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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20251113T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20251113T140000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20251113T151353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251113T151930Z
UID:6809-1763038800-1763042400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Seminar: Human-Nature Encounters in Urban Space
DESCRIPTION:Photo: Megan Lynn Maurer \nSeminar description\nIn this era of overlapping crises\, the future of cities remains uncertain. Urban nature-based solutions (NbS) and green infrastructure (GI) have emerged as key strategies to address climate change\, biodiversity loss\, public health concerns\, and rapid urbanization. Both approaches emphasize increasing the presence of nature in urban environments. \nHistorically\, cities have been spaces where boundaries are both challenged and reinforced—whether social boundaries related to race\, class\, and gender\, or conceptual divisions between humans and nature. NbS and GI offer opportunities to rethink these boundaries by exploring new ways for humans and more-than-human life to coexist\, while also questioning the spatial and conceptual separations between people and nature. \nHowever\, as urban nature becomes more visible and widespread\, it can also intensify conflicts over space and reinforce boundary-making. In particular\, distinctions between “good” nature—manageable and useful to humans—and “bad” nature—unruly and resistant—become more pronounced. \nIn this seminar\, Megan Lynn Maurer examines this tension through examples from New York City\, focusing on street tree maintenance and perceptions of ecosystem disservices. She explores how everyday experiences become sites where human-nature boundaries are negotiated and reshaped\, even as urban planning discourses continue to draw lines between desirable and undesirable forms of nature. Maurer concludes by reflecting on the gap between how urban NbS and GI are framed in policy and planning\, and how residents actually perceive and interact with urban nature—offering insights into how these relationships and meanings might evolve. \nThe presentation will be followed by a discussion with the Öresund Comparative Borderland Research Group\, and questions from participants. The seminar is held on Zoom and open to the public. Read more about the event here. \nMegan Lynn Maurer\nMegan Lynn Maurer is an Assistant Professor of Digital Green Transitions at the IT University of Copenhagen. Trained as a cultural anthropologist\, her research explores the relationships between people and plants in urban environments. She works across disciplines to examine how plant life in cities shapes human experiences of nature\, everyday life\, and future imaginaries in the context of climate crisis. \nAbout the series\nThe seminar series Border Allies\, Boundary Alliances is arranged by the Öresund Comparative Borderland Research Group\, funded by CEMES. Find the complete program here: www.cors.lu.se/en/border-allies-boundary-alliances
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/seminar-human-nature-encounters-in-urban-space/
CATEGORIES:TiP Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2025/11/Megan.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20240531T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20240531T170000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20240522T144427Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240522T144438Z
UID:6675-1717160400-1717174800@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Phd Defense: Rasmus Tyge Haarløv 31 May 2024 1pm
DESCRIPTION:Join us to hear about Rasmus Tyge Haarløv’s PhD research “Making Sense of Air Pollution Modelling: Framed Uncertainties” \nAuditorium 3 \nThe examination committee is: \nChristopher Gad\,  Associate Professor\, IT-University of Copenhagen (Chair)\nLiliana Doganova\, Associate Professor\, PSL Université Paris\, France\nJulia Kirch Kirkegaard\, Senior Researcher\, DTU\, Denmark \nSupervisors:\nPrincipal Supervisor: Steffen Dalsgaard\, Professor\, IT University of Copenhagen\nCo-supervisor: Mikkel Bille\, Professor\, University of Copenhagen
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/phd-defense-rasmus-tyge-haarlov-31-may-2024-1pm/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2024/05/Screenshot-2024-05-22-at-16.42.53.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20240221T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20240221T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20240215T124744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240215T124831Z
UID:6643-1708516800-1708520400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Book Talk at the TiP Salon with Matthew Archer
DESCRIPTION:Online talk in the TiP Salon coming up on February 21st\, from Matthew Archer\, author of the new book from New York University Press “Unsustainable: Measurement\, Reporting and the Limits of Corporate Sustainability”. 12-13 in 2A08\, bring your lunch. \nIf you would like to join online\, please contact the head of group\, Rachel Douglas-Jones. \n 
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/book-talk-at-the-tip-salon-with-matthew-archer/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2024/02/Screenshot-2024-02-15-at-13.46.10.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Technologies in Practice":MAILTO:tip@itu.dk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230614T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230614T170000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20230613T083403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230613T083403Z
UID:6476-1686754800-1686762000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Book Launch: Reclaiming Technology
