Jewish Studies
Stanford Libraries' Jewish Studies collection comprises materials written in Jewish languages (Hebrew, Yiddish, Judeo-Arabic, Ladino, etc.) in various formats on a wide variety of topics.
Stanford Libraries' Jewish Studies collection comprises materials written in Jewish languages (Hebrew, Yiddish, Judeo-Arabic, Ladino, etc.) in various formats on a wide variety of topics.
Computational research techniques such as text and data mining (TDM) hold tremendous opportunities for researchers across the disciplines, ranging from mining scientific articles to create better systematic reviews to building a corpus of films to understand how concepts of gender, race, and identity are shared over time.
Please join the David Rumsey Map Center and the Stanford ITALIC program for a series of short talks on the work of Beatrice Glow , a New York-based artist who is in residence at the Rumsey Center during the week of May 4-8.
Discover how Gallup’s U.
The National Film & Sound Archive of Australia seeks to move from current catalogue-centric approaches to a conversational approach that allows users searching through the archive to directly engage with the archive itself.
How can we critically examine, interpret, and repurpose colonial knowledge through creating structured data? Can colonial texts serve as meaningful data sources to explore the histories of understudied regions like the Arabian Peninsula and the Persian Gulf? How can historical sources be transformed into datasets, and what insights can such data offer? This symposium addresses these questions and marks the OpenGulf research collective’s completion and publication of a comprehensive dataset of geocoded place names derived from a seminal early-twentieth-century British colonial Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Arabian Peninsula, and Oman.
On April 20th, The David Rumsey Map Center at Stanford University will host a gathering of the MRM x David Rumsey Map Collection extended team, faculty, library specialists, developers and select invited guests to unveil the results of the MRM x David Rumsey Map Collection work, present technical details of the process and pipelines, and seek input on the future evolution of MRM from a project to a community-supported toolkit.
Date and Time: 11:00AM–12:00PM, Wednesday, May 27, 2026 (Rescheduled from April 22) Location: Zoom (link provided upon registration) Lead Instructor: Maricela Abarca (Data Curator for Interdisciplinary Sustainability) Federal funding agencies, for example the National Science Foundation (NSF) require Data Management and Sharing Plans (DMSPs) to be submitted with proposals.
Date and Time: 11:00AM–12:00PM, Wednesday, April 8, 2026 Location: Zoom (link provided upon registration) Lead Instructor: Maricela Abarca (Data Curator for Interdisciplinary Sustainability) Wherever you are in the research data lifecycle, this workshop will help you assess your data hygiene and adopt data management strategies that enhance the integrity of your data.
Gear Up for Social Science Data: Come meet Michael Levesque from the Stanford IRB office to learn more about research proposals that include human subjects (non-medical) and the process for when you might need the IRB to review your research plan.
Are you taking advantage of the resources available at Stanford Research Computing for your research? Want to know how to prevent important research data from being lost on an HPC system like SRC’s Sherlock cluster? Come learn about the important Dos and Don’ts on Stanford HPC systems at this Love Data Week workshop and catch up with the team behind Oak and Elm storage systems.
The Stanford Digital Repository (SDR) is the perfect place for sharing and preserving your scholarly works.