![]() ![]() 2023: “History Unbound: From Book Discipline to Digital Discipline,” Digital History & Theory: An Open Conversation on the Future of Digital Scholarship (Brown University), March 2-3, 2023Ģ022: “Models for Argument-Driven Digital History,” What Makes History Digital? (Wesleyan University Virtual Roundtable), May 6 Ģ022: “Deep Mapping and the Law,” Association of American Law Schools Annual Meeting, January 6 Ģ021: “Going to Harlem with Shane White,” Australian and New Zealand American Studies Conference, November 25 Ģ021: “Disorder in the Courts: Using Data, Visualizations, and Hypertext to Create a Legal History of the 1935 Harlem ‘Riot’,” Digital Methods and Resources in Legal History, Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, Frankfurt, March 3 Ģ019: “Law & (Dis)Order in the 1935 Harlem Riot,” Center for Law, Society, and Culture, Indiana University Maurer School of Law, February 28Ģ018: “Promoting a Public Face for Scholarly Journals,” (with Seth Denbo), Coalition for Networked Information Membership Meeting, Washington, DC, December 11Ģ018: “Promoting a Public Face for Scholarly Journals,” (with Lisa Brady, Liz Covart, Seth Denbo, Robert Greene II, and Catherine Halley), Triangle Scholarly Communication Institute, Chapel Hill, October 7-11Ģ018: “Public Humanities,” DARIAH Beyond Europe workshop, Library of Congress, October 3.Ģ018: “ Digital Humanities,” presented at the Law and Humanities Conference, Stanford Law School, May 18Ģ018: “ Adding a Digital Dimension to your Research,” Conference for High-Impact Research, American University, May 14.Ģ018: “ A Conversation about Digital Humanities,” Case Western University, April 25.Ģ018: “ Reimagining Black Urban Space in the 1920s and 1930s: Mapping Places, Events, and Networks with Digital Harlem,” keynote speaker, James A.
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