DESCRIPTION:We are thrilled to announce the publication of our collective work as a book. Join us in celebrating the release of it with a reception at the corridor of 3D at the IT University of Copenhagen\, on June 14th from 15.00-17.00. During the first half hour\, a few words will be said about the book and the work behind it\, followed by informal chatter\, drinks and light snacks. Do come along! \nAbout Reclaiming Technology: \nThe book is written as general audience-oriented academic writing and comprises numerous short contributions from both colleagues and close affiliates of TiP. The aim of it is to inspire ways of thinking\, making\, and intervening in technology worlds by opening up the conditions of technological possibility through various writing styles rooted in ethnographic and STS approaches. The book consists of thirty-six short essays of circa 500 words each. \nEditors James Maguire and Brit Ross Winthereik asked their fellow writers to problematize some aspects of their research through a form of writing not restricted to the traditional repertoires of academic publishing. There are also those that are generated through the concerns and impulses that technology gives rise to (art\, wonder\, privacy\, responsibility\, aesthetics\, evidence\, monsters\, bureaucracy\, state\, and collaboration). And finally\, some are more conceptual in nature but are inspired by a research theme (network\, optics\, edge\, collectivities\, speculation\, space\, maintenance\, movement\, and brain-body). \nThe book addresses anyone curious towards how technology impacts society in general\, including\, anthropology and STS scholars\, students interested in methods and writing\, and lastly practitioners looking for conceptual resources to think about technology differently.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/book-launch-reclaiming-technology/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, 3D Corridor\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen S\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2023/06/Book-Cover.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Technologies in Practice":MAILTO:tip@itu.dk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230525T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230525T120000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20230208T182022Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230208T182905Z
UID:6422-1685005200-1685016000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Writing Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Room: 3A08\n\nPlease reach out to James (jmag@itu.dk) if you are interested in this date or have any questions/queries. \nFor those of you who are not familiar with the workshop\, our ambition is to provide a generous and safe forum for constructive feedback on work in progress. All are welcome\, and we especially encourage junior scholars to avail of the opportunity to engage with fellow TiP’sters around their writing practices. \n  \n 
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-writing-workshop-2/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ORGANIZER;CN="Technologies in Practice":MAILTO:tip@itu.dk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230331T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230331T120000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20230208T181113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230208T182811Z
UID:6410-1680253200-1680264000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Writing Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Room: 3A08 \nPlease reach out to James (jmag@itu.dk) if you are interested in this date or have any questions/queries.\n \nFor those of you who are not familiar with the workshop\, our ambition is to provide a generous and safe forum for constructive feedback on work in progress. All are welcome\, and we especially encourage junior scholars to avail of the opportunity to engage with fellow TiP’sters around their writing practices. \n 
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-writing-workshop/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230215T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20230215T173000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20230208T184603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230208T184621Z
UID:6432-1676466000-1676482200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Hasib Ahsan’s PhD Defense
DESCRIPTION:The Role of Human Infrastructure: Investigating Digital Interventions in the Global South \nBased on fieldwork in five distinct projects\, this thesis investigates the role of human infrastructure in the context of digital interventions in the Global South. The settings are an agriculture voice message service for smallholder farmers in Bangladesh\, a climate and agricultural information service associated with weather forecast using phone text messages (SMS) also for farmers in Bangladesh\, a for-profit service for farmers in Cambodia using digital applications\, a digital mental health intervention for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh and a study of the reordering of everyday life through digital technologies in Bangladesh during the Covid- 19 pandemic. The focus on human infrastructure is inspired by research within Information & Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD)\, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW)\, Human-Computer Interaction (HCI)\, Science Technology Studies (STS) and more. \nThe findings contribute to research and practice by nuancing the understanding of the role of human infrastructure in digital interventions in the Global South. That is\, Hasib empirically and conceptually extends the discussion by pointing out how human infrastructure may be ‘configured\,’ ‘trained’ and ‘unravelled’ in the context of digital interventions in the Global South. The thesis shows how one cannot take the human infrastructure for granted in the sense that it has to be both configured and trained and hence is not simply somehow there. Further\, the thesis discusses how a human infrastructure may unravel in the context of digital interventions in the Global South and the consequences this may have for continued service provision. These contributions may be useful for both researchers and practitioners as it adds to our understanding of the key role of human infrastructure in digital interventions in the Global South and elsewhere. \nNote: After the defense there will be a reception on the first floor of the atrium by the main entrance.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/hasib-ahsans-phd-defense/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen – Auditorium: 1\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, København S\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2023/02/Hasib-Ahsan-1-e1677069002723.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20221212T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20221212T143000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20221129T070520Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221129T070520Z
UID:6305-1670846400-1670855400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Cæcilie Sloth Laursen: Midway
