The Value of the AHSS

The first time I attended to an ADHO meeting (Hamburg 2012): discovering Humanities going digital beyond the fields.

— DARIAH VX Participant

World Pandemic Research Network
This platform maintains a searchable global directory of research projects, surveys and initiatives about the societal and human impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Why We Need More Than Just Scientists...
Opinion: we need to recognise that this crisis is as much about society and politics as it is about virology, immunology and economics
COVID-19 Crisis Blog
We hear from the TLRH research and policy fellows, and members of the AHSS research community in a new weekly blog which reflects on new societal challenges.
Mapping the Public Value of the Humanities
The aim of this multi-disciplinary collaboration is to widen the scope of our current understanding of the pathways of humanistic knowledge.
Interdisciplinarity in Times of Crisis...
Interdisciplinarity in Times of Crisis: Why the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences Matter
Shaping Interdisciplinary Practices in Europe
SHAPE-ID is an EU-funded project addressing the challenge of improving interdisciplinary cooperation between the AHSS and STEM and other disciplines.
Irish Humanities Alliance
Recent blogs and position papers on Covid-19 response
Integrating Social Sciences and Humanities in Interdisciplinary Research
By accounting for the diversity of interdisciplinary collaborations the article recommends a more context-sensitive approach to research funding, which acknowledges the heterogeneity and volatility of research across different knowledge environments.
Using Social and Behavioural Science to Support COVID-19 Pandemic Response
Because the crisis requires large-scale behaviour change and places significant psychological burdens on individuals, insights from the social and behavioural sciences can be used to help align human behaviour with the recommendations of epidemiologists and public health experts.
Sociology and the Social Sciences in the COVID-19 Crisis
It is clear that we cannot understand the shape and dynamics of this crisis without thinking beyond biomedical expertise.