Each year, the National Council on Public History selects one book in the area of public history theory, study or practice as Best New Book of the Year. For 2021, it selected “Digital Community Engagement: Partnering Communities with the Academy,” published by University of Cincinnati Press and edited by three UC faculty researchers.
Digital projects empower communities through collaboration, create new primary sources, collapse barriers and spark new dialogue. The book examines nine examples of digital collaborations from constructing a public response to police violence to creating digital stories of homelessness.
During R+I Week, join the editors and one of their collaborators for a virtual discussion 7-8 p.m. Tuesday about community engagement with academia, ethical engagement with digital research and technology and the future of open-access publishing.
The conversation is presented by UC Press, the Office of Research and The Mercantile Library and will be moderated by Crystal Moten, curator at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Questions can be submitted ahead of the event to research@uc.edu.