Lydia Zvyagintseva successfully defended her Master of Library and Information Studies (MLIS)/ Humanities Computing thesis on March 6, 2015. Her thesis is entitled "Articulating a vision for community-engaged data curation in the digital humanities". The examining committee included the supervisors Dr. Ali Shiri and Dr. Susan Brown, and the third reader Dr. Tami Oliphant. The committee was chaired by Dr. Margaret Mackey.
Congratulations Lydia Zvyagintseva!
SLIS Staff - 10 March 2015