Communities and journals

Connect with your community 

Australian and international networks can provide valuable opportunities for peer learning, networking and new collaboration opportunities. Several relevant local and international networks are listed below as a good place to start:  

Social media remains a powerful tool for connecting with other researchers and growing your research impact. The international digital humanities community is very active on Twitter. Find out more about the University of Adelaide’s social media guidelines and policies here.

  • Humanities Commons

    Humanities Commons is a network connecting digital humanities scholars and researchers. Developed by the Modern Language Association (MLA), the Humanities Commons is a platform for sharing, discovering and preserving digital humanities scholarship. The Humanities Commons network provides two platforms for users to interact and engage. Groups facilitate discussion and collaboration across a diverse range of fields within the Commons, whereas sites are blogs that are open to the public and can be used for broader outreach and community engagement.

    The Commons Open Repository Exchange (CORE) is an open-access repository within the Humanities Commons. Commons users can share, store and discover digital scholarly outputs. DOIs are applied to all work published on CORE and material is free to access and download without registration. Peer feedback on work shared in CORE is highly encouraged.

    The Humanities Commons provides simple guides on how start using the Humanities Commons network and is open access, non-profit and free of charge.