This document provides an overview of potential areas of collaboration between data journalism and digital social research. It discusses how both fields involve "data work" using tools and methods to analyze large datasets. However, the tools and approaches are sometimes attuned to different objectives - journalism seeks compelling narratives while research emphasizes rigorous analysis. The document outlines some common data-focused roles in both fields like data journalists and programmer-journalists. It also provides examples of different types of digital research methods that could potentially be adapted for journalism work.
What Can Data Journalists and Digital Researchers Learn from Each Other?Liliana Bounegru
Talk given with Jonathan Gray at the Digital Humanities + Data Journalism Symposium at the University of Miami on 30 September 2016. http://dhdj.com.miami.edu/
Getting The Deal Through: Telecoms & Media Market Intelligence 2016Matheson Law Firm
Helen Kelly, head of the Telecommunications Group and the EU, Competition and Regulatory Group, and Eoin Kealy, associate in the EU, Competition and Regulatory Law Group, co-wrote the Ireland chapter for Getting the Deal Through: Telecoms & Media Market Intelligence 2016.
The latest report from Centre for Cities gathers together the data on where tax is raised and spent across Britain. It aims to better inform debates around austerity, devolution, public sector efficiency and investment for growth.
Read the full report: http://www.centreforcities.org/tax-and-spend
Matheson partner and head of the Telecommunications Group, Helen Kelly, authored the Irish chapter for Getting the Deal Through: Market Intelligence - Telecoms & Media.
What Can Data Journalists and Digital Researchers Learn from Each Other?Liliana Bounegru
Talk given with Jonathan Gray at the Digital Humanities + Data Journalism Symposium at the University of Miami on 30 September 2016. http://dhdj.com.miami.edu/
Getting The Deal Through: Telecoms & Media Market Intelligence 2016Matheson Law Firm
Helen Kelly, head of the Telecommunications Group and the EU, Competition and Regulatory Group, and Eoin Kealy, associate in the EU, Competition and Regulatory Law Group, co-wrote the Ireland chapter for Getting the Deal Through: Telecoms & Media Market Intelligence 2016.
The latest report from Centre for Cities gathers together the data on where tax is raised and spent across Britain. It aims to better inform debates around austerity, devolution, public sector efficiency and investment for growth.
Read the full report: http://www.centreforcities.org/tax-and-spend
Matheson partner and head of the Telecommunications Group, Helen Kelly, authored the Irish chapter for Getting the Deal Through: Market Intelligence - Telecoms & Media.
Managing Government Balance Sheet: a Focus on Public Assets - Elva Bova, ECOECD Governance
This presentation was made by Elva Bova, EC, at the 19th OECD Senior Financial Management and Reporting Officials Symposium held at the OECD Conference Centre, Paris, on 4-5 March 2019
Increasing SME participation in procurements
Angelica Hymers
Local authorities power on fracking to be limited?
Emma Braidwood
PCER, DPA and satisfaction surveys
Megan Larrinaga
FOI review: the increasing burden
Emma Graham
Putting a stop to public procurement boycotts
Tom Nanson
Potential employment law implications of a ‘Brexit’
Sarah Hooton
The Environment (Wales) Act 2016
Ben Standing
Do you have questions in relation to the legal framework for regulating the behaviour of dominant firms in Ireland? To whom do the rules apply and what forms of conduct can be considered abusive? Matheson’s head of the EU, Competition and Regulatory Law Group, Helen Kelly, and senior associate, Liam Heylin, answer your questions in the Ireland chapter of the 15th edition of the Lexology Getting the Deal Through series on Dominance.
eThekwini State of the Economy - Presentation to the S.D.B LED StakeholderMarketing Durban Chamber
On Tuesday, 14 April the Durban Chamber's Southern Area Business Meeting held a forum discussion, where they hosted Vuyo Jayiya. Vuyo discussed, "Doing business in the south region".
The presentation covered:
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• Economic profile of existing industry
• Constraints and Opportunities to doing business in South
A kilometre based road user charge system proof of concept studyTristan Wiggill
A presentation by Johann van Rensburg delivered during the 2016 Southern African Road Transport Conference in Pretoria, South Africa.
