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<!-- {{notice Please read the [[Virtual Event Code of Conduct]].}} -->


6 p.m. Dinner Thursday, December 14, 2023
;What: "Aligning contributors and audiences" in the [[Community Data Science Collective]]'s [[Science of Community Dialogue Series]]
9 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Friday, December 15, 2023
;When: December 15, 2023 9:00am-3:30pm (with an optional dinner at 6:00pm on December 14)
;Where: [https://citp.princeton.edu/ Center for Information Technology Policy], 3rd Floor on [https://m.princeton.edu/default/map/index?filter=sherrerd%20hall&_recenter=true Sherrerd Hall], Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
;Who: Attendance at this event is by invitation only. Feel free to contact [[Benjamin Mako Hill]] if you are hoping to attend.


Are the activities that participants in an online community are devoting their time to what those who rely on the community need and want? When is the “supply” of work being done more or less aligned with the “demand” of things people need and want? How can community managers more effectively manage or align the relationship between these two?


We'll be exploring these questions through several presentations of academic work and through extensive dialog between an invited group of scholars and leaders of online communities. We expect to host 20-30 people.


=Access and Participation Inequalities: Implications for Online Communities=
This event is being paid for, in part by a National Science Foundation grant, and will be held at no cost to attendees. A code of conduct will be shared with participants prior to the event. Discussions will be held under Chatham House Rule.


'''Please read the [[Virtual Event Code of Conduct]]. We will be recording the event presentations, but not discussions.'''
Presentations will be recorded and shared publicly, though discussions will not.


This event will take place '''May 19, 2023 at 10:00am PT (17:00-UTC)'''. It will feature '''Professor Hernan Galperin''' (University of Southern California) and '''Floor Fiers''' (Northwestern University). '''[https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd7lANLuspnHRm56zMuQg9ln0q5SNst6ngRqAcYdXT5_Tjn_A/viewform?usp=sf_link Register now!]'''
==What is the Science of Community Dialogue Series?==


How can communities address and understand challenges around digital access and participation inequalities? Online participation is differentiated and unequal along almost every dimension—in terms of who gets online and how as well as in terms of who contributes or participates in specific activities once they are there. Individual characteristics shape unequal outcomes, which can then be exacerbated by platform design and policies. In this session, we will explore this topic and its implications for online communities and platforms.
The Science of Community Dialogue Series is a series of conversations between researchers, experts, community organizers, and others interested in how communities work, collaborate, and succeed. You can [https://northwestern.hosted.panopto.com/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?id=1bb1547a-7034-41dd-b433-ae5a0105cca0&start=0 watch this short introduction video with Aaron Shaw].
 
First, Professor Hernan Galperin (University of Southern California) will discuss how participation in online communities is affected by differences in broadband access opportunities and modalities across populations. Prof. Galperin will then present findings from a series of studies that investigate the drivers of inequality in gig economy platforms in the Global South. A key theme will be how to identify and combat digital discrimination in access and outcomes.
 
Next, Floor Fiers (Northwestern) will continue to discuss participation inequalities in the context of the gig economy. As online marketplaces, gig platforms mediate access to opportunities to exchange labor and money. Questions of who is and who is not able to access and navigate such platforms have important consequences. In addition, a variety of digital skills may be needed to overcome barriers to participation in these and other settings.  Recent findings illustrate how having awareness of what is possible in a gig platform is a prerequisite to building the skills to reap potential benefits of participation. What might opportunities look like to bridge such knowledge, participation, and skills gaps?
 
This event is being paid for by a National Science Foundation grant, and will be held at no cost to attendees. A code of conduct will be shared with participants prior to the event. Discussions will be held under Chatham House Rule. Presentations will be recorded, though discussions will not. We are currently planning on hosting the event using jitsi (meet.jit.si).
 
==What is a Dialogue?==
 
The Science of Community Dialogue Series is a series of conversations between researchers, experts, community organizers, and other people who are interested in how communities work, collaborate, and succeed. You can [https://northwestern.hosted.panopto.com/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?id=1bb1547a-7034-41dd-b433-ae5a0105cca0&start=0 watch this short introduction video with Aaron Shaw].


==What is the CDSC?==
==What is the CDSC?==

Revision as of 23:30, 1 November 2023


What
"Aligning contributors and audiences" in the Community Data Science Collective's Science of Community Dialogue Series
When
December 15, 2023 9:00am-3:30pm (with an optional dinner at 6:00pm on December 14)
Where
Center for Information Technology Policy, 3rd Floor on Sherrerd Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
Who
Attendance at this event is by invitation only. Feel free to contact Benjamin Mako Hill if you are hoping to attend.

Are the activities that participants in an online community are devoting their time to what those who rely on the community need and want? When is the “supply” of work being done more or less aligned with the “demand” of things people need and want? How can community managers more effectively manage or align the relationship between these two?

We'll be exploring these questions through several presentations of academic work and through extensive dialog between an invited group of scholars and leaders of online communities. We expect to host 20-30 people.

This event is being paid for, in part by a National Science Foundation grant, and will be held at no cost to attendees. A code of conduct will be shared with participants prior to the event. Discussions will be held under Chatham House Rule.

Presentations will be recorded and shared publicly, though discussions will not.

What is the Science of Community Dialogue Series?

The Science of Community Dialogue Series is a series of conversations between researchers, experts, community organizers, and others interested in how communities work, collaborate, and succeed. You can watch this short introduction video with Aaron Shaw.

What is the CDSC?

The Community Data Science Collective (CDSC) is an interdisciplinary research group made of up of faculty and students at the University of Washington Department of Communication, the Northwestern University Department of Communication Studies, the Carleton College Computer Science Department, and the Purdue University School of Communication.

Learn more

If you'd like to learn more or get future updates about the Science of Community Dialogues, please join the low volume announcement list.