Presentation given at the Kick-Off-Workshop "Broadcasting in the Post-Broadcasting-Era. Policy, Technology and Content". School of Communication, Media and Theatre. University of Tampere, March 29, 2014.
Using Minecraft for community engagement and public space designmysociety
This was presented by Pontus Westerberg from UN-Habitat at the Impacts of Civic Technology Conference (TICTeC2016) in Barcelona on 27th April. You can find out more information about the conference here: https://www.mysociety.org/research/tictec-2016/
Pauline Riordan Dublinked Smart Dublin Launch 8th March 16Mainard Gallagher
Pauline Riordan has worked for over 16 years in Irish local government in a number of roles including open data, strategic design, stakeholder engagement and urban planning. Since 2015 she is the manager of the Dublinked Open Data Platform and innovation network, dealing with data, smart city and research issues both regionally and internationally. Pauline has qualifications in urban planning, urban design and architecture and has a keen interest in sustainable living, future cities and new models of collaborative urbanism.
Electronic Open and Collaborative Governance - An Overviewsamossummit
An introduction to the electronic open and collaborative governance for the summer school participants, aiming to provide background knowledge.
Euripidis Loukis, University of the Aegean, Greece
Using Minecraft for community engagement and public space designmysociety
This was presented by Pontus Westerberg from UN-Habitat at the Impacts of Civic Technology Conference (TICTeC2016) in Barcelona on 27th April. You can find out more information about the conference here: https://www.mysociety.org/research/tictec-2016/
Pauline Riordan Dublinked Smart Dublin Launch 8th March 16Mainard Gallagher
Pauline Riordan has worked for over 16 years in Irish local government in a number of roles including open data, strategic design, stakeholder engagement and urban planning. Since 2015 she is the manager of the Dublinked Open Data Platform and innovation network, dealing with data, smart city and research issues both regionally and internationally. Pauline has qualifications in urban planning, urban design and architecture and has a keen interest in sustainable living, future cities and new models of collaborative urbanism.
Electronic Open and Collaborative Governance - An Overviewsamossummit
An introduction to the electronic open and collaborative governance for the summer school participants, aiming to provide background knowledge.
Euripidis Loukis, University of the Aegean, Greece
PR 313 - Media Regulation & PR/Preparing your ResumeBrett Atwood
This is a two-part PR lecture. Part 1 deals with various media regulations and rules to consider when conducting a media campaign. Part 2 is a basic overview of resume crafting for PR professionals.
Workshop “New Directions in Communication Policy Research”
ECREA Section “Communication Law and Policy”
Zürich, November 6-7, 2009.
Christian Katzenbach
Institute for Media and Communication Studies
Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Icons by Melih Bilgil, http://www.picol.org/, under CC BY-SA
This is the presentation of Pieter Jan Valgaeren, Eva Lievens, Peggy Valcke of the ICRI research group KU Leuven at the IAMCR conference in Istanbul, July 2011
Competitive intelligence for multimodal data integrationAshley M. Richter
What are some of the areas to watch to determine how things are going and what groups will get there first with respective to innovative multimodal data integration and visualization systems.
vsia gin s ar
Presentation we used at the "Local Digital Democracy" lab from the World Forum for Democracy. The Forum was hosted by the Council of Europe, 27-29.11.2013
The presentation includes animations, so you better download it and watch it using Powerpoint.
Understanding Impact: mySociety's year in researchmysociety
This was presented by mySociety's Head of Research, Rebecca Rumbul, at the Impacts of Civic Technology Conference (TICTeC2016) in Barcelona on 27th April. You can find out more information about the conference here: https://www.mysociety.org/research/tictec-2016/
Damien Lanfrey and Donatella Solda. How to design impactful participatory policy processes and leverage innovation in policy design.
First presented at the Service Design Master Degree @ Poli.Design in Milan, March 20th 2015.
How to design impactful participatory policy processes and how to leverage innovation in policy design [with Donatella Solda].
First presented at the Service Design Master Degree @ Poli.Design in Milan, March 20th 2015.
Participants at CKX were among the first to hear the breakthrough concept from best selling author, strategist and disruptive thinker Don Tapscott (@dtapscott) on how institutions, companies and governments can unlock data, knowledge and ideas to create truly vibrant and open communities and cities in his keynote address.