Johann van Rensburg is a lecturer in Transport Economics at Stellenbosch University. He holds a HonsBCom degree from Stellenbosch University and an MPhil degree from the University of Cape Town.
He is currently a Ph.D. candidate with a research focus on transport infrastructure financing.
Budget profile of Estonia - Veiko TALI, EstoniaOECD Governance
This presentation was made by Veiko TALI, Estonia, at the 40th Annual Meeting of OECD Senior Budget Officials (SBO) held in Tallinn, Estonia, on 5-6 June 2019
Remuneration European Parliament rises 3 % in 2018Thierry Debels
Draft budget of the European Union for the financial year 2018: Council
position of 4 September 2017
− Technical annex (Administrative expenditure − Detailed figures for other institutions than the Commission)
Tariff Policy in Mongolia
URANZAYA ERDENECHULUUN
Space and Radio Communications Division
Information Technology, Post and Telecommunications Authority
Information Technology, Post and Telecommunications
Authority is in charge of formulating the law, regulation and
development policies in the ICT development matter.
Communications Regulatory Commission /CRC/ shall
work with functions to develop effective and fair competition
environment for market participants issue licenses, work out
professional conclusions and decisions. (Law on
Communication)
ITU Regional Seminar on Costs and Tariffs for SG3RG-AO
Tokyo, Japan
8-9 April, 2013
Regional trends in labour demand across regions. Preliminary insights from on...OECD CFE
Presentation by Alexandra Tasvetkova, Economist and Policy Analyst, OECD Trento Centre at the 8th Spatial Productivity Lab meeting of the OECE Trento Centre, held in virtual format on 7 May 2020.
More info: https://oe.cd/SPL
Talk on fake news as digital culture given at the Institute for Policy Research symposium on Politics, Fake News and the Post-Truth Era, University of Bath, 14 September 2017.
More about the talk here: http://lilianabounegru.org/2017/09/23/fake-news-in-digital-culture-at-2017-institute-for-policy-research-symposium/
More about the event here: http://www.bath.ac.uk/events/politics-fake-news-and-the-post-truth-era/
Data Infrastructure Literacy: Reshaping Practices of Measurement, Monitoring ...Liliana Bounegru
Conference paper given at 4S/EASST Conference Barcelona 2016, Spain, 2 September 2016, with Jonathan Gray and Carolin Gerlitz. http://www.sts2016bcn.org/
Managing Government Balance Sheet: a Focus on Public Assets - Elva Bova, ECOECD Governance
This presentation was made by Elva Bova, EC, at the 19th OECD Senior Financial Management and Reporting Officials Symposium held at the OECD Conference Centre, Paris, on 4-5 March 2019
Increasing SME participation in procurements
Angelica Hymers
Local authorities power on fracking to be limited?
Emma Braidwood
PCER, DPA and satisfaction surveys
Megan Larrinaga
FOI review: the increasing burden
Emma Graham
Putting a stop to public procurement boycotts
Tom Nanson
Potential employment law implications of a ‘Brexit’
Sarah Hooton
The Environment (Wales) Act 2016
Ben Standing
Do you have questions in relation to the legal framework for regulating the behaviour of dominant firms in Ireland? To whom do the rules apply and what forms of conduct can be considered abusive? Matheson’s head of the EU, Competition and Regulatory Law Group, Helen Kelly, and senior associate, Liam Heylin, answer your questions in the Ireland chapter of the 15th edition of the Lexology Getting the Deal Through series on Dominance.
eThekwini State of the Economy - Presentation to the S.D.B LED StakeholderMarketing Durban Chamber
On Tuesday, 14 April the Durban Chamber's Southern Area Business Meeting held a forum discussion, where they hosted Vuyo Jayiya. Vuyo discussed, "Doing business in the south region".
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• Constraints and Opportunities to doing business in South
A kilometre based road user charge system proof of concept studyTristan Wiggill
A presentation by Johann van Rensburg delivered during the 2016 Southern African Road Transport Conference in Pretoria, South Africa.
Johann van Rensburg is a lecturer in Transport Economics at Stellenbosch University. He holds a HonsBCom degree from Stellenbosch University and an MPhil degree from the University of Cape Town.
