The Emerging Technologies, Big Data and Archives Webinar Series continues on
Wed., June 17, 12pm ET with Computational Ethnography & Archives, presented by Jacqueline Joslyn,
College of Social & Behavioral Sciences, University of Arizona and moderated by
Rebecca Y. Bayeck, Ph.D CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for African American and African Studies, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
and Azure Stewart, Ph.D
CLIR Postdoctoral New York University. This webinar series was made possible by the support of a Mellon Foundation microgrant through CLIR, and in collaboration with the Emerging Technologies and Creativity
Research Lab at Oklahoma State University
Register in advance at https://educationokstate.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_9UB-_ZwCSraFaI99AMOh9Q
Jacqueline Joslyn is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Arizona. Her dissertation develops a conceptual tool for modeling and analyzing relational
processes. The preliminary results of her work were presented at the 2018 Junior Theorists Symposium. She worked as a research assistant to Corey Abramson in an ethnographic study of terminally ill cancer patients. She co- authored a paper on computational
sociology in Ethnography. Ms. Joslyn has a historical analysis on organizational divisiveness in the Stone-Campbell movement currently under review. Previously, she has published papers on economic development and social capital.
Erin O’Donnell, MMC
Outreach and Engagement Associate
📍Based in
Basking Ridge, NJ
Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR)
Arlington, VA