Map of London: Funding
Ongoing support
2006–present. Permission to use the Agas map provided by the London Metropolitan Archives.
2005–present. In-kind technical support and advice from the Humanities Computing and Media
Centre at the University of Victoria. Special thanks to Stewart
Arneil (Head of Research and Development), Martin Holmes,
and Greg
Newton.
Funding
2012–16. SSHRC Insight Grant. PI: Janelle Jenstad. Co-applicants: Martin
Holmes and Stewart Arneil.
2011. SSHRC General Research Grant (Internal Research Grant, University
of Victoria).
2010. SSHRC General Research Grant (Internal Research Grant, University
of Victoria).
2008. Humanities Grant Initiative Fund, administered by the Dean of
Humanities at the University of Victoria.
2004–05. Internal Research Grant Top-up Award, University of Victoria.
2003–08. SSHRC Standard Research Grant.
In-Kind Support
2008–09. Graduate Research Assistant (Camille van der Marel) provided by the
Department of English,
University of Victoria.
2006. Time with Developers (Mike Elkink and Eric Haswell) provided by TaPOR.
2006. Development work supported by the Office of Research Services (VP
Research) at the University of Victoria.
2006. Development work supported by the Dean of
Humanities at the University of Victoria.
Support for Training
2012. SSHRC Scholarship to attend Digital Humanities Summer
Institute (Victoria), "Digital Humanities Databases" course.
2010. SSHRC Scholarship to attend Digital Humanities Summer
Institute (Victoria), "Geographical Information Systems in the
Digital Humanities" course.
2006. SSHRC Scholarship to attend Digital Humanities Summer
Institute (Victoria), "Contexts, Pragmatics, and Theory of
E-Books" course.
2006. SSHRC Scholarship awarded to Research Assistant (Melanie Chernyk)
to attend Digital Humanities
Summer Institute, "Intermediate Encoding" course.
2005. SSHRC Scholarship to attend Digital Humanities Summer
Institute, "Fundamentals of Encoding" course (Victoria).
2005. SSHRC Scholarship awarded to Research Assistant (Melanie Chernyk)
to attend Digital Humanities
Summer Institute, "Fundamentals of Encoding" course
(Victoria).
—Janelle Jenstad (general editor).
Last updated: 3 May 2012.
This project is supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.