DESCRIPTION:On December 12th\, Cæcilie Sloth  Laursen will hold her midway seminar! \n  \nShe will be joined by the committee Marisa Cohn\, Henriette Langstrup\, and Morten Hjelholt. \nAbout the PhD project:The project investigates the implementation of video consultations in Danish hospital outpatient clinics during the Covid-19 pandemic (and beyond). In order to follow the use and adaptation of video consultations\, I have conducted multisided ethnographic fieldwork in two Copenhagen-based hospitals and in patients’ homes. I have explored the perceived benefits of the solution while also being attentive to the challenges clinicians and patients face. Through a theoretical lens of infrastructure\, I aim to shed light on the often hidden infrastructural dependencies and infrastructural work that goes into making video consultations work as a consultation form at Danish hospitals\, as well as how the infrastructure of the consultation itself changes when the clinic\, waiting room\, etc. are removed from the patient experience\, and the home or workplace are enrolled in the infrastructure.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/caecilie-sloth-laursen-midway/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/05/Cæcilie-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20221207T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20221207T170000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20221207T020714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221207T020714Z
UID:6329-1670400000-1670432400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:PhD Defense: Andy Lautrup
DESCRIPTION:Andy Lautrup will defend their PhD\, Generation Carbon: Loss\, goodness and youth climate activism in Norway’s oil capital\, on December 19th at 13:00 in Auditorium 0. \nExamination committee:Associate Professor\, James Maguire\, IT-University of Copenhagen (Chair)Associate Professor\, Gökçe Günel\, Rice UniversityProfessor\, Simone Abram\, Durham University \nSupervisor:Professor\, Steffen Dalsgaard\, IT-University of Copenhagen \nCo-Supervisor:Associate Professor\, Rachel Douglas-Jones\, IT-University of Copenhagen \nAbstact \nThe dissertation explores generational dynamics of youth climate activism in Norway’s oil capital\, Stavanger\, and the local and situated dilemmas of phasing out fossil fuels in the context of a welfare society that understands itself as enabled by technologies of oil and gas production. Because carbon emissions from oil and gas and their impact on the global climate are one of the most important defining challenges of this generation of young people – in Lautrup’s own opinion and in that of the young Norwegians they met – Lautrup names them ‘Generation Carbon’. In the dissertation\, Lautrup focuses on climate activism as one response to the predicament of Stavanger’s Generation Carbon.  \nDrawing on nine months of in-person and online ethnographic fieldwork\, Lautrup demonstrates that climate change in Stavanger is causing experiences of loss\, demands for technoscientific facticity\, as well as shifts and changes in what is regarded as ‘doing good’. Out of the combination of experiences of loss and attempts to realign with a tradition of Norwegian goodness – encompassing the universalist welfare state\, environmentalism and peacebuilding – grows an activism with a particular window of opportunity to act on the experiences of loss through activism. \nThe central argument Lautrup puts forward in the dissertation is that the oil-saturated social environment of Stavanger produces an activism that works from the theory of change that the future can be refigured through caring for social relations in the present despite radical disagreement. Refiguration is a pivotal way of bringing an undesired future of climate catastrophe back into a shape where it is no longer in jeopardy. This relationship between activism and the future grows out of an implicated and caring activism that acknowledges and works from the premise that it is relationally intertwined with and presently benefits from that which it aims to change.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/phd-defense-andy-lautrup/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2019/08/anls.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221207
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221208
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20230116T131314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230116T131314Z
UID:6383-1670371200-1670457599@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:The Grand Opening of the Center for Climate IT
DESCRIPTION:On 7 December 2022\, the Center for Climate IT launched with an event at the IT University. The afternoon featured a presentation of the center’s vision from Head of Center Steffen Dalsgaard and Associate Professor James Maguire\, a talk on climate sustainability at ITU from Vice-Chancellor Per Bruun Brockhoff\, and research presentations from ITU-based researchers Associate Professor Anna Vallgårda from Digital Design\, PhD Fellow Ane Rahbek Vierø and Associate Professor Michael Szell from Computer Science\, and Associate Professor James Maguire from Business IT\, who showcased their ongoing research into topics like data-driven city planning of bicycle routes; how design can help us take better care of our technological and other artifacts; and the burgeoning exploration of how to store data in DNA as well as the ethical questions this raises. A panel of external guests were also welcomed to discuss the future role of IT in green transitions. The panel consisted of Professor and Prorector at the University of Copenhagen Kristian Cedervall Lauta\, CEO of DigitalLead Carolina Benjaminsen\, CEO of Electricity Maps Olivier Corradi\, and Director of Science at Villum Fonden Thomas Bjørnholm\, all of whom gave their input on how to move climate IT research forward. \nClick here to watch the whole event.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/the-grand-opening-of-the-center-for-climate-it/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2023/01/221208-CCIT-Launch-panelists-2000x1000-JPEG-jpg.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221128
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221130
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20221129T071703Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221129T071703Z
UID:6308-1669593600-1669766399@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Welfare After Digitalization: Digitalizing Welfare\, Outsourcing Responsibility
