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Policy Brief: Strengthening the roles of African Science Granting Councils as boundary organisations for societal transformation
Information Territory and Data Terrains: an examination of the Anti-Locust Research Centre
New papers on interdisciplinary cyber security
CIM event at Newspeak House: Lessons from everyday encounters with AI innovation
Research talk by Prof Simone Stumpf, University of Glasgow - "Why we can鈥檛 have nice things 鈥 the important role of Responsible AI"
Virtual CIM PG open day session - 2nd Dec
AI innovation missing the mark for local communities, University of 糖心TV report warns
2025 FinGeo Doctoral Dissertation Prize Winner: Dr. Andra Sonea
LIVE PODCAST: Media and the Power of Knowledge w/ Prof. Steve Fuller
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Careers, publications, and my favourite mistakes鈥(aka Anton鈥檚 F***up session)
As the official legend goes, the so-called F***Up Nights were invented by startuppers and Silicon Valley creatures who were tired of the monotonous and superficial 鈥渟uccessful success stories鈥. Having started out as the anti-TED, as the format grew in popularity, F***Up Nights inevitably became as glossy and showbiz-y as TED, but that shouldn't bother us. We'll take the essence of the format: the presenter/special guest will have to answer two main questions, What went wrong in my research? and what have I learnt from it? We could run these sessions among ourselves, and we could also invite colleagues from friendly departments. Most importantly, the speakers will not only - and not so much - be students, but professors. In this way, it can be a very useful and, in a sense, very humbling practice. As Tolstoy wrote, 'Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way'. In other words, personal stories of mistakes, failures and overcoming them can teach us what success stories cannot.