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DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230301T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230301T133000
DTSTAMP:20260609T004802
CREATED:20230131T200103Z
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SUMMARY:Data Fluencies Speaker Series - Joan Donovan
DESCRIPTION:Joan Donovan from the Shorenstein Center on Media\, Politics and Public Policy will present on their new book Meme Wars: The Untold Story of the Online Battles Upending Democracy in America. \nThis presentation is part of the Data Fluencies Speaker Series\, co-sponsored by the Ahmanson Lab/Harman Academy at the University of Southern California and the Social Science Research Council Just Tech Program. \nEmail ddi_comms@sfu.ca for details and Zoom link.
URL:https://digitaldemocracies.org/calendar/data-fluencies-speaker-series-joan-donovan/
LOCATION:British Columbia
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230302T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230302T183000
DTSTAMP:20260609T004802
CREATED:20230222T001047Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230222T001047Z
UID:4829-1677776400-1677781800@digitaldemocracies.org
SUMMARY:Global Media Education Summit 2023 Keynote by Wendy Hui Kyong Chun and Amy Harris
DESCRIPTION:KEYNOTE: How to Sense the Future: Global Climate Change and Media Edu-cologies – Wendy Hui Kyong Chun and Amy Harris \nGlobal climate change has been predicted for at least a century\, and yet little has been changed in response. This inaction has revealed the importance and inadequacy of knowledge: at first\, many scientists and activists believed that simply educating the public would be enough\, but the continuing lack of action and the debates over the existence and cause of global climate change – even after many predictions have materialised – has proven otherwise. Although there are many reasons for this failure to act – such as concerted political efforts to sow fear\, uncertainty\, and doubt – our talk explores the difficulty of scale and attempts to overcome it. A fundamental difficulty is the fact that we experience weather\, not climate: climate is an abstraction based on global inputs and dynamics that seem impervious to individual actions. To register the intricate and interwoven impact of climate change\, we turn to arts-based interventions that deploy affectively intense hyper-local experiences. Ranging from individual VR experiences\, to large scale art installations\, they reveal how the senses can be deployed to create affective and effective relationships with our future world. \nThe Global Media Education Summit (MES) brings together an international network of researchers\, educators\, and practitioners across all aspects of media education\, media and digital literacies\, youth media production and media and technology in education. As the leading global showcase for research\, pedagogy\, and innovation\, MES explores the changing currents across media education and media literacy communities around the world. \nHeld at Harbour Centre\, Simon Fraser University\, Vancouver\, Canada on March 2nd – 4th 2023 – in person\, with virtual panels. \nMore information\, including registration here.
URL:https://digitaldemocracies.org/calendar/global-media-education-summit-2023-keynote-by-wendy-hui-kyong-chun-and-amy-harris/
LOCATION:British Columbia
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230315T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230315T133000
DTSTAMP:20260609T004802
CREATED:20220913T212807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230103T185156Z
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SUMMARY:Chelsea Rosenthal presents to the DDI
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Chelsea Rosenthal is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Simon Fraser University. Before joining the faculty at Simon Fraser\, she was an Assistant Professor/Faculty Fellow in the Center for Bioethics at New York University and did her doctoral work in NYU’s Philosophy Department. She also holds a J.D. from the Law School there. Her research focuses on ethics\, philosophy of law\, and political philosophy\, with current projects on moral uncertainty\, privacy and content moderation on social media\, and the ethical responsibilities of lawyers. \nEmail ddi_comms@sfu.ca for details and Zoom link.
