Changes In Branch revise-for-2024 Through [da151b8275] Excluding Merge-Ins
This is equivalent to a diff from a588a58f99 to da151b8275
2024-04-11
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12:23 | update overview and faq check-in: d093390a97 user: jboy tags: revise-for-2024 | |
11:57 | update assignment descriptions check-in: da151b8275 user: jboy tags: revise-for-2024 | |
11:57 | revise descriptions of weekly units check-in: ede264ff80 user: jboy tags: revise-for-2024 | |
2024-04-02
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15:23 | Create new branch named "revise-for-2024" check-in: 6ca6a6adb5 user: jboy tags: revise-for-2024 | |
2023-06-05
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13:47 | update assignment description and deadline Leaf check-in: a588a58f99 user: jboy tags: revise-for-2023 | |
2023-05-24
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20:39 | add speaker bio for week 5 check-in: 7fbcf6df3f user: jboy tags: revise-for-2023 | |
Modified docs/assignments/1.md from [bf1e1019dc] to [0a0ad1d0c3].
1 2 3 | # Assignment 1: Data Walk Due date | | | | > > > > | > > > > | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 | # Assignment 1: Data Walk Due date : April 26 (end of day) The goal of this assignment is to sensitize you to the ways in which data is continually produced in contemporary social settings. In another context we might talk about the *opportunities* this holds for social researchers, many of whom have welcomed the "data deluge" as an opportunity to invent new ways of knowing the social. In the context of this class, however, we will mostly discuss its ethical implications---the ways in which the research process is shot through with ethical concerns when it takes place in data-saturated environments. Canadian media scholar [Alison Powell](https://www.alisonpowell.ca/?page_id=71) came up with the idea for **data walkshops** with the express purpose of "opening up civic discussions about data and its ethics within urban space." A variation on the ethnographic go-along method, it has been adopted by scholars around the world, including the [Centre for BOLD Cities](https://www.centre-for-bold-cities.nl/projects/data-walks) in our own region. Powell describes the data walkshop as "a radically bottom-up process of exploring and defining data, big data and data politics from the perspectives of groups of citizens, who walk, observe, discuss and record connections between data, processes of datafication, and the places that they live in" (p. 213). In this assignment, you will plan, carry out and report on a data walk. Each student will submit **a brief report** (around 800 words) with supporting materials such as maps, photographs and notes taken en route. While we take inspiration from Powell's format (also succinctly discussed in [this interview][powell-interview]), we make a few modifications. We trust the assignment description that follows is detailed enough, but please let us know if you have any further questions. During the walk, you will focus on _data hubs_: objects or sites that collect data. Examples include customer loyalty cards, ATMs, traffic cameras, RIFD tracking systems, OV chip card scanners, QR codes, parking meters, air quality meters, but the list could go on and on. A data walk should involve participants, each taking on a different role, such as navigator, note-taker or photographer. For the purposes of this assignment, you should involve at least one other person, meaning you will complete it in pairs. You are free to involve more people, but only if that doesn't cause you extra work or delays. Your participant could be a roommate or a family member (not a fellow CADS student, but somebody coming to the walk with a different perspective). Plan your walk someplace convenient, for instance in your own neighborhood, and restrict it to about one hour. You should make at least a rough plan for your walk ahead of time. Most importantly, remember these questions from Powell's summary, and try to set yourself up for an affirmative answer: "Can [these activities] provoke joy, curiosity and engagement? New ways to tell stories and new ways of thinking about why data matters?" You may also ride by bike, but we advise not to drive unless you or your participant is unable to be mobile in other ways. Your report should address the planning, execution and your reflection on the data walk. You may take the following points as a guide as you complete the assignment: 1. **Plan your walking route ahead of time.** Make a map or list some landmarks you intend to pass on your walk. 2. **What will you look for?** Which data hubs do you expect to encounter along the way? 3. **Collect evidence.** Take pictures or bring back objects from your walk. 4. **Tell a story.** Why did you walk where you walked? What was an important thread that you decided to follow? What did you learn about your environment? Did the other participant in your walkshop see things differently? 5. **Discuss the results.** How visible are the data hubs you spotted? What kinds of data do they collect? Who owns the data? Where are they stored? What value might they bring to you or others? What do you think are the "costs" of data collection---in terms of the technology required for its collection, the likely environmental impact, encroachments on privacy, or possible "chilling effects"? Please write your report in clear and coherent prose. Use proper references as needed. Here's hoping your walk is stimulating and sunny! ☀️ [powell-interview]: https://doi.org/10.18146/2213-7653.2018.371 "Alison Powell on Data Walking" |
Modified docs/assignments/2.md from [6233064ba1] to [af86615474].