DESCRIPTION:By bringing together decision-makers\, interest organizations\, NGO’s\, citizens\, journalists\, educators\, and researchers the conference Welfare after Digitalization will try to take stock of digitalization’s effect on the public sector.\nNumerous TiP-sters will participate in the Welfare After Digitalization conference this week. The goal of the conference is to better understand what welfare has become after the digitalization of four key sectors: education\, energy\, health care\, and law enforcement. The conference is unique in that we strive for dialogue and joint presentations to share knowledge across practices and worlds that are often separate. \n  \nAs the organizers\, Brit Ross Winthereik and Vasilis Galis put it: \nDuring the conference we will take stock of digitalization efforts in the public sector using responsibility as our lens for understanding and intervening in current efforts. Bringing together decision-makers\, interest organizations\, NGOs\, citizens\, journalists\, educators\, and researchers the conference will form a meeting place for exchange of insights and opinions regarding the disparate intentions and varied effects of digitalizing welfare. The goal is to better understand what welfare has become now\, after the digitalization of key functions have taken place. In particular\, we are interested in the digitalization of four key welfare sectors: education\, energy\, health care\, and law enforcement\, but presentations of studies or interventions beyond these sectors are welcome\, too (e.g. news media\, child care\, protection of labor rights\, migration and asylum management etc.). \nWe propose to focus on the outsourcing of responsibility to address a salient feature following public sector digitalization: Public sector digitalization in most cases involves private businesses\, either as in-house consultants or as owners of a platform. This differs from traditional forms of Public-Private-Partnerships as an important element is to delegate responsibility to new actors\, including citizens. This tendency raises questions about ownership\, both with respect to the provided expertise or technical infrastructure as well as in relation to the data that is created\, transported\, and stored. What happens when the responsibility for welfare services is outsourced? We invite case studies\, historical perspectives\, first-hand experiences\, ethnographies\, political manifestos\, digital methods and more. \n We invite presenters to share research\, experiences\, and politics individually or as a group. This way we wish to make space for conversations and exchange insights between people who occupy very different positions in relation to digitalization programs and their effects. \n  \nThe conference is supported by the Velux Fonden
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/welfare-after-digitalization-digitalizing-welfare-outsourcing-responsibility/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2022/11/Screenshot-2022-11-29-at-20.11.10.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220620T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220620T170000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220603T144409Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220603T144409Z
UID:6231-1655730000-1655744400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:PhD Defense John Mark Burnett
DESCRIPTION:John Mark Burnett will defend his PhD\, “Health Data Ecosystems: Contested Valuations in Denmark” on June 20th\, 2022\, 13:00. \nThe defense takes place in Auditorium 2\, at the IT University of Copenhagen. It will be followed by a reception in the ITU canteen. \nInformaiton on the PhD and the examination committee is available here.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/phd-defense-john-mark-burnett/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2017/06/jmbu-sq.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220614T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220614T120000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220505T191641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220505T191724Z
UID:6179-1655202600-1655208000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Material Acts of Resistance: Researching\, reconstructing\, and re-imagining socio-political clothing stories
DESCRIPTION:  \nClothing is a critical socio-technology of everyday life; both mundane and familiar and invested with social and political significance. The political subject is (almost) always dressed (and even when they are not\, this too is a potent act). This lecture focuses on two projects: Bikes & Bloomers is about convertible cycling costumes patented by pioneering women in 1890s Britain and Politics of Patents maps connections between citizenship and clothing in global patent archives from 1820 to 2020. This research takes a feminist technoscience and inventive practice approach to examine how and in what ways inventors create new forms of clothing that resist\, subvert or disrupt social and political norms and beliefs\, and in the process\, bring new expressions of citizenship into being. Using patent archives\, ethnographic methods and speculative sewing\, the research seeks to open for discussion embodied\, object-oriented and performative ways of thinking with\, in and through inventive forms of knowledge making and transmission. Throughout\, I reflect on the intimacy of making and wearing the clothes of others and what happens when as researchers we get up close to (and into) our research. \n  \n  \nBio: \nDr Kat Jungnickel (www.KatJungnickel.com) is a Reader in Sociology\, Director of the Methods Lab and PI on the European Research Council–funded project Politics of Patents\, which examines citizenship via two hundred years of global clothing inventions. Her research explores mobilities\, gender\, technology cultures\, DIY/making practices\, and visual and inventive methods. Recent publications include: (ed) Transmissions: critical tactics for making and communicating research (MIT Press 2020)\, Creative Practice Ethnographies (with Hjorth\, Harris and Coombs\, Rowman & Littlefield 2020) and Bikes and Bloomers: Victorian Women Inventors and their Extraordinary Cycle Wear (Goldsmiths Press 2018). \n  \n  \n  \nTues 14th June 10:30 – 12:00\, Aud 2
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/material-acts-of-resistance-researching-reconstructing-and-re-imagining-socio-political-clothing-stories/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2022/05/Screenshot-2022-05-05-at-20.13.18.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Technologies in Practice":MAILTO:tip@itu.dk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220613T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220613T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220603T144133Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220603T144133Z
UID:6227-1655125200-1655132400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Accessibility in Practice
DESCRIPTION:  Inklusio\,  (a leading web accessibility consultancy in DK) will visit ITU to teach Tipsters how to use screen-readers.  Stein Erik Stokjerra and Mai Hartmann will facilitate the workshop. \n \nThe team at Inklusio have conducted workshops across Denmark to make web accessibility compliance a reality in the Danish context e.g.\, at Denmarks Radio and various municipalities. They also monitor web accessibility compliance of public sector websites for the Agency for Digitisation.\n \nWe will  put screen readers into practice. After the course you should be able to have a basic understanding of screen readers and web accessibility and be more confident in making your research accessible. 