Tapscott is ranked by Thinkers50 as the one of the most important management thinkers in the world. In his keynote address at CKX, presented by Manulife Asset Management, Tapscott shared a radically new concept of the city. What if institutions opened up and shared data, knowledge and ideas — everything from local government, public transportation, traffic, hospitals, universities, schools, shopping malls, to the power grid, research laboratories and community organizations. “We can create the city as a platform” says Tapscott, “supercharging entrepreneurship, jobs, prosperity, science, learning, sustainability, public safety and good government.”
The author or co-author of 15 books including Radical Openness, Macrowikinomics and Grown Up Digital, Tapscott explained how The Open City is not just a vision, it’s also within our reach.
We live in a “digital” world, the separation between physical and virtual makes (almost) no sense anymore. Here, the Corona pandemic has also acted as an accelerator/magnifier demonstrating that the future of our digital society is here with all its possibilities, but also shortcomings.
In his talk, Hannes Werthner will briefly reflect on the history of computer science, and then discuss the need for an interdisciplinary response to these shortcomings. Such an answer is the Digital Humanism, which looks at this interplay of technology and humankind, it analyzes, and, most importantly, tries to influence the complex interplay of technology and humankind, for a better society and life. In the second part he will discuss this approach, and show what was achieved since its first workshop in 2019, and what lies ahead.
Slides presented by David Wood, Executive Director of Transpolitica, at the London Futurists event "Anticipating Tomorrow's Politics" on Saturday 21st March 2015. See http://www.meetup.com/London-Futurists/events/220967752/ for more about this meeting, and http://transpolitica.org/ for more about Transpolitica.
PR 313 - Media Regulation & PR/Preparing your ResumeBrett Atwood
This is a two-part PR lecture. Part 1 deals with various media regulations and rules to consider when conducting a media campaign. Part 2 is a basic overview of resume crafting for PR professionals.
Workshop “New Directions in Communication Policy Research”
ECREA Section “Communication Law and Policy”
Zürich, November 6-7, 2009.
Christian Katzenbach
Institute for Media and Communication Studies
Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Icons by Melih Bilgil, http://www.picol.org/, under CC BY-SA
This is the presentation of Pieter Jan Valgaeren, Eva Lievens, Peggy Valcke of the ICRI research group KU Leuven at the IAMCR conference in Istanbul, July 2011
Competitive intelligence for multimodal data integrationAshley M. Richter
What are some of the areas to watch to determine how things are going and what groups will get there first with respective to innovative multimodal data integration and visualization systems.
vsia gin s ar
Presentation we used at the "Local Digital Democracy" lab from the World Forum for Democracy. The Forum was hosted by the Council of Europe, 27-29.11.2013
The presentation includes animations, so you better download it and watch it using Powerpoint.
Understanding Impact: mySociety's year in researchmysociety
This was presented by mySociety's Head of Research, Rebecca Rumbul, at the Impacts of Civic Technology Conference (TICTeC2016) in Barcelona on 27th April. You can find out more information about the conference here: https://www.mysociety.org/research/tictec-2016/
Damien Lanfrey and Donatella Solda. How to design impactful participatory policy processes and leverage innovation in policy design.
First presented at the Service Design Master Degree @ Poli.Design in Milan, March 20th 2015.
How to design impactful participatory policy processes and how to leverage innovation in policy design [with Donatella Solda].
First presented at the Service Design Master Degree @ Poli.Design in Milan, March 20th 2015.
Participants at CKX were among the first to hear the breakthrough concept from best selling author, strategist and disruptive thinker Don Tapscott (@dtapscott) on how institutions, companies and governments can unlock data, knowledge and ideas to create truly vibrant and open communities and cities in his keynote address.
Tapscott is ranked by Thinkers50 as the one of the most important management thinkers in the world. In his keynote address at CKX, presented by Manulife Asset Management, Tapscott shared a radically new concept of the city. What if institutions opened up and shared data, knowledge and ideas — everything from local government, public transportation, traffic, hospitals, universities, schools, shopping malls, to the power grid, research laboratories and community organizations. “We can create the city as a platform” says Tapscott, “supercharging entrepreneurship, jobs, prosperity, science, learning, sustainability, public safety and good government.”
The author or co-author of 15 books including Radical Openness, Macrowikinomics and Grown Up Digital, Tapscott explained how The Open City is not just a vision, it’s also within our reach.