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| | | < | < < < < | | | < | < < | < < < < < < < < < < < | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | # Assignment 2: Care Manuals for Ethnography Due date : May 17 (end of day) Working in groups of up to four students, you will design and produce **a care, maintenance or repair manual** for ethnographic research. This assignment encourages you to use your creativity and to experiment with ways of presenting and explaining concepts touched on in this course for a wider public. The manuals are intended to be public-facing resources for other ethnographers, so you will create your manual in such a way that it will be useful to others like you wondering what kinds of practices they can adopt in the course of ethnographic research to respond to emerging dilemmas, protect themselves and research participants, secure data, and otherwise ensure that their research is ethical. We will discuss possible topics during tutorials in [week 3](../weeks/3.md). After you have created your manual, you will [choose a Creative Commons license](https://creativecommons.org/choose/) under which to release your work to the public. Submit your assignment, preferably as a single PDF, through Brightspace. Making hard copies to distribute to your friends is optional but encouraged! ## Resources Care, maintenance or repair manuals come in all kinds of formats. Aside from basic information about the thing being cared for, common elements include checklists, flowcharts, diagrams, recommendations for tools and instructions for their use, *More to come.* |
Modified docs/assignments/3.md from [defb2460b4] to [f74085623a].
1 2 3 | # Assignment 3: Essay Question Due date | < < < | < < < < < < < < | 1 2 3 4 5 6 | # Assignment 3: Essay Question Due date : May 29 (end of day) This assignment consists of **an essay question** that will be posted to Brightspace in the final week of May. In your answer to this question, you will have the chance to demonstrate what you have learned about ethical issues contemporary ethnographers face and ways they can respond practically. Successful answers will make connections between the course content (lectures, readings, and discussions in tutorials) and _Dealing in Desire_. |
Modified docs/weeks/1.md from [b29aa22cb8] to [785d2174ad].
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11 12 13 14 15 16 17 | Contemporary ethnographic research continues the tradition of ethnographic inquiry in anthropology and sociology, but has some distinguishing characteristics. We will discuss the past and present of ethnographic research and how at every stage it involves decisions where ethical concerns are at stake, forcing us to ask what "the good" is in society and how we are meant to act. Further, we will cover the current research ethics regime, where it comes from, what it entails, what it looks like in practice, and why it is at times contested. ## Tutorial Homework : - Find the ethics code of an anthropological or sociological association in your home country or region and read it with Mutaru (2018) at the back of your mind. | > > > > > > > > > > | > > > | 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 | Contemporary ethnographic research continues the tradition of ethnographic inquiry in anthropology and sociology, but has some distinguishing characteristics. We will discuss the past and present of ethnographic research and how at every stage it involves decisions where ethical concerns are at stake, forcing us to ask what "the good" is in society and how we are meant to act. Further, we will cover the current research ethics regime, where it comes from, what it entails, what it looks like in practice, and why it is at times contested. ## Tutorial Homework : - Find the ethics code of an anthropological or sociological association in your home country or region and read it with Mutaru (2018) at the back of your mind. (Examples from [Netherlands](https://antropologen.nl/abv/ethical-guidelines/) [anthropology], [Netherlands](https://www.nsv-sociologie.nl/?page_id=3697) [sociology], [Brazil](https://portal.abant.org.br/codigo-de-etica/), [Britain](https://www.therai.org.uk/about-the-rai/ethical-policy), [Czechia](https://www.narodopisnaspolecnost.cz/index.php/o-nas/eticky-kodex-cns), [Germany](https://www.dgska.de/en/ethics/), [South Africa](https://www.asnahome.org/about-asna/ethical-guidelines), [United States](https://americananthro.org/about/anthropological-ethics/), and [more](https://waunet.org/wcaa/members/wcaa-members-associations/).) - Ask yourself: How well do you think the code would guide you when dealing with emerging ethical dilemmas in the course of fieldwork? Jot down some notes. - *For pre-master's students:* Install the [Dilemma Game][] app and familiarize yourself with it. [Dilemma Game]: https://www.eur.nl/en/about-eur/policy-and-regulations/integrity/research-integrity/dilemma-game |
Modified docs/weeks/2.md from [1133df1f4d] to [13d65b217a].
