The site is designed principally with researchers and academics in mind, but will also be of use to students,
educational and cultural policy professionals, teachers, and informed general users.
Please participate! general users and academics are invited to give their views on the site, to
offer suggestions for additions or improvement; academics are asked to contribute postings on events,
conferences, and working paper titles. Research students may submit dissertation and project titles to our
online database. This may be done through the following e-mail address: info@austrianresearch.org
WHAT CAN I FIND HERE?
The site contains a variety of reference material, updated quarterly, including:
Changing content:
The Editorial page
contains a short bulletin on research activity from a guest academic editor, a post that will rotate at regular intervals.
The calendar of planned events is
supplemented by an open bulletin board,
where new conference announcements, book launches and so on can be posted freely between updates.
Austrian Research UK was originally proposed by the Austrian Cultural Forum in London, and has been designed
by a small team comprising younger researchers with experience in academic work, Austrian Studies, and web
design. We have archived past design ideas that were commissioned on a
special page.
And finally... MORE ABOUT YOU
We would be most grateful if, at this stage, any academics or postgraduates working in the field of Austrian Research in the United Kingdom would send us comments and feedback, plus any or all of the following details for possible inclusion on the site:
- MAIN RESEARCH INTEREST(S)
- PERSONAL OR DEPARTMENTAL WEBPAGE (if extant)
- NAMES OF INTERESTED POSTGRADUATE STUDENTS (who may wish to have details of current working paper
titles etc. posted online)
Please write to us with your comments and details by sending an e-mail to:
info@austrianresearch.org
Robert Pyrah would particularly like to thank: Carl Auböck, Jane Kennelly, Dr Robert Knight,
Dr Elisabeth Kornfeind, Katie Lazar, Dr Jill Lewis, Dr Martin Liebscher,
Dr Peter Plener, Professor Ritchie Robertson, Professor Eda Sagarra, Professor Robert Vilain, John Warren, Dr Johannes Wimmer, and Dr Michael Zimmermann.