Digital cooperation in action – A collaborative case study – Pre 01 2019: Difference between revisions

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18 June 2019 | 12:00-14:00 | YANGTZE 1 | [[image:Icon_remote_20px.png | Remote participation | link=https://j.mp/EuroDIG19RP3D0]]<br />
[[Consolidated programme 2019|'''Consolidated programme 2019 overview''']]<br /><br />
[[Consolidated programme 2019|'''Consolidated programme 2019 overview''']]<br /><br />
{{Sessionadvice-Pre-2019}}
Working title: <big>'''City of The Hague, Legal Delta Plan'''</big><br /><br />
== Session teaser ==
== Session teaser ==
Until <span class="dateline">15 April 2019</span>.
This panel features an interactive discussion of the opportunities and challenges of inter-field and interdisciplinary cooperation to innovate for digital governance. Our team is a collaboration of the Asser Institute, Data Science Initiative, the International Institute of Social Sciences, LANDac, and Leiden University.


== Session description ==  
== Session description ==  
Until <span class="dateline">30 April 2019</span>.
This panel features an interactive discussion of the opportunities and challenges of inter-field and interdisciplinary cooperation to innovate for digital governance. Our team is a collaboration of the Asser Institute, Data Science Initiative, the International Institute of Social Sciences, LANDac, and Leiden University. We are working together to develop an internet-based digital tool to fight land grabbing practices around the world. Land grabbing practices include the variety of ways by which large tracts of land are seized and controlled, displacing the people living there. Traditional tools of law and policy have had limited effect combatting land grabbing. Using data harvested from the internet with a tool that will be operationalized as an internet-based application, our team has worked across disciplinary and professional boundaries to develop a technology capable of achieving governance gains. Our panel shares the collaborative process behind the innovation.
 
Always use your own words to describe your session. If you decide to quote the words of an external source, give them the due respect and acknowledgement by specifying the source.


== Format ==  
== Format ==  
Until <span class="dateline">30 April 2019</span>.
This Pre-event will simulate in workshop format the cooperative venture to build new governance technology. Audience and panel members will partner to deliberate imaginable goals and challenges for a practical, internet-based application to address land-grabbing abuses with data tools. We will collaboratively explore stakeholder interests, privacy considerations and institutional constraints, among other things. We will focus interactively on the challenges of addressing these and other issues with a diverse team assembled from distinct fields of expertise. Finally, we will engage in plenary discussion and networking exercises to map the constellation of uses and interests for comparable new technologies.


Pre-events should give the opportunity to create synergies with 3 rd parties i.e. Dynamic Coalitions, Partners. No session principles apply. They are held on day zero in parallel to setting up the venue for EuroDIG. We provide limited technical support.
== Further reading ==
'''About inter- and multi-disciplinary collaboration:'''
*William H. Dutton , Annamaria Carusi & Malcolm Peltu (2006) ‘Fostering Multidisciplinary Engagement: Communication Challenges for Social Research on Emerging Digital Technologies’, Prometheus: Critical Studies in Innovation, 24:2, 129-149, DOI: 10.1080/08109020600714910.


Describe your plans here.


== Further reading ==
'''About land-grabbing:'''
Until <span class="dateline">30 April 2019</span>.
*Promotion transnational accountability of land grabbing: https://www.glanlaw.org/single-post/2017/11/20/Promoting-transnational-accountability-for-%E2%80%9Cland-grabbing%E2%80%9D-Insights-from-a-brainstorming-event
 
*Land grabbing primer Feb 2013: https://www.tni.org/files/download/landgrabbingprimer-feb2013.pdf
Links to relevant websites, declarations, books, documents. Please note we cannot offer web space, so only links to external resources are possible. Example for an external link: [http://www.eurodig.org/ Main page of EuroDIG]
*General Assembly Special Rapporteur Report on food. http://www.srfood.org/images/stories/pdf/officialreports/20140310_finalreport_en.pdf


