CODHES-2025
The Conference on Digital Humanities and Environmental Sustainability (CoDHES-2025) “Sustainability in the Digital Age: Rethinking Humanities, Digitalization, and the Environment” invites scholars, researchers, and practitioners worldwide to examine how digital technologies influence our understanding of the past and shape our environmental and cultural future. From digitizing language documentation, cultural artifacts, human and state behavior, relation among actors, to advancing computational methods, every contribution plays a crucial role in this evolving discourse.
Digital Humanities and Environmental Sustainability is an interdisciplinary field that merges technology with humanistic inquiry to explore, interpret, and preserve cultural heritage in innovative ways.
We welcome submissions on diverse topics, including digital storytelling, spatial computing, data visualization, cultural preservation, technology implication to human life, and computational linguistics, fostering collaboration and discovery in a world transformed by Digital Humanities and Environmental Sustainability.
Our conference serves as a platform to explore cutting-edge research, share best practices, and build a global community that bridges the gap between technology and the humanities.
Aims
- Evaluate the progress SDG within the digital humanities perspectives and approaches, including involving critical examination of the concept, its implications, their theoretical underpinnings, their practical applications and their potential to enhance digital humanities discourse to support SDG.
- Understand the implication of industrial 5.0 in the study of digital humanities, including to prevail the challenges and strength on the progress and complexity of the technological advancements within the theoretical and empirical engagement in digital humanities related studies.
- Map out the progress, impact and influence of technology within the humanities discourse, including to provide comprehensive understanding of the unique concerns, aspirations and perspectives that shape the global debates of digital humanities.
- Chart the evolution of technology and digitalization to the humanities scholarship, including examining how the subsets are currently situated within the landscape of digital humanities studies and how they might evolve in the future.
Objectives
- Facilitate the exchange of ideas and experiences among researchers, scholars, and practitioners in the field of digital humanities and environmental studies.
- Showcase cutting-edge research, methodologies, tools, and applications in digital humanities and environmental studies.
- Promote interdisciplinary collaboration and networking among participants from diverse academic and professional backgrounds.
- Discuss challenges, opportunities, and future directions in the field of digital humanities and environmental studies.
- Foster partnerships and collaborations between academia, industry, and other stakeholders in advancing digital humanities research and practice.
Scope of the Conference
- Contribution of technology in the studies of humanities including languages, international relations, economics, legal, education, and psychology.
- Progress of digital humanities to support the achievement of SDGs, including historical trajectories, current states, and future prospects, including specifically in the case of Indonesia.
- SDG, technology and humanities debates, including dominant theoretical frameworks, prevailing themes, emerging trends, as well as the challenges and opportunities faced by humanities scholars and practitioners.
Target Audience and Key Stakeholders:
The conference targets researchers, scholars, and practitioners ain the field of digital humanities, including but not limited to:
- Academics and researchers from various disciplines such as humanities, social sciences, computer science, and information technology.
- Professionals and practitioners working in cultural heritage institutions, museums, libraries and archives, digital media, big data analysis.
- Industry representatives involved in digital technologies, software development, and innovation.
- Government officials and policymakers are interested in the intersection of technology and humanities.
- Students and early-career researchers are interested in digital humanities.
- International participants from around the world who contribute to the global conversation on digital humanities.
The papers can be theoretical or based on empirical case studies from any state or region of the world. Some issues covered include (but not limited to) to the following subtopics:
- AI in Digital Humanities
- Computers and Human Behavior
- Data Mining in Digital Humanities
- Digital Archiving & Eco Preservation
- Digital Cultural Arts
- Digital Ecolinguistics & Cyber-Ecology
- Digital Environmental Sustainability
- Digital Pedagogy
- Digital Storytelling and Narrative Studies
- Digital Humanities and Cyber Law
- Multimodal Discourse Analysis
- Spatial Computing for Digital Humanities
- Sustainable Digital Practices
- Techno linguistics
- Technology, Security, and International Relations
- International Political Economy of Technology
- Digital Diplomacy
- Global Digital Economy
- AI and Legal Disruption
- Digital Psychology
- Financial Technology and Law