He is currently a Ph.D. candidate with a research focus on transport infrastructure financing.
Budget profile of Estonia - Veiko TALI, EstoniaOECD Governance
This presentation was made by Veiko TALI, Estonia, at the 40th Annual Meeting of OECD Senior Budget Officials (SBO) held in Tallinn, Estonia, on 5-6 June 2019
Remuneration European Parliament rises 3 % in 2018Thierry Debels
Draft budget of the European Union for the financial year 2018: Council
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Tariff Policy in Mongolia
URANZAYA ERDENECHULUUN
Space and Radio Communications Division
Information Technology, Post and Telecommunications Authority
Information Technology, Post and Telecommunications
Authority is in charge of formulating the law, regulation and
development policies in the ICT development matter.
Communications Regulatory Commission /CRC/ shall
work with functions to develop effective and fair competition
environment for market participants issue licenses, work out
professional conclusions and decisions. (Law on
Communication)
ITU Regional Seminar on Costs and Tariffs for SG3RG-AO
Tokyo, Japan
8-9 April, 2013
Regional trends in labour demand across regions. Preliminary insights from on...OECD CFE
Presentation by Alexandra Tasvetkova, Economist and Policy Analyst, OECD Trento Centre at the 8th Spatial Productivity Lab meeting of the OECE Trento Centre, held in virtual format on 7 May 2020.
More info: https://oe.cd/SPL
Talk on fake news as digital culture given at the Institute for Policy Research symposium on Politics, Fake News and the Post-Truth Era, University of Bath, 14 September 2017.
More about the talk here: http://lilianabounegru.org/2017/09/23/fake-news-in-digital-culture-at-2017-institute-for-policy-research-symposium/
More about the event here: http://www.bath.ac.uk/events/politics-fake-news-and-the-post-truth-era/
Data Infrastructure Literacy: Reshaping Practices of Measurement, Monitoring ...Liliana Bounegru
Conference paper given at 4S/EASST Conference Barcelona 2016, Spain, 2 September 2016, with Jonathan Gray and Carolin Gerlitz. http://www.sts2016bcn.org/
Journalism in an Age of Big Data: What It Is, Why It Matters and Where to StartLiliana Bounegru
Invited lecture and workshop at the European University Institute Boot Camp for Journalists: Tools for Better Reporting, Florence, Italy, 10 June 2014.
Paper given at the Conference of the Digital Methods Winter School, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, 14 January 2016, with Jonathan Gray and Carolin Gerlitz.
Sourcing Practices in Data Journalism at The New York Times, The Guardian and...Liliana Bounegru
Talk at the Right to Information and Transparency in the Digital Age: Policy, Tools and Practices Conference, Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law, Stanford University, 12 March 2013.
A Field Guide to Fake News Launch at the International Journalism Festival 2017Liliana Bounegru
Slides from a presentation of the Field Guide to Fake News given by myself, Jonathan Gray, Michele Mauri and Angeles Briones at the launch event which took place on 7 April 2017 at the International Journalism Festival in Perugia.
More about the launch event can be found here: http://lilianabounegru.org/2017/04/07/a-field-guide-to-fake-news-launch-international-journalism-festival-perugia/
The field guide can be accessed at: https://fakenews.publicdatalab.org/
Façonner les données. Travail et valeur de l'informationAlexandre Monnin
Présentation de Jérôme Denis donnée dans le cadre du séminaire "Artéfacts numériques et matérialités" organisé par Lise Arena, Bernard Conein et Alexandre Monnin, le 18 février 2016, à l'Université Nice Sophia Antipolis.
The struggle to set aside savings and the increasing difficulty that many working people find in securing a decent income at retirement is one of the less noticed but potentially most far-reaching issues in the living standards debate.
In her first major speech on pensions policy since becoming Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Rachel Reeves MP discussed Labour’s plans for helping those on modest and low incomes save for a pension and secure a decent income at retirement.
These are the slides presented by Michael Johnson, Research Fellow at the Centre for Policy Studies who responded to the speech by Rachel Reeves MP on 29th May 2014.
