The University of Amsterdam has its origins in the Athenaeum Illustre in 1632 and is today one of the largest
general research universities in Europe. It has over 30,000 students and 5,000 employees. It participates in
LERU, the League of European Research Universities, and Universitas 21, the global network of research
universities for the 21st century. Media Studies (with Communication Science) is ranked 1st by QS World
University Rankings in 2019. The research group in the project is the Digital Methods Initiative (DMI) from
Media Studies and the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis. DMI is the research program of the Chair
in New Media & Digital Culture, headed by Prof. Dr. Richard Rogers. The forerunner of the program
pioneered issue mapping with its most well-known piece of software, the Issue Crawler, funded by the
Information Program of the Soros Foundation. Through three Ford Fellowships as well as support from the
MacArthur Foundation, Open Society Foundations, Mondriaan Foundation, Hivos, Gates Foundation, the
Dutch Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Education, Culture and Science and the European Commission,
Rogers and his team have built some 60 tools that collect online data and map and visualise social debates
and issue networks on the web. More substantively, the Digital Methods Initiative is dedicated to reworking
method for the Web, concentrating on the opportunities afforded by the rich data online. Treating the Web
as a data set as opposed to a cyberspace or virtual world, DMI seeks to learn from the methods employed by
search engines, social media and online platforms generally, and repurpose them for social and cultural
research. DMI is online at http://www.digitalmethods.net.
Universiteit van Amsterdam
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