I found the following definitions of research and scholarship to be quite interesting and possibly useful in my efforts to distinguish e-Research from digital scholarship. It seems to me that a lot of activities in the humanities, arts and social sciences that are described (and funded) as e-Research are actually digital scholarship since they involve setting up/maintaining/providing access to digital collections of research resources (e.g. social science datasets, images, video, audio), rather than contributing to new knowledge. Does anyone else agree with or object to the definitions of research/scholarship below, and my attempt to use them to distinguish e-Research from digital scholarship? Any relevant scholarly references would be much appreciated. Rob ------------------------------------- Dr Robert Ackland Fellow and Masters Coordinator, Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute, The Australian National University e-mail: robert.ackland@anu.edu.au project: http://voson.anu.edu.au teaching: http://adsri.anu.edu.au/study/ssi.php -------------------------------------- Marj Kibby wrote:
Our promotions criteria differentiate research and scholarship - research is seen as contributing new knowledge to the field, scholarship as staying abreast of developments in the field published by others.
Marj