URL:https://digitaldemocracies.org/calendar/chelsea-rosenthal-presents-to-the-ddi/
LOCATION:By zoom
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230316T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230316T100000
DTSTAMP:20260609T004802
CREATED:20230314T190905Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230314T190905Z
UID:4852-1678957200-1678960800@digitaldemocracies.org
SUMMARY:Digital Policy Rounds: Mis/disinformation and the question of authenticity
DESCRIPTION:Digital Policy Rounds: Mis/disinformation and the question of authenticity\nThursday\, March 16 from 9 am – 10 am PST \nRegister here \nABOUT THE EVENT\nWhile mis- and dis-information is primarily understood in terms of its facticity\, or lack thereof\, the very circulation of information such as news stories is tied to the cultural contexts in which people come to trust and rely on certain channels of information. Tackling misinformation\, then\, requires not just repudiation of its claims but an understanding of how and why its claims become significant — through what cultural channels — for certain groups of people. How do these channels influence what people will believe in their news and information consumption habits? How do recommender algorithms shape cultural channels that mark certain information as compelling? How does understanding the cultural sites of meaning-making help us address mis- and dis-information? \nThis panel seeks to surface the cultural dimensions of mis- and dis-information through the lens of authenticity: how claims to truthfulness and facticity are recognized as believable by communities\, and so how those claims are authenticated as truth or facts. Our panelists will discuss the historical\, technological\, and political aspects of claiming access to an authentic reality\, and how addressing mis- and dis-information through policy requires engaging culturally with those claims. \nRegister to receive the event Zoom link on the day of the event. \n\n\n\n\nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\n\nDr. Elisha Lim is a Provosts’ Postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Social Policy and Practice. Lim is currently working on a book called “Pious” that studies the rise in distorted identity politics through theology and Afropessimism\, tackling issues from ethnic fraud to hyperbolic corporate solidarity statements. Lim is part of Canada’s Initiative for Digital Citizen Research\, which advises on digital government policy\, and is a Joint Initiative organized by SSHRC and the Department of Canadian Heritage.\n\n\nChristina de Castell is chief librarian & CEO at Vancouver Public Library\, and has held roles bridging technology\, collections\, research and public service in her more than twenty years as a librarian. She is passionate about the role of libraries in building communities and exploring ideas\, and fascinated by the way that technology is changing how we learn and communicate. Christina has represented the world’s and Canada’s libraries at UN forums including the World Intellectual Property Organization and the Internet Governance Forum\, and is a member of copyright and ebook leadership groups for libraries in Canada and internationally. She is the co-author\, with Paul Whitney\, of Trade eBooks in Libraries: The Changing Landscape (DeGruyter\, 2017)\, and is a frequent speaker on issues related to libraries\, information and the digital world.\n\n\nSarah Nguyễn is a PhD student at the University of Washington’s Information School. Sarah investigates information infrastructures & information disorder among immigrant diaspora and non-English communities. They apply theory into practice at the intersections of information & media infrastructures\, information disorder\, embodied memories\, archival studies\, Asian American studies\, & immigrant studies. Grounded in Black and Asian technocultures with feminist practices of care\, Sarah centers contextual\, archival\, qualitative\, and community participatory methodologies alongside social media analysis. Currently\, Sarah contributes to the NSF Rapid Response Research with UW Center for an Informed Public about problematic information discourses within the Vietnamese and Latine diaspora; and to the AfterLab about community archives in response to COVID-19. Her research has been featured in Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review\, VICE\, BuzzFeed News\, KUOW Public Radio\, NPR\, Saigon Broadcasting Television Network\, John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight\, and InDance magazine.\n\n\nDivyani Motla is a PhD Candidate at the Department of History\, University of Toronto; also affiliated with the Centre for Diaspora and Transnational Studies. Her research explores connected transnational histories and articulations of religion and power\, with a focus on Sikh ethno-nationalism\, in India and Canada. Divyani is a Lead Editor with the Jamhoor collective\, a Left media organisation based in Toronto focusing on South Asia and the South Asian diaspora in North America; and Editor of the Past Tense Graduate Review of History\, a journal housed in the Department of History at University of Toronto.\n\nThis event intends to bring together experts in the field to discuss culturally- and community-specific ways to understand and address the spread of mis- and dis-information. It is organized in partnership with the Digital Democracies Institute at SFU; the University of British Columbia’s Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions; the Centre for Media\, Technology and Democracy at McGill University; Toronto Metropolitan University’s Leadership Lab; and the Centre for Law\, Technology and Society at the University of Ottawa.
URL:https://digitaldemocracies.org/calendar/digital-policy-rounds-mis-disinformation-and-the-question-of-authenticity/
LOCATION:By zoom
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230329T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20230329T133000
DTSTAMP:20260609T004802
CREATED:20230328T182041Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230328T182041Z
UID:4884-1680093000-1680096600@digitaldemocracies.org
SUMMARY:Data Fluencies Speaker Series - Chris Gilliard
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Chris Gilliard is a writer\, professor\, and speaker. His scholarship concentrates on digital privacy\, surveillance\, and the intersections of race\, class\, and technology. He is an advocate for critical and equity-focused approaches to tech in education. His writings have been featured in the New York Times\, the Washington Post\, Wired Magazine\, the Chronicle of Higher Ed\, and Vice Magazine. He is a Visiting Research Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School Shorenstein Center\, a member of the UCLA Center for Critical Internet Inquiry Scholars Council\, and a member of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project community advisory board. Gilliard is a member of the inaugural (2022 – 2024) cohort of the Just Tech Fellowship. \nThe 2023 Data Fluencies Speaker Series is co-sponsored by the Ahmanson Lab/Harman Academy at the University of Southern California\, the Social Science Research Council Just Tech Program and the Digital Democracies Institute. \nContact ddi_comms@sfu.ca for details and Zoom link.
URL:https://digitaldemocracies.org/calendar/data-fluencies-speaker-series-chris-gilliard/
LOCATION:By zoom
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