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Introduction
For nearly two decades, Jason has worked at the forefront of digital technologies, developing strategies and projects that apply emerging technologies and practices to improve the assembly and delivery of scholarly research and resources. With nearly two decades’ experience in arts humanities research and public-facing digital engagement, Jason has built a reputation for co-creating, supporting and fostering the innovative use of technology within higher education as both a method of inquiry and a means of dissemination. Jason currently works at the Library, Western Sydney University, as Manager, Engagement Strategy and Scholarly Communications. Jason does research in Computing in Social science, Arts and Humanities, Research Impact, Global Book History and Studies in Human Society.
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Publications
Publications (13)
Migrants all over the world have left multiple traces in different countries, and this cultural heritage is of growing interest to researchers and to the migrant communities themselves. Cultural heritage institutions, however, have dwindling funds and resources to meet the demand for the heritage of immigrant communities to be protected. In this ar...
This article discusses the potential of ‘historical bibliometric’ methodologies for understanding past cultures and offers a vision for how historical bibliometric research might be conducted on a comparative and global scale. Drawing on conceptual work being undertaken at the Western Sydney University in order to further develop and extend the wid...
Supervision of doctoral students needs to be improved to increase completion rates, reduce attrition rates (estimated to be at 25% or more) and improve quality of research. The current literature review aimed to explore the contribution that technology can make to higher degree research supervision. The articles selected included empirical studies...
This short paper is part of two interlinked short papers which discuss the archival, custodial and digital challenges that impact the discovery, collection, preservation and content management of material and immaterial traces from the past that the Netherlands shares with Australia. (The other short paper is " Developing a Sustainable Model in Mut...
Angus and Robertson and the British Trade in Australian Books, 1930-1970' traces the history of the printed book in Australia, particularly the production and business context that mediated Australia's literary and cultural ties to Britain for much of the twentieth century. This study focuses on the London operations of one of Australia's premier b...
Foundations and genre The origins of the novel and the settlement of Australia may both be located within the historical convergence of European industrialisation, colonisation and the Enlightenment in the 18th and early 19th centuries. It is uncertain what novels might first have been carried on board the tall ships with their human cargoes of con...
Apocacidal Tendencies: Three Excerpts from the Heaven's Gate Website 1995 (A term which blends apocalypse with suicide, apocacides could be best described as those groups or individuals who understand salvation from an imagined approaching armageddon to involve, indeed depend upon, the voluntary sacrifice of one's own life on earth.) 1. '95 Stateme...
Creators do not just 'create' or 'act' -- they are privileged agents, points of origin, sources of innovation and transformation. Within religious systems, creators can exist in an extra-discursive real beyond nature and culture, functioning as the origin of the word and being. They can be supernatural, existing outside nature to influence earthly...