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[Commlist] Autumn 2023 speaker series Science, Health, and Data Communications Research
Thu Oct 12 20:11:08 GMT 2023
The Centre for*Science, Health, and Data Communications*Research invites
you to our Autumn 2023 speaker series. Featuring researchers from around
the world, these online talks are open to the public and encompass
topics on crisis communication, climate change and sustainability;
media, data and AI literacy; social justice communication and how the
arts and storytelling can help tackle global challenges.
*All events take place on zoom - Thursdays 16:00-17:00 UK time *
Find out more and [Register%20for%20events%20on%20EventBrite.]Register
for events on EventBrite. (https://bit/ly/SHDCevents
<https://bit/ly/SHDCevents>)
*12/10 Sarah Jones Uncovering a literacy for AI
*Literacies have been well documented from media to the digital and more
recently immersive. With an increase in the use of generative AI tools
and the impact that this is having on an increasing number of sectors,
this talk will argue for the need for an AI literacy. It will examine
frameworks for understanding how to use artificial intelligence and the
need to be constantly evolving our thinking when it comes to technology.
*19/10 Suntosh Pillay The limitations of #BlackLivesMatter
for anti-racist activism in the global south *It is unlikely that you
know the name Collins Khosa. However, you would know the name George
Floyd. This is no accident. The media, as a global epistemic authority,
produces, polices and perpetuates a knowledge system that favours the
Global North. I present a comparative analysis of the murders of Khosa
in South Africa (April 2020) and Floyd in the U.S. (May 2020). Despite
its quasi-universal appeal, Black Lives Matter (BLM) has an ironic
proximity to whiteness within the United States that provide BLM with
epistemic advantages not enjoyed elsewhere, especially in poor
‘township’ contexts of South Africa. I argue that anti-racist activism
in global south contexts must guard against uncritically importing
northern-centric forms of protest, such as #BlackLivesMatter. The US has
particularities that distracts the media gaze, (mis)directing social
justice activism away from black lived experiences in countries such as
South Africa, reinforcing silences, epistemic injustices, and colonial
continuities.
*26/10 Tessa Jolls Media Literacy: A Strategy for Risk Management
in an Uncertain World*With new AI technologies, as well as the cacaphony
of voices that have emerged through social media, it is clear that the
call for a media ecosystem that only contains “the truth” or that
contains little or no misinformation or disinformation is a utopian
dream that only invites more discord and polarization, or worse, highly
contestable labelling and censorship. Meaning lies in the minds and
hearts of information users, and with this recognition, media literacy
offers a pathway toward dialogue and risk management strategies that
encompass both qualitative and quantitative analyses and reflection,
based on a fundamental understanding of media as a global symbolic
system. With this in mind, media literacy offers the questions — not
“the answers” — for exploring and interrogating media in all its forms,
individually and collectively. This empowerment enables wiser choices
throughout life and societies.
*02/11 An Nguyen Global South’s over-reliance on science news from
Global North: causes, consequences and solutions *Developing countries
rely heavily on the developed world for not only scientific expertise
but also science news output. From Africa and the Middle East to South
America and developing parts of Asia, a large proportion of science news
consumed in the Global South has been found to be translated or, at
best, synthesised from foreign sources, especially global media outlets
based in the Global North. Such reliance is a double-edged sword: while
it helps to enhance general awareness and understanding of global
science developments in the Global South, this double-layered structure
of dependency bears many negative long-and short-term implications for
local and global development. Drawing on recent content analyses and
in-depth interviews with science journalists in Southeast Asia and the
Middle East, this paper will address this critically important, but
rarely studied, phenomenon. I will discuss the causes and impacts of
such over-reliance on foreign sources and offers some thoughts on
potential solutions to the problem. In general, this requires a holistic
approach and international cooperation efforts to address the many
traditional shortfalls of science and science news cultures in the
Global South.
*9/11 Sweta Baniya Transnational Assemblages: Social Justice and
Communication During Disaster *
*16/11 Kayla Jones The Power of Podcasting: Audio Storytelling
Beyond Entertainment*With the rise in popularity of audio listening,
podcast studies is a growing field of research that is responding to
podcasts that have gone mainstream, such as Serial. Audio storytelling
podcasts can be a powerful tool to advocate for, connect with, and
educate global audiences. Through creating her own podcast, Kayla
explored the ways storytelling podcasts can tell multilayered narratives
beyond the realm of entertainment and in non-fiction settings, like
heritage and tourism.