International Investment Analysis: United KingdomMarlène Aimar
As part of my studies, I had to choose one country (the UK) and provide a thorough analysis of the chosen country.
In this presentation, you will find the opportunities existing in the country, the potential risks associated with the country (analysis of the BOP,, the the fluctuations in the exchange rate and the four major risks) and how to manage those risks (hedging currency risk, and reduce the other identified risks).
In a lecture at the London School of Economics, Carolyn Fairbairn, CBI Director-General, and Rain Newton-Smith, CBI Chief Economist, argue that uncertainty is biting on our economy and our firms. The complexities of 21st century trade and the prospect of serious disruption from a ‘no deal’ outcome means businesses are changing plans and slowing investment now. The lecture can be viewed here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zy6fz0tPcbg
These are the slides presented at Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University for the Economic Forum on Thursday 13 June 2019 to provide delegates an understanding of economic statistics and regional analysis.
Dublin Chamber members received this presentation from the Dublin City Manager, John Tierney entitled “Dublin City Council – The Budget, The Demand and the Resources".
London Tech Week 2020 Tech Nation DealroomTech Nation
Figures compiled by Tech Nation and Dealroom for the Digital Economy Council show that investors continue to back some of the UK’s most promising tech teams, despite the challenges posed by Covid-19.
As members of the UK tech sector meet virtually during #LTWConnects events, figures show UK digital tech companies are continuing to attract investment, are still advertising vacancies and are optimistic that they can navigate the crisis. On measures including investment raised by companies and capital raised by investors - which will help sustain the sector for the long term - the UK outperforms all of its European neighbours.
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Data Work: Bridging Data Journalism and Digital Social Research
1. DATA WORK
BRIDGING DATA JOURNALISM
& DIGITAL SOCIAL RESEARCH
LILIANA BOUNEGRU
(@BB_LILIANA)
University of Groningen / Ghent
lilianabounegru.org
JONATHAN GRAY
(@JWYG)
University of Bath
jonathangray.org
2. DATA WORK IN JOURNALISM
AND SOCIAL RESEARCH
AREAS AND FORMATS
OF COLLABORATION
11. I. There are similarities between data work in
data journalism and digital research.
12. Discussion with Bruno Latour about the use of digital methods for data journalism.
Tow Center for Digital Journalism, Columbia University, September 2014.
13. TCAT
Issue Crawler60+ tools from the Digital Methods Initiative,
the médialab at Sciences Po and Density Design.
http://tools.digitalmethods.net
http://tools.medialab.sciences-po.fr
28. Data
Journalists
NOTES
Total spending, 2010/2011
£691.67bn
+0.34%change after
inflation on 2009/10
SOURCES: GUARDIAN DATA RESEARCH, DEPARTMENTAL RESOURCE
ACCOUNTS, INSTITUTE FOR FISCAL STUDIES, PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
STATISTICAL ANALYSES (PESA)
RESEARCH: SIMON ROGERS, AMI SEDGHI, GEMMA TETLOW
GRAPHIC: JENNY RIDLEY, MICHAEL ROBINSON
Public spending by the UK's central government departments, 2010-2011
Cabinet Office
£0.570bn -7.47%
National school of government (NSG) £0.023bn
House of Commons
£0.164bn
Independent Parliamentary
Standards Authority[8] £0.126bn
New department
Office of communications (Ofcom) [7]
from government funding
(rest from licence fees)
£0.122bn -13.1%
UK trade & investment
(UKTI) £0.085bn -12.5%
House of Lords
£0.077bn -22.3%
National Audit Office
£0.069bn +7.9%
Office of fair trading (OFT)
£0.058bn -9.2%
Revenue & customs
Prosecutions office (RCPO)
£0.046bn -1.1%
Serious fraud office (SFO) £0.036bn -12.5%
Charity commission for England and Wales £0.030bn -4.6%
Office of rail regulation (ORR) £0.028bn -11.0%
Electoral commission £0.022bn -2.2%
Government actuary's department (GAD) £0.019bn +17.4%
Postal services commission
(Postcomm) £0.0082bn -2.1%
Attorney general's office (see also LSLO) £0.0049bn -8.7%
HM crown prosecution service
inspectorate £0.0034bn -27.7%
The figures give a picture of major expenditure but exclude local
government spending not controlled by central government. We don't
have room to show everything — some programmes are just too small to
go here, but this gives a flavour of where your tax pounds go. It also
excludes government departments that are predominantly financed
bytheir income, such as the Crown Estate or the Export Credits Guarantee
Department. The totals here add up to more than the total budget,
because some of the smaller government departments are funded via the
larger ones, such as the Parliamentary Counsel Office, funded via the
Cabinet Office.
