Dear Colleagues,

 

 

I am very happy to share with you a call for participation to a workshop exploring critical perspectives on data access for research, organised 16 March 2023. Note that you can also join as a participant (not an author). The CfP deadline is 16 January 2023.

All information can be found attached, below, and on https://www.ivir.nl/radi/.

In case of questions, don’t hesitate to contact me.

 

 

Critical Perspectives on

Data Access for Research

 

We invite abstract submissions and expressions of interest for an

international workshop on Research Access to Digital Infrastructures (RADI),

hosted by the University of Amsterdam

on 16 March 2023.

 

The RADI workshop will bring together a diverse crowd of academics with different backgrounds and perspectives, and is aimed at critically exploring key issues relating to the regulation of access to data for research and provide a platform to discuss ongoing work. This workshop is organised in tandem with a hands-on workshop on Research Access in the Digital Services Act (DSA), 15 March.

 

Throughout the last decade, concerns have been growing over the (lack of) transparency of digital infrastructures. Notably, (academic) researchers have decried the many obstacles preventing them from observing and scrutinising privately-held data. At the same time, the EU regulator has put forward a barrage of legislation purported to boost transparency and facilitate data access, primarily in light of internal market goals. Yet, data access for research only features in the margins of these (proposed) data regulations, if at all. Still, the observability of digital infrastructures is vital, not just from a market perspective or for holding power to account, but also for scrutinising the (individual and societal) impact of these infrastructures and observing the world in general. There is a clear need for critical and global reflection on how new data access rules shape research agendas but also on the positionality of different actors in these debates.

The RADI workshop aims to provide a platform for critical reflection on these matters. It will bring together a small group of scholars with different backgrounds and levels of seniority, to conduct in-depth discussions. In order to achieve this, the workshop will primarily centre around work-in-progress of selected participants. We therefore invite people from different disciplines to submit short ideas and provocations to be workshopped at the event. We particularly (though not exclusively) welcome perspectives from the following communities and fields: critical legal studies, science and technology studies, law and political economy, critical data studies and digital humanities. Selected authors are expected to develop their ideas into a draft paper that will be shared and discussed during the workshop. Building on this, the papers can then be further developed for publication in a curated international peer-reviewed publication.

Limited spots are also available for people who wish to participate, without submitting any work-in-progress. Indeed, in order to ensure the quality of discussions and allow for adequate preparation time, only a select number of submissions will be workshopped. If you are interested in participating without submitting a working paper, please let us know as well.

We are interested in understanding how academics examine questions of data access, both within the EU and globally, in order to ascertain what kind of strategies to acquire and use data meaningfully as well as ways of resisting power that are being developed in different jurisdictions. Submissions can (but do not have to) relate to any of the following issues and themes:

 

 

Important dates

 

Practical Information

 

 

Organisers

Jef Ausloos (University of Amsterdam – IViR)

Siddharth Peter de Souza (Tilburg University – TILT)

 

 

https://www.ivir.nl/radi/