We live in a “digital” world, the separation between physical and virtual makes (almost) no sense anymore. Here, the Corona pandemic has also acted as an accelerator/magnifier demonstrating that the future of our digital society is here with all its possibilities, but also shortcomings.
In his talk, Hannes Werthner will briefly reflect on the history of computer science, and then discuss the need for an interdisciplinary response to these shortcomings. Such an answer is the Digital Humanism, which looks at this interplay of technology and humankind, it analyzes, and, most importantly, tries to influence the complex interplay of technology and humankind, for a better society and life. In the second part he will discuss this approach, and show what was achieved since its first workshop in 2019, and what lies ahead.
Slides presented by David Wood, Executive Director of Transpolitica, at the London Futurists event "Anticipating Tomorrow's Politics" on Saturday 21st March 2015. See http://www.meetup.com/London-Futurists/events/220967752/ for more about this meeting, and http://transpolitica.org/ for more about Transpolitica.
Algorithmic Culture & Maker Culture; Breaches and Bridges in the Platform Eco...Raúl Tabarés Gutiérrez
During last year’s different platforms have emerged on the Internet and have become common in our everyday living. These new digital companies have succeed in positioning themselves as cultural intermediaries in a growing trend towards the digitization of society favoured by the irruption of different technologies, new forms of value-creating human activities and the decentralization effect that Internet culture helps to create.
In this sense, the growing importance of digital ecosystems in human processes & decisions has nurtured an algorithmic culture that symbolizes our current declining of autonomy in the social sphere. This disruption in the cultural landscape has been supported by the introduction of different “black-boxes” that impede to ascertain what the inner workings of these new socio-technological brokers are.
On the contrary, we can observe how different grassroots initiatives that promote technological appropriation and digital empowerment like the Maker Movement are also becoming globally recognized and institutionally supported. These movements rely on Free Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) and Hardware for opening black-boxes and promoting critical thinking about technology in citizenship.
In this contribution we would like to explore the several convergences and divergences that are present in these two different cultures to shed some light in the complicated new techno-realities that have risen. Finally, we conclude with a set of several key guidelines that can help to policy-makers to promote new updated legislations.
Künstliche Intelligenz und Algorithmen – Ethische und politische Herausforder...Christian Katzenbach
Vortrag beim Neusser Wirtschaftstreff in fünf Thesen:
These 1: Die KI-Debatte ist derzeit stark überhitzt. Deshalb ist sie aber nicht irrelevant
These 2: Wir erleben derzeit eine beschleunigte Automatisierung sozialer Verhältnisse. Dabei werden komplexe soziale Phänomene in berechenbare Abläufe übersetzt.
These 3: Technik ist immer politisch. Sie setzt sich nicht funktional durch, sondern sozial
These 4: Die höchste Relevanz und den größten Impact haben KI- Technologien und Automatisierung, wenn sie unsichtbar bleiben.
These 5: Gesellschaftliche Gestaltung ist möglich! Die digitale Transformation erzeugt derzeit genuin politische Momente am laufenden Band..
Governing Platforms by Algorithms? Digital Sovereignty and the Technological ...Christian Katzenbach
Digital Science Match Berlin, 12 May 2017
Digital platforms such as Facebook, Google and Twitter have become key intermediaries for public and personal communication (and much more). Recently, we have seen many conflicts and controversies around rules and rule-setting on these platforms: Who is setting the rules for communication on these platforms? How should we respond to Hate Speech and Fake News? What should platforms do? Is algorithmic filtering, is the technological fix the way out for all these problems? And what do these policy and technological options means for digital sovereignty?
Algorithmen, Daten und schwarze Kisten: Zur (Wieder-)Entdeckung der Technik i...Christian Katzenbach
Vortrag auf der Tagung “Digitale Kommunikation: Zum Stand der Forschung". Jahrestagung der DGPuK- Fachgruppe Digitale Kommunikation. 4. - 5. November 2016, Technische Universität Braunschweig.
