Where Do We Fit? Reflections on Research Interview Practice, Project Design, and Interpretation**
What is special about historical research interviews in the history of science, technology, and medicine, and how do they compare to the tools of oral historians and social scientists? This essay reflects on three interview projects I have undertaken, each taking a distinct shape.
Dmitriy Myelnikov
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Weaving Regenerative Value Through Nature-Inclusive Stakeholder Engagement: Insights From Indigenous Businesses in the Sierra Nevada. [PDF]
Oberholzer S.
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Controlling the Field: Memory, Labor, and Ethics in Oral Histories of Brazilian Human Genetics
This article examines how oral histories of twentieth‐century human genetics in Brazil reveal the politics of memory of fieldwork. Through a comparative analysis of interviews with prominent geneticist Francisco M. Salzano and technician Girley V. Simões, who worked with him for most of his career, this study explores the narrative strategies each ...
Rosanna Dent +1 more
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Developmental trajectories of outpatient mental health service contact from childhood to early adulthood in an Australian birth cohort. [PDF]
Ogilvie JM +9 more
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The impacts of biological invasions
ABSTRACT The Anthropocene is characterised by a continuous human‐mediated reshuffling of the distributions of species globally. Both intentional and unintentional introductions have resulted in numerous species being translocated beyond their native ranges, often leading to their establishment and subsequent spread – a process referred to as biological
Phillip J. Haubrock +42 more
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Correction: Proposed highway in the Peruvian Amazon threatens vulnerable indigenous communities and natural protected areas. [PDF]
Griffiths BM +6 more
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Subterranean environments contribute to three‐quarters of classified ecosystem services
ABSTRACT Beneath the Earth's surface lies a network of interconnected caves, voids, and systems of fissures forming in rocks of sedimentary, igneous, or metamorphic origin. Although largely inaccessible to humans, this hidden realm supports and regulates services critical to ecological health and human well‐being.
Stefano Mammola +30 more
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<i>'We are experts in telling our story'</i>: the perspectives of stakeholders from Aboriginal Community-Controlled Health Services on the health and wellbeing of urban First Nations Australians, and their priorities for a First Nations urban health research agenda in Australia. [PDF]
Clifford-Motopi A +4 more
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Extent, characteristics and policy applications of Key Biodiversity Areas
ABSTRACT A global standard for the identification of Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) was published 10 years ago to provide a unified set of criteria for identifying ‘sites of significance for the global persistence of biodiversity’. We review the initiative's origins, the KBA identification process, characteristics of the current network, threats, policy
Stuart H. M. Butchart +57 more
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