ALL % CHANGES TAKE ACCOUNT OF INFLATION
[1] Interest paid on the public debt.
[2] Treasury spending in 2008-09 and 2009-10 was dominated by the
impact of interventions in the financial sector — the figure shown here is
gross spending. In fact, in 2010-11 the net effect of financial stability
activities was to yield income to the Treasury. Loans to financial
institutions were repaid to the Treasury in 2010-11 and there was no
further purchase of shares and other assets in the year — so we have
shown the core department spending separately. The increase is due to
the provision for Equitable Life.
[3] The Rural Payments Agency distributes CAP payments — covered by
transfers from EU so do not show up as net spending here.
[4] Benefit spending excludes child benefit, guardians' allowance,
widows’ pensions, statutory paternity pay, statutory
adoption pay — these paid by HMRC, MoD, DBERR respectively.
[5] Excludes spending on family health services. GP running cost
includes salaries, hospitality budgets, home and overseas
accommodation costs.
[6] Totals absent from MoD annual report and supplied separately to
other figures by the department.
[7] The amount of government funding from BIS and DCMS, rest from
licence fees from broadcasters and media organisations.
[8] MPs’ expenses now administered by the Independent Parliamentary
Standards Authority (IPSA).
[9] This includes increase of £5bn in est. liabilities for the UK’s nuclear
legacy over the 100 years. It is NOT allocated for spending in one year.
Excl. this DECC’s total expenditure for 2010/11 is therefore £3.16bn with
£1.7bn of that allocated to the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
Main pension schemes are forecasts for 2010-11
Debt interest [1]
£43.90bn
+36.2%
Child trust fund
£0.23bn
-28.12%
Tax credits
£28.09bn
+23.08%
Child
benefit
£12.05 bn
-1.9%
HM Revenue
& Customs [8]
£45.78bn
-1.09%
Social justice &
Local government
Environment, sustainability
& housing £0.794bn +5.8%
Rural
affairs
£0.134bn
-14.7%
Heritage
£0.183bn -3.8%
Health & social
services
Children, education,
lifelong learning & skills
£2.19bn +0.8%
Economy & transport
£1.05bn -40.0%
£6.61bn
+5.21%
£4.47bn
-1.73%
£15.87bn
-3.92%
Devolved
spending
Wales
Wales Office (WO)
£0.0050bn -12.1%
£18.76bn
+3.2%
£14.09bn
+11.5%
Higher &
further education
Universities
Further
education
£24.04bn
-11.52%
Department
for Business,
Innovation and
Skills
£4.67bn
-15.8%£3.0bn
-5.4%
£5.86bn
-5.0%
Science
Innovation & enterprise
£1.36bn -16.1%
Free & fair markets
£0.72bn -7.6%
Professional support
£0.38bn -2.2%
Research
councils
Roads
Rail
London £2.77bn+1.3%
Local authority
£1.17bn +0.5%
Supported capital expenditure
(Revenue) £0.975bn +5.0%
Buses £0.771bn -1.8%
Olympics £0.236bn +12.9%
Crossrail £0.220bn
Admin £0.188bn -5.6%
DVLA trading fund £0.187bn -20.4%
Coastguard £0.132bn -11.1%
Aviation, maritime, security & safety £0.129bn -39.7%
Sustainable travel £0.115bn -19.1%
Science, research & support functions £0.042bn -60.2%
Renewable fuels agency £0.001bn +4.0%£12.32bn
-18.3%
Department for Transport
£3.79bn
-18.2%
£2.93bn
-41.1%
UK border agency
£1.70bn -3.4%
Police pensions