Dieser Beitrag entwickelt die These, dass sich in den vergangenen Jahren innerhalb der Kommunikationswissenschaft eine Wiederentdeckung der Technik beobachten lässt. Algorithmen, Daten und Infrastrukturen werden zunehmend zu Gegenständen kommunikationswissenschaftlicher Forschung. Sie werden dabei nicht mehr nur als Auslöser oder als Umwelt des eigentlich Interessanten verstanden – seien es journalistische Arbeitsprozesse, Dynamiken öffentlicher Kommunikation oder Strukturen der Medienökonomie - und -politik. Stattdessen geraten ihre eigene Konstruktion und ihre Einbindung in mediales Handeln in den Fokus der Betrachtung (etwa Katzenbach 2013; Gillespie 2014; Heise 2014; Brüggemann et al. 2014). Ihre Ausgestaltung scheint derzeit so relevant für die Analyse kommunikativer Prozesse zu sein, dass sie nicht länger als Black Box verstanden werden können.
Auf der Grundlage einer Durchsicht von Technik-Konzeptionen in der Kommunikationswissenschaft, sowie techniksoziologischen und institutionentheoretischen Arbeiten zum Verhältnis von Technik und Gesellschaft liefert der Beitrag erstens den Versuch einer Erklärung für die gegenwärtige Wiederentdeckung der Technik. Zweitens formuliert der Beitrag Elemente eines kommunikationswissenschaftlichen Vokabulars für die Beschreibung von Technik in Kommunikationsprozessen jenseits des üblichen Entweder-Oder von technikdeterministischen und kulturalistischen Perspektiven. Drittens lassen sich auf dieser Basis Besonderheiten digitaler Technik herausarbeiten.
Dieser Beitrag adressiert damit primär den Aufruf der Tagungsveranstalter, die theoretischen Perspektiven in der Forschung zu digitaler Kommunikation zu reflektieren und weiterzuentwickeln.
Vortrag "Governance durch Algorithmen? 'Politics of Platforms' und die Ordnun...Christian Katzenbach
Gastvortrag "Governance durch Algorithmen? "Politics of Platforms" und die Ordnung des Netzes" im Rahmen der Vorlesungsreihe "Kollektives Handeln im Internet".
Universität Stuttgart, Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Abteilung für Organisations- und Innovationssoziologie
Plakat der Vorlesungsreihe: http://www.uni-stuttgart.de/soz/oi/aktuelles/Kollektives_Handeln_im_Internet.pdf (pdf)
Digitale Objekte in digitalen Öffentlichkeiten: Die Rolle von Hashtags in po...Christian Katzenbach
Vortrag auf der DGPuK 2014, 29. Mai 2014, Passau
Digitale Öffentlichkeiten und ihre Rolle in der Politik stehen schon länger im Fokus der kommunikationswissenschaftlichen Internetforschung. Mit der breiten Etablierung sozialer Medien – auch als Forschungsobjekt – zeigt sich indes, dass Plattformen wie Facebook oder Twitter mehr als eine reine Vermittlerrolle in digitalen Öffentlichkeiten zukommt: Indem diese Plattformen die Kommunikation, die über sie stattfindet, konfigurieren, tragen sie maßgeblich zur Entstehung, Aufrechterhaltung und Auflösung digitaler Öffentlichkeiten bei – und präformieren diese auch in Struktur und Inhalt.
Unser Beitrag untersucht deshalb die Rolle von digitale Objekten in digitalen Öffentlichkeiten im Kontext der Mehr-Ebenen-Modelle von Öffentlichkeit von Gerhards/Neidhart und Klaus. Wir betrachten die plattformspezifischen Konfigurationen und hinterfragen dabei, wie digitale Öffentlichkeiten entstehen und wie sie sich stabilisieren. Anhand zweier jüngerer Fallbeispiele – #aufschrei und #bürgerforum – analysieren wir mit unterschiedlichen Methoden, welche Rolle Hashtags als „digital social objects” zukommt.
Zur Dynamik von Öffentlichkeiten in Kneipen und Weblogs, auf Facebook und Twitter.
Vortrag auf der ExpertInnen-Tagung "Das 3-Ebenen-Modell von Öffentlichkeit“,
Universität Salzburg, 12.-13. Dezember 2013.
Christian Katzenbach
Institute for Media and Communication Studies
Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Young European Researchers Seminar on New Media Studies
Institute of Journalism and Social Communication, University of Wroclaw
Wroclaw, November 17, 2009.
