CitiGen

CitiGen

Identity, Citizenship and Nationhood in the Post-Genome Era

Menu

  • About
  • Team
  • News
  • Blog
  • Outputs
  • Contact
Back
Search
  • About
  • Team
  • News
  • Blog
  • Outputs
  • Contact
Press Enter to Search

Category Archives: Project workshops

What Makes Us?

0
Written by Sarah Abel 14/06/2017 Tags: art dna testing human migrations music pint of science soundwork

Artist and PhD researcher Kelcy Davenport discusses her inspiration for the soundwork “What Makes Us?”, which she presented at this year’s Pint of Science festival in Cambridge. Continue reading →

Discussion: Using DNA to excavate our collective pasts

0
Written by Sarah Abel 08/12/2016 Tags: ancient dna genealogy genetic testing history

CitiGen workshop at King’s Manor, University of York. [Photo by M. Collins]
On Wednesday 7 December, CitiGen and ArchSci2020 (a new Marie-Skłodowska Curie network) organised a workshop on the use of palaeogenomic data at the University of York. Continue reading →

Recent Posts

  • CitiGen PL Hannes Schroeder presents paper at workshop in Barcelona 12/12/2019
  • CitiGen postdoc Sarah Abel to present at AAA conference 15/11/2019
  • Can DNA really tell us who we are? 27/09/2019
  • Sarah Abel and Hannes Schroeder participate in the HERA closing conference in Gdansk 10/09/2019


University of Copenhagen


University of Iceland


Trinity College Dublin


University of York


HERA


European Union
 This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 649307.

© 2016 CitiGen. All Rights Reserved.
Subscribe

Get the latest CitiGen blog posts delivered to your mailbox:

CitiGen is an international research project that aims to study how modern and ancient genomic data are being used to shape public understandings of the past.

Headquartered at the Natural History Museum of Denmark, CitiGen involves academic partners from Iceland, Ireland, and the UK, as well as non-academic partners from the fields of genetic ancestry testing, family tree research, and public engagement with science.

The project is funded by the Humanities in the European Research Area (HERA) Joint Research Programme “Uses of the Past”.