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/accessibility-in-practice/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2022/06/accessibility-in-practice.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220608T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220608T153000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220519T123435Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220519T123559Z
UID:6196-1654696800-1654702200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Book Launch: Democratic Situations
DESCRIPTION:TiP Associate Professor Irina Papazu and Aalborg colleague Andreas Birkbak invite you to a launch event for their new book Democratic Situations. \n\n\n\nAbout the book \nDemocratic Situations places the making and doing of democratic politics at the centre of relational research. The book turns the well-known sites of contemporary Euro-American democracy – elections\, bureaucracies\, public debates and citizen participation – into fluctuating democratic situations where supposedly untouchable democratic ideals are contested and warped in practice. The empirical cases demonstrate that democracy cannot be reduced to theoretical schemes of conflict\, institutions or deliberation. Instead\, they offer an urgently needed renewal \nof our understanding of democratic politics at a time when conventional ideas increasingly fail to capture current events such as Brexit\, Trump and Covid19. \n\n\n\n\n\nTime & Place \n8 June 2022\, 14:00 – 15:30\nTANTLab\, room 2.3.002a\, Aalborg University Copenhagen\, A. C. Meyers Vænge 15\, 2450 København SV \nProgram* \n14:00 – 14:15 Presentation by the editors\n14:15 – 14:30 Intervention by invited discussant Anders Blok\, Uni. of Copenhagen\n14:30 – 14:45 Discussion\n14:45 – 15:30 Bubbles and snacks \n*The first 45 minutes can be attended via Zoom. Please contact the organizers for a link!Democratic Situations_Book launch poster 3[42]
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/book-launch-democratic-situations/
LOCATION:room 2.3.002a\, Aalborg University Copenhagen\, A. C. Meyers Vænge 15\, 2450 København SV\, room 2.3.002a\, Aalborg University Copenhagen\, A. C. Meyers Vænge 15\, København SV\, 2450
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=application/pdf:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2022/05/Democratic-Situations_Book-launch-poster-342.pdf
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220602T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220603T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220531T115758Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220603T115419Z
UID:6219-1654160400-1654268400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:DASTS22
DESCRIPTION:Under the theme “Living with Ruptures: Repair\, Maintenance\, and (Re)Construction”\, DASTS 2022 is happening in Aarhus from the 2nd to the 3rd of June: \n“The world seems to be filled with ruptures. Ongoing migration issues\, pandemics\, mistrust in institutions\, climate change catastrophes\, among other chronic and unresolved crises. It is compelling to interrogate the status and demands of STS-oriented research in the moment during\, after\, with\, and despite ruptures: How do we live with them? Should we (re)construct or maintain the “normal”? What do we leave behind and what do we repair?” \n“DASTS 2022 provides a platform to gather and share ongoing and emergent STS-related research\, particularly in Denmark and the Nordic space. Here\, we want to discuss how the current landscape of STS methods and theories inform and impact maintenance practices and reactions to ruptures.” \nThe full programme\, including a full list of speakers and abstracts\, is available here: DASTS22 \nAmong the speakers is a long list of TiPsters: \n  \nTRACK 5: Art\, Science\, and Technology Studies (II) \n Chair: Adam Bencard \nThursday\, June 2\, 4pm-5.30pm\, 2022 – Nygaard 184 \nChristopher Gad \nUdredning-Udtrykt / Expressing ’undergoing diagnosis’  \nABSTRACT: \nParents to children undergoing socio-medical diagnosis (udredning) in Denmark live through a range of unfamiliar experiences with authorities\, institutions\, the child\, and themselves as families. It would be an understatement to claim that this situation is often marked by uncertainty\, it is resource-draining\, and it is a situation in which it is difficult to find a stable foothold. One common theme amongst such parents seems to be that they must often become the ‘project manager’ or ‘their own caseworker’\, as the institutions and institutional actors they encounter when seeking a diagnosis quickly multiply and are in many cases not wellcoordinated. Or in the parlor of STS\, they become the partial managers of the infra-structure for their child’s diagnosis. For instance\, parents often become the caretakers of the increasingly complex story of their child\, which is important not only in the various encounters with institutions for something to happen\, but also in relation to their families\, neighbors\, and friends. This talk is a report from an ongoing research trough design project on giving expression to this situation. It first consisted in conducting a qualitative investigation of the experiences of parents to children\, who have been through such a process. Followingly the project has been concerned with transforming