£1.44bn -7.2%
Office for security &
counter-terrorism
£0.808bn -3.7%
AME charges £0.399bn +367.2%
Central services £0.204bn -22.6% Area-based grants £0.071bn -14.5%
European solidarity mechanism £0.022bn
Government equalities office £0.012bn -19.4%
Identity & passport service £0.005bn -94.7%
National fraud authority £0.004bn -1.0%
£10.45bn
+-7.69%
Home Office
Crime &
policing
Criminal records bureau £0.001bn +116.5%
£5.6bn
-3.2%
£37.8bn
-7.51%
Neighbourhoods Localism
London
governance
£0.048bn -2.8%
£6.0bn
-38.5%
£25.9bn
-2.5%
Spending by local
& regional government
£3.0bn
+90.8%
Foreign and
Commonwealth Office
£2.25bn -3.0% [6]
Admin & embassies
£1.09bn -3.9%
Peacekeeping grants
£0.408bn +10.7%
UN & other international
organisations £0.294bn -0.2%
BBC World Service £0.265bn -4.3%
British Council £0.189bn -8.7%
Conflict prevention programme
Grants £0.106bn -6.4%
Non-departmental bodies £0.006bn -2.9%
Scotland Office (SO)
£0.0078bn -5.9%
Health &
wellbeing
Local
Government
Finance and
sustainable
growth
Education & lifelong
learning
£2.88bn +0.2%
Scottish teachers' & NHS
pension schemes
£2.52bn -9.2%
Justice £1.95bn +2.6%
Rural affairs & the
Environment £0.517bn -8.1%
Office of the first minister
£0.267bn -2.1%
Admin £0.264bn -6.0%
Crown office and procurator fiscal £0.120bn -2.1%
Scottish parliament corporate body £0.102bn -4.2%
Scottish courts service £0.098bn
Forestry commission (Scotland) £0.096bn -0.2%
£34.88bn
+2.95%
Devolved
spending
Scotland
£12.29bn
+14.4%
£10.52bn
-0.8%
£3.20bn
-8.5%
War pensions
£0.935bn -7.3%
Army
Royal
Navy
Royal
Air
Force
Chief, joint ops
£0.047bn -89.9%
Operations &
peace-keeping
Afghanistan
Iraq
£0.095bn -73.1%
Libya
£0.022bn
Equipment
& support
Central
command
Admin
£2.03bn -8.1%
£22.77bn
+31.7%
£7.29bn
+6.7%
£2.84bn
-1.9%
£2.89bn
+4.7%£3.77bn
-4.1%
£2.31bn
+0.7%
Defence
estates
£4.66bn
+25.0%
£2.63bn
-6.2%
Ministry of
Defence [6]
£39.46bn
-1.95%
Devolved spending
Northern Ireland
£9.05bn
-2.01%
£4.5bn
-1.1%
£2.1bn
-5.1%
Education
Regional development
£1.07bn +30.9%
Employment and learning
£0.837bn -0.02%
Social development
£0.791bn +1.5%
Environment £0.312bn +100.3%Enterprise, trade & investment
£0.273bn -7.8%
Finance and personnel
£0.198bn +5.8%
Culture, arts and leisure £0.173bn -8.6%
Office of the first minister & deputy first minister
£0.090bn -11.1%
Northern Ireland Assembly £0.052bn +15.6%
Agriculture & rural development £0.051bn -79.9%
Other departments £0.022bn -0.6%
Northern Ireland Office (NIO)
£0.039bn +0.9%
Northern Ireland human rights
Commission £0.0016bn -4.0%
Prisons & probation (National
Offender Management Service)Criminal legal aid £1.22bn +7.8%
HM Courts Service £0.999bn +25.3%
Civil legal aid £0.921bn -6.8%
Policy, corporate services &
Associated offices £0.917bn +51.1%
Youth justice board £0.467bn -6.2%
Criminal injuries compensation authority
£0.426bn +312.5%
Tribunals service
£0.279bn -9.8%
Top judicial salaries
£0.143bn -3.6%
Legal services commission administration
£0.136bn -0.1%
Central funds £0.078bn -14.3%
HM courts & tribunals service
£0.012bn -93.8%
Parole board £0.010bn +11.7%
Ministry of Justice
£9.46bn
+1.0%
£4.22bn
-11.0%
