historical editions
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Author(s):  
James Lee

Abstract Scholars have argued that during the Cold War, the United States gave aid to its allies to reward them for maintaining an anti-Communist foreign policy rather than to promote their economic development. This finding is mostly based on data starting in the 1970s and does not accurately characterize US grand strategy before the 1970s,  when the United States used aid to promote development among its allies in order to strengthen them against Communism. Using original data collected from historical editions of USAID's “Greenbook,” this article identifies the amount of unconditional aid in the United States’ foreign-aid programs in the period 1955–1970. This type of aid was designed to be politically attractive rather than to be developmentally effective. This article also develops an original measure of aid recipients’ geopolitical alignment that draws on hand coding of 466 diplomatic documents. Using these data, this article finds that there was more unconditional aid in the United States’ aid programs to neutral and nonaligned countries than in the United States’ aid programs to its allies and security partners—a counterintuitive finding that shows how different the first half of the Cold War was from the second.1


2020 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-35
Author(s):  
Gabriel Bodard ◽  
Polina Yordanova

"EpiDoc is a set of recommendations, schema and other tools for the encoding of ancient texts, especially inscriptions and papyri, in TEI XML, that is now used by upwards of a hundred projects around the world, and large numbers of scholars seek training in EpiDoc encoding every year. The EpiDoc Front-End Services tool (EFES) was designed to fill the important need for a publication solution for researchers and editors who have produced EpiDoc encoded texts but do not have access to digital humanities support or a well-funded IT service to produce a publication for them. This paper will discuss the use of EFES not only for final publication, but as a tool in the editing and publication workflow, by editors of inscriptions, papyri and similar texts including those on coins and seals. The edition visualisations, indexes and search interface produced by EFES are able to serve as part of the validation, correction and research apparatus for the author of an epigraphic corpus, iteratively improving the editions long before final publication. As we will argue, this research process is a key component of epigraphic and papyrological editing practice, and studying these needs will help us to further enhance the effectiveness of EFES as a tool. To this end we also plan to add three major functionalities to the EFES toolbox: (1) date visualisation and filter—building on the existing “date slider,” and inspired by partner projects such as Pelagios and Godot; (2) geographic visualization features, again building on Pelagios code, allowing the display of locations within a corpus or from a specific set of search results in a map; (3) export of information and metadata from the corpus as Linked Open Data, following the recommendations of projects such as the Linked Places format, SNAP, Chronontology and Epigraphy.info, to enable the semantic sharing of data within and beyond the field of classical and historical editions. Finally, we will discuss the kinds of collaboration that will be required to bring about desired enhancements to the EFES toolset, especially in this age of research-focussed, short-term funding. Embedding essential infrastructure work of this kind in research applications for specific research and publication projects will almost certainly need to be part of the solution. Keywords: Text Encoding, Ancient Texts, Epigraphy, Papyrology, Digital Publication, Linked Open Data, Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations"


NASKO ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 138
Author(s):  
Sam Grabus ◽  
Jane Greenberg ◽  
Peter Logan ◽  
Jane Boone

Representing aboutness is a challenge for humanities documents, given the linguistic indeterminacy of the text. The challenge is even greater when applying automatic indexing to historical documents for a multidisciplinary collection, such as encyclopedias. The research presented in this paper explores this challenge with an automatic indexing comparative study examining topic relevance. The setting is the NEH-funded 19th-Century Knowledge Project, where researchers in the Digital Scholarship Center, Temple University, and the Metadata Research Center, Drexel University, are investigating the best way to index entries across four historical editions of the Encyclopedia Britannica (3rd, 7th, 9th, and 11th editions). Individual encyclopedia entry entries were processed using the Helping Interdisciplinary Vocabulary Engineering (HIVE) system, a linked-data, automatic indexing terminology application that uses controlled vocabularies. Comparative topic relevance evaluation was performed for three separate keyword extraction algorithms: RAKE, Maui, and Kea++. Results show that RAKE performed the best, with an average of 67% precision for RAKE, and 28% precision for both Maui and Kea++. Additionally, the highest-ranked HIVE results with both RAKE and Kea++ demonstrated relevance across all sample entries, while Maui’s highest-ranked results returned zero relevant terms. This paper reports on background information, research objectives and methods, results, and future research prospects for further optimization of RAKE’s algorithm parameters to accommodate for encyclopedia entries of different lengths, and evaluating the indexing impact of correcting the historical Long S.


1991 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 377-380
Author(s):  
David R. Chesnutt
Keyword(s):  

Harold B. Carter, Sir Joseph Banks 1743-1820 . British Museum (Natural History), London, 1988. Pp. 671. £45.00. ISBN 0 565 009931. Harold B. Carter, Sir Joseph Banks (1743-1820): a guide to biographical and bibliographical sources . St Paul’s Bibliographies, Winchester, 1987. Pp. 328. £45.00. ISBN 0906795 451. Judith Diment and C.J. Humphries (ed.), Banks’ Florilegium: a publication in 34 parts of 738 copperplate engravings of plants collected on Captain Cook’s first voyage . Alecto Historical Editions, London, 1980-88. About £147,000. Patrick O’Brian, Joseph Banks: a life . Collins Harvill, London, 1988. Pp. 328. £15.00. ISBN 0002173506. £6.95 pbk. ISBN 0002723409. Like moths round a flame, historians of science have a habit of clustering round particular key pivotal figures. They scrutinize their published works with ever closer and closer attention; they disinter their drafts and journals and letters; they argue endlessly about what exactly was meant, where the ideas came from and what happened when. The most salient of these scholarly ‘industries’ are those devoted to Darwin and Newton, each of them sufficiently epoch-making in what they thought and wrote to act as a lure for the more philosophical as well as for those whose primary relish is for the basic excavating. The latter, indeed, is all-important: a full-scale historical ‘industry’ can scarcely arise if the material calling for study has all along been fully in print. There needs to be a great deal as well buried out of sight, which, once revealed, is capable of modifying the received interpretations and thereby engendering continuing debate.


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