== People ==  
== People ==  
Until <span class="dateline">15 May 2019</span>: Key participants
*​Kate Dodgson, Data Science Initiative (The Hague)
 
*Geoff Gordon, The Asser Institute (The Hague)
Please provide name and institution for all people you list here.
*Oane Visser, International Institute for Social Studies (The Hague)
*Stelios Paraschiakos, Leiden University
*Antonis Somarakis, Leiden University
*Marthe Derkzen, LANDac (Utrecht)
*Chantal Wieckardt, LANDac (Utrecht)
*Thomas Baar, Humanity X (The Hague)​


Example for a list:
==Report==
*Person 1
Find an independent report of the session from the Geneva Internet Platform Digital Watch Observatory at https://dig.watch/sessions/digital-co-operation-action-collaborative-case-study.
*Person 2


[[Category:2019]][[Category:Sessions 2019]][[Category:Sessions]][[Category:Side events 2019]][[Category:Cross cutting/other issues 2019]]
[[Category:2019]][[Category:Sessions 2019]][[Category:Sessions]][[Category:Side events 2019]][[Category:Cross cutting/other issues 2019]]

Latest revision as of 11:03, 26 June 2020

18 June 2019 | 12:00-14:00 | YANGTZE 1 | Remote participation
Consolidated programme 2019 overview

Session teaser

This panel features an interactive discussion of the opportunities and challenges of inter-field and interdisciplinary cooperation to innovate for digital governance. Our team is a collaboration of the Asser Institute, Data Science Initiative, the International Institute of Social Sciences, LANDac, and Leiden University.

Session description

This panel features an interactive discussion of the opportunities and challenges of inter-field and interdisciplinary cooperation to innovate for digital governance. Our team is a collaboration of the Asser Institute, Data Science Initiative, the International Institute of Social Sciences, LANDac, and Leiden University. We are working together to develop an internet-based digital tool to fight land grabbing practices around the world. Land grabbing practices include the variety of ways by which large tracts of land are seized and controlled, displacing the people living there. Traditional tools of law and policy have had limited effect combatting land grabbing. Using data harvested from the internet with a tool that will be operationalized as an internet-based application, our team has worked across disciplinary and professional boundaries to develop a technology capable of achieving governance gains. Our panel shares the collaborative process behind the innovation.

Format

This Pre-event will simulate in workshop format the cooperative venture to build new governance technology. Audience and panel members will partner to deliberate imaginable goals and challenges for a practical, internet-based application to address land-grabbing abuses with data tools. We will collaboratively explore stakeholder interests, privacy considerations and institutional constraints, among other things. We will focus interactively on the challenges of addressing these and other issues with a diverse team assembled from distinct fields of expertise. Finally, we will engage in plenary discussion and networking exercises to map the constellation of uses and interests for comparable new technologies.

Further reading

About inter- and multi-disciplinary collaboration:

  • William H. Dutton , Annamaria Carusi & Malcolm Peltu (2006) ‘Fostering Multidisciplinary Engagement: Communication Challenges for Social Research on Emerging Digital Technologies’, Prometheus: Critical Studies in Innovation, 24:2, 129-149, DOI: 10.1080/08109020600714910.


About land-grabbing:

People

  • ​Kate Dodgson, Data Science Initiative (The Hague)
  • Geoff Gordon, The Asser Institute (The Hague)
  • Oane Visser, International Institute for Social Studies (The Hague)
  • Stelios Paraschiakos, Leiden University
  • Antonis Somarakis, Leiden University
  • Marthe Derkzen, LANDac (Utrecht)
  • Chantal Wieckardt, LANDac (Utrecht)
  • Thomas Baar, Humanity X (The Hague)​

Report

Find an independent report of the session from the Geneva Internet Platform Digital Watch Observatory at https://dig.watch/sessions/digital-co-operation-action-collaborative-case-study.