Icons by Melih Bilgil, http://www.picol.org/, under CC BY-SA
Vortrag auf der Tagung "Politik 2.0 – Politik und Computervermittelte Kommunikation" der DGPuK-Fachgruppe “Computervermittelte Kommunikation“, 6. bis 8. November 2008, Ilmenau.
Video-Stream: http://streaming.fem.tu-ilmenau.de/portal/category.query?id=48
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
Technologies in Digital Media Regulation. A Governance Perspective.
1. A Governance Perspective
Technologies in Digital Media Regulation
1
Christian Katzenbach
!
Workshop „Broadcasting in the Post-Broadcasting Era“
University of Tampere
March 29, 2014
2. !2
[.…] a politics deeply embedded not just within the institutions
that design and distribute technologies and services, but within
the technology itself, as software products and information
networks both prescribe and proscribe, configuring suppliers
and users, containing and constraining behaviour, and
embodying in their algorithms and their gateways both the
normative and the seductive.!
!
Mansell /Silverstone, 1996
13. Governance with Sociological Neo-Insitutionalism
!13
Regulative Pillar
Institutions as sanction-based Regulations
!
Normative Pillar
Institutions as normative
Expectations
!
Cultural-Cognitive Pillar
Institutionen as cultural-cognitive Patterns
!
+ Material Dimension
Technological and Material
Manifestation of Institutions
14. Technologies as Institutions?
!14
Impacts of Technology on social
behaviour and sectoral change
1 Political and Social Construction of
Technology
2‣ Technology in Use!
‣ Meaning and Usage are ascribed,
not determined!
‣ Domestication
‣ Technology Development!
‣ „Leitbilder“!
‣ Standardisation!
‣ Regulation
‣ Technology as functional
equivalent!
‣ Durkheim‘s social facts!
‣ Hardened social action and
structured
‣ Technology is Society made
durable
17. Side-path: Technologies as Institutions?
!17
Impacts of Technology on social
behaviour and sectoral change
1 Political and Social Construction of
Technology
2‣ Technology in Use!
‣ Meaning and Usage are ascribed,
not determined!
‣ Domestication
‣ Technology Development!
‣ „Leitbilder“!
‣ Standardisation!
‣ Regulation
‣ Technology as functional
equivalent!
‣ Durkheim‘s social facts!
‣ Hardened social action and
structured
‣ Technology is Society made
durable
18. Governance with Sociological Neo-Insitutionalism
!18
Regulative Pillar
Institutions as sanction-based Regulations
!
Normative Pillar
Institutions as normative
Expectations
!
Cultural-Cognitive Pillar
Institutionen as cultural-cognitive Patterns
!
+ Material Dimension
Technological and Material
Manifestation of Institutions
19. Regulation (+ incl. Private ordering
!
!
(informal) Norms and Practises
!
Discourses and Framings
!
!
Governance and Technology
4 Research Perspectives
!19
Regulative Pillar
Institutions as sanction-based Regulations
!
Normative Pillar
Institutions as normative
Expectations
!
Cultural-Cognitive Pillar
Institutionen as cultural-cognitive Patterns
!
+ Material Dimension
Technological and Material
Manifestation of Institutions
20. Conclusion:
Technologies as Institutions in Media Regulation?
!20
Technologies embody norms,
values and practises
Technologies frame interactions
and expectations
Technologies as integrated part of
the fabric of the social
Technologies in regulatory
constellations
Technologies, interpretative
flexibility and the „best“ solution
21. !21
!
!
Pictures
Bundestag: Times, CC-BY-SA-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia
Commons. URL: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Deutscher_Bundestag_Plenarsaal_Seitenansicht.jpg
DSDS, American Idol, Indian Idol: Pressematerial der Sender.
Instagram, iTunes: Eigene Screenshots der Websites.
Küche: Cornelius Jacobsen (Riksarkivet, National Archives of Norway. Archivnr: Pa1528_ua2_012. URL: http://
www.flickr.com/photos/national_archives_of_norway/6475926375/)
Laurel Hardy: Dougal McGuire CC-BY-SA 2.0. URL: http://www.flickr.com/photos/tom-margie/1535543995/)
Christian Katzenbach
!
Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet
and Society
Berlin, Germany
katzenbach@hiig.de
Visit our Internet Policy Review under
http://policyreview.info !
for short-form papers on !
Internet Governance!
!
Looking for authors!