2021
DOI: 10.1057/s41599-021-00921-8
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The impact of COVID-19 on digital data practices in museums and art galleries in the UK and the US

Abstract: The first quarter of 2020 heralded the beginning of an uncertain future for museums and galleries as the COVID-19 pandemic hit and the only means to stay ‘open’ was to turn towards the digital. In this paper, we investigate how the physical closure of museum buildings due to lockdown restrictions caused shockwaves within their digital strategies and changed their data practices potentially for good. We review the impact of COVID-19 on the museum sector, based on literature and desk research, with a focus on th… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Academic and heritage organisations alike pivoted to digital platforms to bring historical programming to locked down populations, also opening them up to new international audiences (Noehrer et al 2021). As talks and workshops have gone digital, it has become just another medium by which the public can engage with crime history online.…”
Section: Challenges For Digital Public Histories Of Crimementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Academic and heritage organisations alike pivoted to digital platforms to bring historical programming to locked down populations, also opening them up to new international audiences (Noehrer et al 2021). As talks and workshops have gone digital, it has become just another medium by which the public can engage with crime history online.…”
Section: Challenges For Digital Public Histories Of Crimementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The COVID-19 epidemic has prompted a rise in digital technology engagement and accessibility [6][7][8]. According to research, changes in the school sector due to the pandemic can have a good influence on creative development, with the most effective initiatives focusing on cognitive processes [9][10][11][12]. The findings demonstrate that a person's creativity can be enhanced through targeted learning strategies [13], which encourages the selection of the most efficient techniques for creative development.…”
Section: Of 18mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At least in the more affluent countries, the COVID-19 pandemic has effected, or at least accelerated, a pivot to a world that is dominated by digital technology with the virtual delivery of school and university education [86][87][88][89], museum experiences [90,91], film festivals [92,93] and seasonal festive markets [94]. The major pivot has been towards working from home where feasible [95][96][97] and an increase in on-line commerce including groceries [98][99][100].…”
Section: Conceptual Framing For Future-proofing Human Habitationmentioning
confidence: 99%