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*Good afternoon everyone!*


*We're excited to announce our 2018 Digital Scholarship Colloquium, The
Digital and Democracy, at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland,
Ohio. are now accepting proposals for papers, posters, panels, and/or
demonstrations from scholars, students, librarians/archivists,
technologists, non-profit researchers, and community organizers that
interrogate the ways that digital tools work to either uphold or upend
democracy, and how research might be used to advocate for positive impact
within communities experiencing disruption and inequality. The colloquium
is an opportunity to connect people to the scholarly work and digital tools
that directly or indirectly affects their lives and civil liberties.*















*The conference will be held Thursday, November 1, 2018 - Friday, November
2, 2018.Proposals will fall into one of three categories: - Methodology:
Proposed submissions discuss digital scholarship projects as case studies,
including their workflows and best practices.- Theory: Proposed submissions
discuss theoretical topics around digital scholarship, such as the ethics
of big data, impact measurement, DS labor practices, or DS classroom
pedagogy.- Workshops: Proposed submissions aim to teach attendees a skill
using a specific digital tool, e.g. text mining with Voyant, a quick intro
to Timeline JS, or how to “hydrate” social media data. Attendees would
bring laptops to these sessions.Proposals may include, but are not limited
to topics related to healthcare, law, social sciences, housing, the
environment, or social justice activism, such as: - Geospatial analysis of
gerrymandering- Using big data to fight the opioid crisis- Algorithmic bias
and predictive policing- Digital surveillance and constitutional rights-
Equitable labor and cultural production- Net neutrality and digital
accessProposals should clearly connect to the theme of democracy and
digital scholarship and identify action-oriented takeaways or opportunities
for collaboration in and out of academia. Proposals where academics or
nonprofit researchers are analyzing community-based projects should include
members of that community on the panel. Proposals should evince a range of
perspectives and identities among presenters.Here are examples of Digital
Scholarship Colloquium past programs
<http://library.case.edu/ksl/freedmancenter/colloquium/>. Please submit
your proposals here <https://goo.gl/forms/FYruq3EaQPTZCuj52>. All
submissions must be received by May 30, 2018, and notifications of
acceptance will be sent by June.Accepted papers will have the opportunity
to be published in an open access journal created by Case Western Reserve
University and hosted in our institutional repository, Digital Case.For
questions, contact Stacie Williams ([log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>) or Charlie Harper ([log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>) *

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