the empirical material gathered into an art/design installation which may hopefully work to enable a broader conversation on the issue. The presentation will be about how the research developed from its initial motivational ideas – to its present state. \n\nTRACK 9: Caring and Commoning in/through STS interventions  \nChair: Giacomo Poderi & Maurizio Teli \nFriday\, June 3\, 9am-10.30am\, 2022 – Nygaard 184 \nAdam Veng & Irina Papazu \nControversy mapping and the care for climate commons – Re-assembling the Danish climate movement by counter-mapping digital network maps \nABSTRACT: \nThe Danish general electoral campaign in 2019 saw a unifying culmination of the “climate movement”\, as a diverse assembly of green think tanks\, school children and direct-action protest groups succeeded in turning climate into the paramount political issue of the election. The government has since signed the “most ambitious Climate Act in the world”\, however\, the climate movement\, alongside several scientific experts\, has since expressed dissatisfaction with the government’s politics on the green agenda\, while the government itself and its established networks of cooperate “climate partnerships” maintains to uphold an ambitious climate politics. This paper is based on nine months of mixed-methods research\, using the digital tools Hyphe\, Gephi and CorText to map the relations between different public Danish actors (NGO’s\, businesses etc.) and their “matters of concern” (Latour 2004) in the controversy of the Danish green transition. Inspired by literature on counter-mapping data science (Dalton and Stallmann 2018)\, it introduces an interventionist methodological experiment in using network maps as props for material participation (Marres & Lezeaun 2011) in a workshop setting with invited activists. As such\, the paper seeks to explore how critical discussions of network maps can become a ‘prototype for prefiguration’ (Jimenéz 2014) for mapped entities to collectively evaluate and re-invent both their position in a controversy and their methods for obtaining public impact. The experiment is framed by a discussion of the potentials of research collaborations with state-opposed commons and their politics of world-building (Zigon 2017\, Caffentzis & Federici 2014) in the field of controversy mapping. \nMace Ojala \nMaintain-ability. On Life Alongside Computer Software  \nABSTRACT: \nThis paper\, based on my recent thesis (Ojala 2021) examines what lessons about living with technology can we learn from software maintainers who struggle to keep digital infrastructures – at least most of the time – in good running order. The empirical material of the research was collected at four events as programmers convened to discuss breakage. Drawing on STS\, I identify themes which concern programmers as they give testimony of their lives lived alongside computer software. The findings firstly challenge the imaginary of existing software as an stable object\, and secondly nuance and specify the notions of maintenance documented in research literature. Themselves well versed in conceptualizing breakage\, software maintainers exercise considerable agency over the immediate material in their care; code. However in doing so\, they also find themselves having to articulate dynamic\, interdependent and hybrid networks of relations which they are intimately entangled with\, and whose durability depends on the success of their ongoing\, indeterminate reconfiguration. Both the programmers and the software they maintain must continuously navigate risks of breakage\, burnout\, bugs or falling into obsolescence. Inspired by feminist technoscience and in response to so-called broken world thinking (Jackson 2014)\, I theorize the concept of *maintain-ability* and demonstrate its application to foreground the situated\, fragile and often underappreciated capacity to not only give but also receive care which holds together more-than-human worlds at the dawn of the third millennium. \n\nTRACK 10: Ruptures Through Re-politicizing Technified ‘Facts’ on Sustainability  \nChair: Julia Kirch Kirkegaard \nFriday\, June 3\, 9am-10-30am\, 2022 – Nygaard 192 \nSteffen Dalsgaard & Rasmus Tyge Haarløv \nFacts and Politics of Air Pollution in Copenhagen \nABSTRACT: \nThe introduction of Google’s Project Air View (PAV) in Copenhagen has re-invigorated local concerns over air pollution. In contrast to established techno-scientific networks which deploy well-known air pollutants as visible in accordance with European limits\, the PAV has both contributed with fine-grained measurements as ’technified facts’ at street-level and it has amplified the visibility of new and emerging objects of aerial governance such as ultrafine particles and black carbon over which there is yet to form scientific or ’factual’ consensus. The objective of this paper is twofold: Firstly\, we analyze the divergent and heterogeneous identifications and representations of air pollution in Copenhagen. Secondly\, we discuss how groups of concerned citizens in their push against entrenched ways of thinking about air pollution are empowered by the PAV’s fine grained air pollution visualizations in different ways. While some citizens deploy the PAV to (re)politicize pollutants stemming from aviation\, busses\, and smaller vehicles\, others propose novel urban green designs