Nanjing University.
- Arianna Ciula is director and research software senior analyst at King’s Digital Lab, King’s College London. She collaborates in many digital humanities projects and is a coauthor of Modelling Between Digital and Humanities: Thinking in Practice.
- Maya Dodd is associate professor in the Department of Humanities at FLAME University, Pune, India. She is founding member of DHARTI, India, and director of the Milli Archives Foundation.
- Martin Paul Eve is professor of literature, technology, and publishing at Birkbeck, University of London.
- Allan Gomez is the systems administrator for Philly Community Wireless. In his past life, Allan built low-power FM radio stations throughout Latin America and the United States.
- Matthew N. Hannah is associate professor of digital humanities in the School of Information Studies at Purdue University.
- Matthew Hockenberry is assistant professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University. His work focuses on the intersection of media, logistics, and global supply chains, past and present.
- Arun Jacob is doctoral candidate at the Faculty of Information, University of Toronto.
- Mike Jones is postdoctoral fellow of Indigenous and colonial histories at the University of Tasmania. He is the author of Artefacts, Archives, and Documentation in the Relational Museum.
- Lucie Kolb is professor of critical publishing and head of the MAKE/SENSE PhD program at the Basel Academy of Art and Design FHNW.
- Alan Liu is Distinguished Professor in the English Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Since he started the Voice of the Shuttle website in 1994 (https://liu.english.ucsb.edu/voice-of-the-shuttle-vos/), his books, essays, and projects have focused on the digital humanities and public humanities. His most recent book is Friending the Past: The Sense of History in the Digital Age, and recent projects are 4Humanities.org, WhatEvery1Says, and the Center for Humanities Communication.
- Ian M. Miller is associate professor in history at St. John’s University, New York. His research interests are in the long-term interplay between changing ideas, changing institutions, and changing environments, especially in southern and central China, and in the use of digital texts and tools to explore new methods for writing history.
- Sylvia K. Miller is director of scholarly publishing and research development at Duke University’s John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute. She is the former director of the Mellon-funded Publishing the Long Civil Rights Movement project at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and she managed two international collaborative Mellon grants involving nineteen universities on five continents for the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes. During twenty years in scholarly reference publishing in New York, she was executive editor at Scribner and publishing director at Routledge.
- Sarah Montoya earned a PhD in gender studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is a Mellon Humanities Postdoctoral Fellow for the National Park Service.
- Saumyaa Naidu is an independent researcher working on research that critically examines the role of design in digital technology, specifically in areas such as privacy, accessibility, and digital identities. Her areas of interest include design studies and digital cultures.
- Sharika Parmar is doctoral candidate in the Department of Humanities at FLAME University, Pune, India. Her research areas include modern South Asia, digital humanities, memory studies, and migration studies.
- Kush Patel is associate professor of Contemporary Art Practice Master of Arts program at Srishti Manipal Institute of Art, Design, and Technology, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Bengaluru, where they also lead and steward a digital humanities research and pedagogy space called the Just Futures Co-lab.
- Urszula Pawlicka-Deger is research manager in the Discovery Research program at Wellcome Trust. A former Marie Curie Fellow at King’s College London, she is coauthor of Digital Humanities and Laboratories: Perspectives on Knowledge, Infrastructure and Culture.
- Miriam Posner is assistant professor in the Department of Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.
- James Smithies is professor of digital humanities and director of the HASS Digital Research Hub at Australian National University, and author of The Digital Humanities and the Digital Modern (2017). He was previously professor of digital humanities and founding director of King’s Digital Lab at King’s College London. He has also worked at the University of Canterbury in Aotearoa/New Zealand, and in the government and commercial IT sectors in Aotearoa/New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
- Puthiya Purayil Sneha is research manager with the Open Knowledge Initiatives team at the International Institute of Information Technology, Hyderabad. Her areas of work and interest include digital media and cultures, open knowledge, arts and humanities scholarship and pedagogy, gender, and digital rights.
- Paul Spence is reader in digital humanities in the Department of Digital Humanities at King’s College London. He is coeditor of Multilingual Digital Humanities and section coeditor for the digital modern languages section on Modern Languages Open.
- Lik Hang Tsui is associate professor in the Department of Chinese and History of the City University of Hong Kong.
- Deb Verhoeven is professor and Canada 150 Research Chair in Gender and Cultural Informatics at the University of Alberta and founding director of the Humanities Networked Infrastructure (HuNI) Project.
- Miguel Vieira is principal research software engineer at King’s Digital Lab, King’s College London.
- Devren Washington is cofounder of Philly Community Wireless and senior policy organizer of the Movement Alliance Project, Philadelphia.
- Alex Wermer-Colan is cofounder, long-term volunteer, and executive director of Philly Community Wireless. He also works as the academic and research director of the Loretta C. Duckworth Scholars Studio at Temple University Libraries, and serves as the managing editor of the Programming Historian in English.
- Darren Wershler is professor at Concordia University, founder and director of the Residual Media Depot, and associate director of the Milieux Institute. His most recent book, with Jussi Parikka and Lori Emerson, is The Lab Book: Situated Practices in Media Studies (Minnesota, 2021).
- Grant Wythoff directs the graduate program of the Center for Digital Humanities at Princeton University. His most recent book is A User’s Guide to the Age of Tech (Minnesota, 2025). A cofounder of Philly Community Wireless, he now serves on its board of directors.