Decolonizing Data
IEEE Santa Clara Valley SSIT Chapter, IEEE UK and Ireland SSIT Chapter, and SSIT IST-Africa SIGHT are cooperating to organise this SSIT Lecture as a joint Chapter Webinar.
IEEE and SSIT Members as well as non-IEEE Members are invited to Register and participate. IEEE Members should include their IEEE Membership Number when registering.
This joint meeting will take place online. Registered participants will be provided with the link prior to the event.
This meeting will take place at 11am (Pacific Time) / 7pm (UTC) on 16 December 2021 for one hour.
FOCUS
This talk will explore the issue of data in the social sector. In this era, it is unimaginable evaluating the impact and implementation of social programs without using large data sets. Unfortunately, all too often, organizations and researchers extract data from individuals, communities, and countries for their own purposes, and do not even make the data available to the subjects of that data. With data flows the power to make informed decisions.
It is ironic that international organizations committed to reversing the legacy of colonialism are employing highly colonial practices in their approach to data.
Decolonizing data will help ensure that the benefits of data extraction and analysis will accrue to the rightful owners of that data, and greatly strengthen social programs at the local and national level.
For more information, please visit SSIT Website
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
- Date: 16 Dec 2021
- Time: 07:00 PM to 08:05 PM
- All times are (UTC+00:00) Dublin
- Add Event to Calendar
- Starts 15 December 2021 08:00 AM
- Ends 16 December 2021 06:56 PM
- All times are (UTC+00:00) Dublin
- No Admission Charge
Speakers
Jim Fruchterman, CEO, Tech Matters of CEO, Tech Matters
Biography:
Jim Fruchterman is a leading social entrepreneur, a MacArthur Fellow, a recipient of the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship, and a Distinguished Alumnus of Caltech.
After starting two successful machine learning companies, he went on to found Benetech, the award-winning tech nonprofit. He's built tools which help people with disabilities read independently and human rights groups document and analyze abuses.
His current projects at Tech Matters include Aselo, a shared modern contact center for the crisis response field, and Terraso, a platform to bring better tools and more funding to locally-led sustainability initiatives to respond to climate change.