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Found 1000 results from blogs.ed.ac.uk.
Moveable Transactions (Scotland) Bill – Edinburgh Private Law Blog
Any views expressed within media held on this service are those of the contributors, should not be taken as approved or endorsed by the University, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University in respect of any particular issue. Press
Malware: proposal for a social history – Dark matters
Aycock, John. 2006. Computer Viruses and Malware. Springer. Inglis, David . 2014.
#gurumedia – film, image, art, sound, and beyond
Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Graeber, David . 2018.
Grace Lavery at the University of Edinburgh – Staff Pride Network
She’s the enfant terrible of Trans academia, described in her book as “the David Bowie of Californian English professors.” Grace Lavery is at the University of Edinburgh to promote her
Conferences and Public Events — Edinburgh, Guwahati, Kolkata – The British Empire, Scotland, and Indian Famines: Writings on Food Crisis in Colonial India
As a writer she is represented by David Godwin Associates. 9/ Dr Anuparna Mukherjee: “The Famished City: Displacement and the Trails of Hunger in Calcutta of the 1940s”.
Organising Committee – PGCon: Edinburgh Postgraduate Conference
Dr Dave Laurenson (Co-chair) The University of Edinburgh. David (Dave) I. Laurenson is a Reader with the School of Engineering at The University of Edinburgh.
Farewell, Goodnight – Edinburgh Race Equality Network
David Creighton-Offord. Former Co-Convenor, Edinburgh Race Equality Network. (Pixabay CC0). (Pixabay CC0). ... Posted by David Creighton-Offord.
Drug markets and pre-made futures – Dark matters
Nutt, David , Trevor W. Robbins, and Gerry Stimson. 2007. ‘Chapter 1 – Drugs Futures 2025’.
Topic 1 ONL221 – Online participation and digital literacies | Visitors & Residents
2: 12–15. White, David S., and Alison Le Cornu (2011) “Visitors and Residents: A New Typology for Online Engagement”.
Cairness House – MANAGING IMPERIAL LEGACIES
For David Walker and Colin McWilliam, Cairness ‘reveals the elder Playfair as perhaps the most advanced British architect of his generation’ his designs anticipating upcoming developments in British architecture spearheaded by