1 2 3 4 5 | # Week 2 ## Lecture Location | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 | # Week 2 ## Lecture Location : PdlC SC01 Readings : - Bratich (2017) - Thomas-Hébert (2019) - Mejias and Couldry (2019) Whether we like it or not, we live in data-saturated environments. The lecture will present concepts for thinking about this situation, introduce cases that illustrate risks that result for individuals and groups, and discuss some implications for the conduct of ethnographic research. |
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Modified docs/weeks/3.md from [514da0ed4a] to [87d55538db].
1 2 3 4 5 | # Week 3 ## Lecture Location | | | > > < < < < < < | < | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 | # Week 3 ## Lecture Location : PdlC SC01 Readings : - Markham (2012) - De Seta (2020) We have discussed challenges we face as we want to conduct ethnographic research in an ethical manner in today's world. But what can we do as researchers to put ethical principles into practice? How can we avoid causing harm and protect those in the field, ourselves included? We will discuss ways in which "care" may provide a useful framework for thinking about putting ethics into practice. ## Tutorial During tutorials, you will discuss and plan the [second assignment](../assignments/2.md). This will require forming groups with two or three other students in your tutorial group and coming up with an idea for a manual. Homework : - TK |
Modified docs/weeks/4.md from [73d7b71cf2] to [d2ed3c8bb1].
1 2 3 4 5 | # Week 4 ## Lecture Location | | | | | > > | > | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 | # Week 4 ## Lecture Location : PdlC SC01 Readings : - Jarzabkowski et al. (2014) For this session we are honored to welcome Dr. **Andrew Hoffman**, the Faculty of Social Sciences data steward, who will speak from his vantage point about data management, its institutionalization and professionalization in contemporary academic research, its relation to ethnography---but especially what it looks like in practice and why it can be a helpful skill even if you don't intend to become an academic researcher. About our guest speaker: > [Andrew Hoffman](https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/staffmembers/andrew-hoffman) had an early career as a research data coordinator in academic cancer medicine before going on to complete a doctoral degree in sociology/social studies of medicine at McGill University. Over the course of two subsequent postdoctoral fellowships, Andrew studied and collaborated with researchers, data scientists, and software engineers on the development of new knowledge infrastructures, predominantly in the domain of translational science. > > Combining training as an ethnographer with dedication to user-centered design, Andrew aims to make data management policies and workflows legible, useful for, and responsive to the values and practices of social science researchers working across the methodological spectrum. As a Data Steward, his primary responsibility is to liaise with researchers and support staff in Cultural Anthropology & Development Sociology and the Centre for Science & Technology Studies (CWTS) to address research data management needs spanning the whole project lifecycle. ## Tutorial During tutorials, you will have a chance to show off what you made for assignment 2. You will also discuss ethical issues you might encounter as a researchers working in a nonacademic context. Homework : - If possible, bring a hardcopy of your group assignment. - Learn about the Crisis Text Line scandal by reading McNeil (2022) and at least one additional source of your own choice. Take some notes to prepare for a discussion in tutorials. - Put some of this week's lessons into action by rethinking how you organize your own files and folders. You have a [backup](https://www.worldbackupday.com/), right? |
Modified docs/weeks/5.md from [9e3c6811cb] to [e6185f70be].
1 2 3 4 5 | # Week 5 ## Lecture Location | | | < < < < < < < < < < < < < < | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 | # Week 5 ## Lecture Location : PdlC SC01 Readings : - TK |
Modified docs/weeks/6.md from [671c7c3c4e] to [9d1e8ebe84].
1 2 3 4 5 | # Week 6 ## Lecture Location | | < < | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | # Week 6 ## Lecture Location : PdlC SC01 Readings : - Fassin (2013) - Reyes (2017) - Dilger et al. (2018) - De Koning et al. (2019) Researchers have a responsibility to address issues of public concern, and critical scholars in particular have the ambition of making public interventions. This requires finding formats for scholarly communication that can reach the public, but also resisting tendencies that enclose scholarly knowledge behind paywalls or within proprietary systems. In that sense, ethnographers are champions of opening up our work. The demand to be "open" can also be a challenge to those conducting critical research, particularly for ethnographers who are unable to share their data or be totally transparent about their research process. We will discuss a variety of ethical issues that are at stake in this tension. You will also have a chance to ask questions about [assignment 3](../assignments/3.md) following the final lecture. |