Barjak, FranzWiegand, GordonLane, JuliaKertcher, ZackPoschen, MeikProcter, RobRobinson, Simon2015-10-052015-10-052008-06-19http://hdl.handle.net/11654/9803https://doi.org/10.26041/fhnw-3331We report results from a study of e-Infrastructure adoption in the social sciences and humanities. We find that bridging barriers between computer and domain scientists is of key importance. In particular, SSH communities have to be accepted as being distinct and not suited to a “one size fits all” strategy of e-Infrastructure diffusion. Sustainability was also a core issue, whereas barriers to resource sharing could mostly be resolved with technological solutions, and skills and training activities are a reflection of the general “user dilemma”. Our recommendations to EU policy-makers point the way to promoting e-Infrastructure development and application in the social sciences and humanities.en-UKe-Social Sciencee-InfrastrukturForschungsinfrastruktur330 - Wirtschaft659 - Werbung & Public Releations (PR)Case Studies of e-Infrastructure Adoption06 - Präsentation