*23/11 Antonio Lopez Algorithms and the Climate Emergency:
An Ecomedia Literacy Perspective*Whether it’s blockchain technologies or
disinformation, Big Tech algorithms have a significant environmental
impact. The economic models of surveillance and carbon capitalism are
both based on extractivism, so data harvesting and resources extraction
practices mirror each other in Big Tech algorithms. To encourage a
holistic environmental analysis of algorithms, ecomedia literacy’s four
zone approach enables an investigation from the perspectives of
ecoculture, political ecology, ecomateriality, and lifeworld. For media
literacy educators and reformers, the challenge is to develop curricula
and methods that address these different standpoints, which can include
critical media literacy, design justice, civic media literacies, news
and misinformation literacies, and ethical algorithm audits.
*30/11 Andrea Winkler-Vilhena The art of presence*Throughout
history the Arts have been used to address societal issues, to see and
show the world in diverse ways, and to imagine and create new futures.
Nowadays, every aspect of life has become so entangled with digital
media that it is impossible to speak about the world without considering
the effects they have on our lives. How do we relate to and interact
with people when our attention is absorbed by digital gadgets? What does
presence mean in a world in which a big part of human relationships and
communication happens in virtual spaces? In this lecture we will explore
how the Arts can be used to promote media literacy and how seeing,
interacting with and making art can revive our sense of presence and
promote care and imagination.
*7/12 Annamaria Neag Youth digital activism and online media:
from digital exclusion to the complexities of civic participation*Since
the second half of the 2000s, there has been an increasing interest in
the relationship between internet use and civic participation. While
initially this interest was geared towards the adult population,
researchers have shifted their attention to young people and their
activism in the digital sphere. In this talk, I will present the
research findings of our ongoing project focusing on young people in the
CEE region (namely, the Czech Republic and Hungary) and their (online)
involvement in the Fridays for Future movement. We first mapped the
online public discourse on youth civic participation in these two
countries and then focused on young people’s views on activism and the
digital skills needed to participate. Our results show that online
commenters use specific strategies to exclude young people from the
public sphere. When it comes to young people and their views on digital
activism, we found that digital media plays a rather complex and
contradictory role in their civic participation, with its affordances
providing both opportunities and challenges in terms of mental
well-being, non-formal education and community-building.
*14/12 Arseli Dokumaci Shrinkage and Activist Affordances: How
disabled people improvise more habitable worlds*For people living with
disability, everyday tasks like lifting a glass or taking off clothes
can be daunting. As such, their undertakings may require ingenuity,
effort and artfulness. In this talk, I draw on visual ethnographies with
disabled people living in Turkey and Quebec, and trace the immense
labour and creativity that it takes for them just to navigate the
everyday. Bringing together theories of affordance, performance, and
disability, I propose “activist affordances” as a way to name and
recognize these extremely tiny and yet profoundly artistic
choreographies that disabled people have to continually rehearse to make
the world more habitable for themselves and others. Activist
affordances, in the way I define them, are micro, often ephemeral acts
of world-building, with which disabled people literally make up, and at
the same time make up for, whatever affordances fail to materialize in
their environments. Activist affordances are not like any other
affordance in that their creation emerges from constraints, losses and
precarity that I broadly conceptualize as “shrinkage”. It is within a
shrinking world of possibilities, that it becomes necessary to create
affordances in their physical absence, which is why I call them
“activist”. Even as an environment shrinks to a set of constraints
rather than opportunities, the improvisatory space of performance allows
disabled people to imagine that same environment otherwise through
activist affordances, presenting the potential for a more livable and
accessible world.**
**/The Centre for*Science, Health, and Data
Communications*Research//focuses on the urgent need for better science,
health and data communication through ambitious cross-disciplinary
collaborations. Bringing together experts from various disciplines –
media and communication, computer and data sciences, health and medical
sciences, environment sciences, business studies, psychology and
sociology – we research and pioneer interdisciplinary solutions for
contemporary communication challenges. From reporting statistics, to
tackling disinformation, from health and wellness interventions to more
efficient communication around environmental and humanitarian disasters,
our members respond to real world issues—often in real time. For more
about our centre or to get in touch, please
visithttps://www.bournemouth.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/centre-science-health-data-communication-research
<https://www.bournemouth.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/centre-science-health-data-communication-research>/
/Checkout past events and subscribe to ourYouTube channel
<https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCb5RlDCyrUrQ0efjsWq7fMw/about>(@SHDCresearch)
/
/Follow us on Instagram and X (Twitter) @SHDCresearch/
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