Health protection agency
£0.177bn -25.1%
Department
of Health
£105.60bn
+0.28%
NHS
£87.61bn
+1.29%
[5]
Secondary
health care
(hospitals etc)
Primary
healthcare
GP
servicesPrescriptions
Dental
Opthalmic
£0.48bn
-0.7%
Pharmacy
£1.98bn-3.1%
Learning
difficulties
Mental
illness
Maternity
General & acute
A & E
Community
health
Other
contractual
£8.29bn
+1.3%
£7.68bn
-1.6%
£21.37bn
-0.54%
£66.10bn
+2.08%
£38.91bn
+1.9%
£2.58bn
+0.5%
£3.06bn
+6.6%
£8.37bn
+0.7%
£8.41bn
+2.5%
£2.53bn
+2.2%
£2.22bn
+5.3%
£2.82bn
+0.18%
Schools
Department
for
Education
£52.81bn
+1.12%
£58.34bn
-0.24%
Office for standards
In education (Ofsted)
£0.182bn -12.5%
£5.86bn
-13.2 %
£6.03bn
+2.3%
Department for Work
& Pensions [4]
£160.68bn
+0.21%
Benefit spending
in Great Britain
£152.35bn
+0.60%
State pensions
Pension
credit
Income
support
Incapacity benefit &
employment &
support allowance
Other
Council
tax benefit
Jobseeker's
allowance
Winter fuel
payments
Statutory maternity pay
£1.99bn -3.1%
£21.61bn
+5.0%
£17.17bn
+0.7%
£8.18bn
-2.3%
£7.78bn
-9.8%
£7.76bn
+12.7%
£5.86bn
-9.9%
£4.97bn
+2.8%
£4.50bn
-6.8%
£2.75bn
-2.3%
£69.78bn
+1.31%
Disability
living allowance
& attendance
allowance
Housing
benefit
Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs [3]
Food standards agency
£0.072bn -41.7%
Water services regulation authority
(Ofwat) £0.017bn -3.4%
Environmental risk and emergencies
£1.021bn -4.6%
Environment agency
£0.832bn +4.2%
Environment £0.865bn -16.3%
Natural England £0.213bn -20.6%
Department £0.267bn -15.9%
Rural payments agency £0.228bn -40.8%
Sustainable consumption & production £0.122bn -40.8%
Farming £0.093bn -12.2%
Rural communities £0.073bn -10.4%
Forestry commission £0.045bn -11.0%
Marine management organisation
£0.032bn +0.9%
Royal botanic gardens, Kew £0.025bn -16.8%
Climate change £0.018bn -23.2%
Sustainable development £0.008bn +2.9%
Food supply £0.003bn -31.2%
£2.69bn
-15.22%
Nuclear
Decommissioning
Authority
Low carbon UK £0.623bn -29.2%
Promoting low carbon technologies
in developing countries £0.279bn +159.5%
Professional support & infrastructure
£0.118bn -7.6%
Historic energy liabilities £0.104bn -106.8%
Energy £0.087bn +3.3%
Coal authority £0.071bn +87.0%
International agreement on
climate change £0.005bn +22.4%
Committee on climate
change £0.004bn +12.2%
£6.93bn
+81.1%
Department of Energy &
Climate Change[9]
See note
£8.06bn
+146.0%
Department for
International Development
Country
programmes
Africa
£1.87bn +10.1%
Sub-Saharan Africa
£1.76bn +11.1%
Americas £0.073bn +8.9%
Asia £1.09bn -2.5%
Europe £0.018bn -16.8%
Pacific £0.003bn +19.6%
Commonwealth &
overseas territories
£1.65bn +14.8%
Overseas territories
£0.059bn +14.7%
World Bank
£0.927bn +60.8%
Debt relief
£0.066bn +24.0% European Commission
£1.27bn +3.8%United Nations
£0.355bn +59.5%
£7.69bn
+12.65%
£3.18bn
-22.1%
Equitable Life payment scheme
£1.49bn
BoE dividend £0.063bn
DMO £0.001bn -2.9%Other functions £0.011bn -2.9%
Banking & gilts registration services £0.011bn -11.0%
UK debt management office (DMO) £0.015bn -9.0%
Coinage £0.034bn +17.9%
Core treasury & group shared services £0.176bn -14.5%
Her Majesty’s Treasury [2]
£1.678bn +870.0%
