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Interpreting UKRI environmental sustainability guidance for the digital humanities

Interpreting UKRI environmental sustainability guidance for the digital humanities
Interpreting UKRI environmental sustainability guidance for the digital humanities
Climate transition spans all aspects of society, including the Digital Humanities. Researchers and research development professionals will need to play their part. However, as yet UK funders do not provide resources detailing how researchers can make changes to their research practices in support of environmental and ecological sustainability.

Funders justifiably set expectations around research practice, including impacts on the environment. UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) have published a sustainability strategy and is a signatory of a cross-sector environmental sustainability concordat, and in December 2024, the AHRC Research Funding Guide was updated to include a statement on environmental responsibility.

Aimed primarily at Digital Humanities researchers and research offices, this short guide explores the policy resources underpinning the AHRC statement. It offers a series of interpretations of existing guidance on research practice and points to advice on how to operationalise sustainable practice in Digital Humanities research. Our interpretations draw on the Digital Humanities Climate Coalition Toolkit, an extensive and evolving resource that provides guidance on making research practices more environmentally responsible.
digital humanities, sustainability, net zero, responsible innovation, responsible research, climate change, digital sustainability, digital sobriety, digital sufficiency
Digital Humanities Climate Coalition
Little, Hannah
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Hayes, Isobel
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Baker, James
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Otty, Lisa
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Walton, Jo Lindsay
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Ohge, Christopher
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Little, Hannah
3fca6578-bf8d-4b48-863e-9be1e088e46b
Hayes, Isobel
f4489567-c2cb-49f0-a240-78aac2f6ff29
Baker, James
96e66490-0844-46eb-bc81-fbbc6bf38692
Otty, Lisa
fb417834-70dd-4eb3-be8e-3581a4523123
Walton, Jo Lindsay
1faf2160-f3a8-49c5-a123-88b39ee2fc0a
Ohge, Christopher
c0b55f76-1e7c-4901-9e1d-457db38bfd62

Little, Hannah, Hayes, Isobel, Baker, James, Otty, Lisa, Walton, Jo Lindsay and Ohge, Christopher (2025) Interpreting UKRI environmental sustainability guidance for the digital humanities Digital Humanities Climate Coalition 9pp. (doi:10.5281/zenodo.15312177).

Record type: Monograph (Project Report)

Abstract

Climate transition spans all aspects of society, including the Digital Humanities. Researchers and research development professionals will need to play their part. However, as yet UK funders do not provide resources detailing how researchers can make changes to their research practices in support of environmental and ecological sustainability.

Funders justifiably set expectations around research practice, including impacts on the environment. UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) have published a sustainability strategy and is a signatory of a cross-sector environmental sustainability concordat, and in December 2024, the AHRC Research Funding Guide was updated to include a statement on environmental responsibility.

Aimed primarily at Digital Humanities researchers and research offices, this short guide explores the policy resources underpinning the AHRC statement. It offers a series of interpretations of existing guidance on research practice and points to advice on how to operationalise sustainable practice in Digital Humanities research. Our interpretations draw on the Digital Humanities Climate Coalition Toolkit, an extensive and evolving resource that provides guidance on making research practices more environmentally responsible.

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Interpreting UKRI Environmental Sustainability Guidance for the Digital Humanities - Version of Record
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More information

Published date: 1 May 2025
Keywords: digital humanities, sustainability, net zero, responsible innovation, responsible research, climate change, digital sustainability, digital sobriety, digital sufficiency

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502938
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502938
PURE UUID: 02179784-6477-49ae-81fb-093396119158
ORCID for James Baker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2682-6922

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Date deposited: 14 Jul 2025 16:43
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 03:22

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Contributors

Author: Hannah Little
Author: Isobel Hayes
Author: James Baker ORCID iD
Author: Lisa Otty
Author: Jo Lindsay Walton
Author: Christopher Ohge

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