Feeds
Ed Nagelhout
Ed Nagelhout is a Professor of Writing and Rhetoric at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, where he is the Assistant Chair and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the English Department. He has co-edited three collections, published more than thirty peer-reviewed articles or book chapters, along with two open-access electronic textbooks, and presented more than one hundred papers on a variety of topics in a variety of venues.
Katherine D. Harris
Katherine D. Harris (@triproftri on Twitter) is a Professor of Literature & Digital Humanities in the Departmentof English and Comparative Literature, San José State University, where she teaches about literature andtechnology ranging from the mechanization of the printing press in 19th-century England to current uses ofnarrative in gaming. In collaboration with co-editors with Matthew K.
Katharine Dunn
Katharine Dunn works in the scholarly communications & collections strategy department in the MIT Libraries, where she’s been a librarian since 2011. She manages MIT’s open access policies and supports researchers and students around OA, author rights, copyright, and federal funder policies.
Maureen Callahan
Maureen Callahan is the steward of the Sophia Smith Collection of Women's History at Smith College, a repository that documents the ways that people have changed the world on behalf of women and other gender minorities. In her role, she manages long-term donor relationships and collects records of current work in women's movements. Maureen had previously worked in archival technologies and technical services at Yale University, New York University, and Princeton University. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan and Bryn Mawr College.
Alexandra Dolan-Mescal
Alexandra Dolan-Mescal is an artist, archivist, and user experience designer whose work aims to increase social capacity for individual empathy and cultural understanding. As the user experience designer for Documenting the Now, she employs human-centered and participatory design models to develop tools that work for and with their communities. She also teaches archival theory at the City University of New York, which informs her ethical inquiries and methodologies for archiving social media within the Documenting the Now project.
UNT OA Symposium 2020: Call for Poster Presentations
We welcome proposals from students and early-career professionals to present a poster during UNT's 11th annual Open Access Symposium, which will be held on May 22, 2020, in conjunction with the 2020 Society of Southwest Archivists Annual Meeting. [more]
Call for Posters
We invite proposals from students and early-career professionals at UNT and other institutions to present posters on topics related to Open Access in higher education at the 11th annual UNT Open Access Symposium, to be held Friday, May 22, 2020 at the Embassy Suites in Denton. Posters may address OA in research, teaching, scholarly publishing, libraries, archives, or any of the disciplines.
Travel and Accommodations
Attendees of the UNT Open Access Symposium 2020 have access to the room block for the 2020 Society of Southwest Archivsts Annual Meeting. See further information on the SSA meeting website.