Department of
Communities
and Local
Government
National savings and investments
£0.162bn -1.1%
Office for Budget Responsibility
£0.0017bn New department
Financial stability
/financial
institutions
£13.79bn
Money in
Money in
Constitution group £0.006bn -34.4%
Security and intelligence services
£1.909bn +1.3%
Cabinet Office £0.206bn +2.3%
Office for civil society £0.192bn -17.6%
General election funding £0.102bn +4.1%
Executive non-departmental bodies £0.030bn -22.7%
Directgov £0.023bn -15.7%
Cabinet Office service concession - DEL £0.011bn +160.2%
Cabinet Office utilisation of provisions £0.003bn +1.5%
Members of the European parliament (MEP) £0.002bn -54.8%
Executive NDPBs (net) £0.002bn -39.9%
Independent offices - civil service commissioners £0.001bn -29.5%
BBC
Lottery grants
Museums & galleries £0.427bn -2.6%
Tate gallery £0.055bn-5.1%
Natural history museum
£0.049bn-7.8%
British museum £0.046bn-6.9%
Victoria & Albert museum
£0.044bn-3.8%
NM Liverpool £0.024bn-1.9%
Olympics
£0.362bn
-12.7 %
Sport £0.193bn-13.4%
Sport England £0.121bn-12.3%
Broadcasting and media £0.151bn+0.9%
S4C £0.100bn-4.5%
Libraries sponsored bodies £0.133bn-3.9%
British library £0.106bn-6.1%
Tourism £0.042bn-14.1%
Ceremonial & heritage £0.025bn+25.0%
Royal parks £0.019bn -11.5%
Department for Culture
Media & Sport
£7.02bn
-0.7%
Arts £0.455bn-1.57%
Arts council £0.438bn-6.0%
£2.96bn
-8.7%
£1.81bn
+0.4%
Principal civil
service pension
scheme
Sure Start (including
childcare & nursery funding)
£2.12bn+10.3%
£7.5bn
£5.1bn
£3.6bn
Teachers'
pension
scheme
£6.9bn
NHS
pension
scheme
Armed forces
pension scheme
£1bn
Northern Ireland executive
pension schemes
Judicial pension scheme
£0.1bn
Investment in
school buildings
Academies
£2.08bn+58.8%
School meals
£0.006bn-55.2%
Free schools
£0.006bn
Learning and skills council
(excluding sixth form funding)
Sixth forms (through
Learning and skills council)
£2.18bn-4.0%
Early years
£2.14bn+9.0%
Admin
£0.25bn
-28.5%
Education, standards,
curriculum & qualifications
£0.63bn-24.5%
Workforce training & development
£1.04bn-6.6%
Children & families
£2.0bn-31.3%
UK atomic energy
authority pension scheme
£0.2bn
58. “The critic is not the one who debunks, but the one
who assembles. The critic is not the one who lifts the
rugs from under the feet of the naïve believers, but
the one who offers the participants arenas in which to
gather” (Bruno Latour, 2004: 246).
68. AREAS AND FORMATS OF COLLABORATION
I. Shaping the future of big data.
II. Creating “just good enough” data.
III. Aligning data work with broader societal concerns
IV. Archiving data projects.
V. Expanding visual imagination.
VI. Learning and collaborating through “data sprints”.
DATA WORK IN JOURNALISM AND SOCIAL RESEARCH
I. There are similarities between data work in data journalism and digital research.
II. Data tools are attuned to different ways of knowing and ways of working.
III. There are many different types of “data work”.
IV. There are different ways of valorising and evaluating data.
V. Different forms of data work require different kinds of tools.
VI. A single tool can be used in different ways in different contexts.