in dialogue with municipal authorities. At the same time corporate and some governmental actors attempt to depoliticize the problem of air pollution by deferring responsibility to established conventions for which air pollution ‘counts’. All in all\, we argue that Google’s contribution to the (re)politicization of air pollution in Copenhagen is a multi-facetted process\, which solidifies existing political environmental contrasts rather than depoliticizing or solving them. \nCaroline Anna Salling \nThe Competition of Heat Pumps  \nABSTRACT: \nThis paper analyses the politics of competition through the policy-incentivised simultaneous installation of large and small heat pumps in Denmark. The heat pumps are prepared for competition with both old heating solutions as well as with each other in order to electrify and decarbonise. As district heating pipes are extended into new areas of towns and cities with the help of large heat pumps\, small heat pumps are in policy and marketing offered as solution mainly to households that not (yet) have access to district heating. I have ethnographically followed district heating engineers in the city of Odense\, Denmark\, in putting heat pumps to work to utilise excess heat from servers within the nearby Facebook datacentre. The excess of hot\, usually lukewarm\, air from industrial machines is raised in temperature and converted into water that can flow in the pipes of the district heating and assist in phasing out fossil fuels. Through three events – a course taught on thermodynamics to employees\, the installation of heat pumps next to the datacentre\, and a lobby meeting – competition is analysed as emerging through the implementation of thermodynamic theory and policy incentivising technology instalment. Experiencing competition is a rather new event for the district heating sector\, which happens in contrast to the arrival of the monopolistically governed Big Tech hyperscale datacentre that draw several benefits from attaching itself to the community form of energy arrangement\, as district heating is often described to be. \nMichael Hockenhull \nInfrastructuring the trouble: Sustainability reports\, facts & expertise  \nABSTRACT: \nDanish and European law requires large corporations operating in Denmark to report on their sustainabillity initiatives. Simultaneously\, financial markets are increasingly interested in investing in companies which perform well in Economic\, Social and Governance (ESG) ratings and similar benchmarks. This has lead to a steady rise in the quantity and importance of sustainability reporting\, a process through which corporations purport to document how they are becoming more sustainable\, decreasing their emmissions and doing good in the world through measurements and the creation of facts. Corporate’ greenwashing’ and CSR spin is no new phenomenon\, and it is thus easy to dismiss such reports as nothing more than branding. However sustainability reporting is simultaneously a practice which companies pour many hours of work into\, procuring data\, developing calculations\, conforming to standards and which many corporate actors genuinely believe represent an attempt at positive action. It thus represents a ‘trouble’ (Haraway\, 2016)\, in the sense that it is a pervasive practice which we may want to disregard as an expression of frivilous corporate non-action\, but nevertheless is a site of practical fact-making. This paper documents how a particular conception of corporate sustainability is being produced in this reporting practice\, through the mobilization of particular laws\, data\, standards and expertises\, before being expressed in reports. The reports are thus material- semiotic actors that hold the potential for systematic study\, interrogation and\, perhaps\, repoliticization. The paper finally outlines how digital and quanti-qualitaitve methods might help facilitate this work. \n\nTRACK 13: Approaching Platform Work  \nChair: Kalle Kusk \nFriday\, June 3\, 11am-12.30pm\, 2022 – Nygaard 184 \nKonstantinos Floros \nHouse cleaning platforms in Denmark: How does the past fit in the imagined future? \nABSTRACT: \nIn recent years\, there has been great concern that contracting remote or localized work through digital labor platforms will shape the future of work and employment relations (e.g.\, Ilsøe & Larsen\, 2020). Despite a lack of agreement within the literature on whether the platform economy has been growing in steady\, fast or exponential ways\, it is rather safe to admit that working through platforms is a consolidated work form in the global labor market\, challenging traditional full-time\, dependent employment. Both the Danish government (Regeringen\, 2019) and EU institutions have stressed the need to cover growing demands for flexible employment through platforms which “create jobs and improve competitiveness” (European Commission\, 2018). This paper combines digital ethnography\, document analysis and interviews with housecleaners and stakeholders to investigate the nexus between flexible and precarious employment in Danish housecleaning platforms. It argues that the composition of the labor force working through these platforms and the everyday practices within platform housecleaning challenge the positive character attributed to the state-supported sociotechnical imaginary of the Danish platform