The influence of expert witnesses in the courtroom does not only depend on the available scientific knowledge or technology, international, comparative research shows.
Kiene Brillenburg Wurth, Iris van der Tuin, and Nanna Verhoeff have edited a special section in the minnesota review on Mobilizing Creativity: A Humanities Perspective (part 1 of 2).
Climate change means that we have to deal with history in new ways, Professor Thijs Weststeijn argues in his new book The Future of the Past: Heritage and Climate.
Ozan Ozavci and Jonathan Conlin (University of Southampton) have recently published their new book about Treaty of Lausanne and the post-Ottoman world.
The Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies just published the dossier Affective Arrangements and Violence in Latin America, edited by Reindert Dhondt and others.
By Marijke de Valck and others, ‘Rethinking Film Festivals in the Pandemic Era and After’ was recently published. 25 international authors contributed.
The book, edited by Professor of Musicology Emile Wennekes and others, presents developments in speech and music technology in the domain of audio signal processing.
Edited by Sandra Ponzanesi and others, this volume explores how migrants, refugees, and citizens express and share their causes and experiences through art and media.
Edited by Rick Dolphijn and Rosi Braidotti, a series of contributions places the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari in the context of contemporary fascism.
The new book Wealth & Power by Professor of Political Philosophy and Economic Ethics Rutger Claassen, among others, explores the link between wealth and politics.
This publication, written by Iva Vukušić, is the first to offer a comprehensive analysis of Serbian paramilitary units during the violent breakup of Yugoslavia.