economy and goes further to question whether such an imaginary exists or if it forms part of a broader Danish sociotechnical imaginary of the digitalization of everyday life (cf Jasanoff\, 2015). In line with this year’s DASTS theme the paper claims that digital housecleaning platforms build on the affordances inherent to the platform business model (cost-efficient algorithmic management\, performativity of ratings\, competition etc.) while sustaining “normal” (atypical\, low-paid) employment conditions for the highly gendered and racialized workforce of housecleaners in Denmark. \n\nTRACK 14: Designing the Socio-Technical Design Research & STS  \nChair: Stefanie Eggers & Christian Lepenik \nFriday\, June 3\, 11am-12.30pm\, 2022 – Nygaard 192 \nSimy Kaur Gahoonia & Christopher Gad \nPrototyping the future\, prototyping citizens – the Danish trial of ‘technology comprehension’ in public school \nABSTRACT: \nThis paper explores how the Danish school sector currently performs and reworks students’ engagement with digitalization through prototyping. Public schooling is routinely mobilized by the state as part of the solution to perceived societal problems. By law\, Danish schooling should prepare students for participation\, co-responsibility\, rights\, and duties in a democratic society. Recently\, this includes preparing students for life in an increasingly digitalized democracy. We investigate the Ministry of Children and Education’s trial of ‘technology comprehension’ (2018-2021). This was an experimental effort to determine how to introduce ‘understanding of technology’ into compulsory schooling as a generally formative\, creativeconstructive\, and critical subject matter combining societal reflection\, computer science and design approaches. The curriculum suggested that design approaches\, especially\, were conducive to agency and empowerment in digital democratic life\, making it imperative that students learn to materialize digital artifacts through prototyping. This takes prototyping beyond its traditional use in design and systems development\, making experimentalism central to the conduct of citizenship and social life. We examine prototyping across the trial: the curriculum; the trial’s design; the classroom; and the trial’s evaluation. We argue that prototyping functions as a device for intervention in the complexity and uncertainty of a digital democratic future. In this situation\, the capacity of prototyping is to keep matters of concern both open and closed across scales\, and bind different sites of the trial together. We critically examine the role of the prototype in a democracy in ’perpetual beta’ and the response: educating students to cultivate a design attitude.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/dasts22/
LOCATION:Fredagscafeen\, IT-Byen\, Finlandsgade 81\, Aarhus N\, 8200\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2022/05/Skaermbillede-2022-05-31-kl.-13.41.50.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220323T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220323T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220315T170548Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220315T170615Z
UID:6152-1648036800-1648040400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Guest Salon: Christopher M. Kelty
DESCRIPTION:  \nOn March 23rd\, we will host Christopher M. Kelty in the TiP Salon. \nTitle:  The Maze of Nature in Los Angeles \n  \nAbstract: The Labyrinth Project is a collaborative inquiry into \nnature in Los Angeles. Wetlands\, lawns\, rats\, cats\, coyotes\, \nmountain lions interact with human affect\, state power\, indigenous \npolitics\, aesthetic pleasure\, local governmental power and much \nmore. Also\, Satan. Using a mix of participant-observation\, \nstructured interviewing\, collaborative urban anthropology\, \nhistorical and archival digging\, ecological observation\, and \nanalysis of social media content\, we explore the diverse and \nsurprising ways in which Los Angeles is full of different natures— \na veritable trophic cascade of the absurd and surprising. \n  \nBio \nChristopher M. Kelty is professor at the University of \nCalifornia\, Los Angeles. He has appointments in the Institute for \nSociety and Genetics\, the department of Information Studies and \nthe Department of Anthropology. Research interests center on \nsocial theory and technology\, the cultural significance of \ninformation technology; the relationship of participation\, \ntechnology and the public sphere; and more recently\, the role \nthat wild animals play in contemporary urban Los Angeles.  He is \nthe author of two books: The Participant: A Century of \nParticipation in Four Stories (Chicago\, 2019); and Two Bits: The \nCultural Significance of Free Software (Duke University Press\, \n2008).
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/guest-salon-christopher-m-kelty/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2022/03/Screenshot-2022-03-15-at-18.03.48.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220316T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220316T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220315T170746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220315T170746Z
UID:6157-1647432000-1647435600@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Barbara Nino Carreras: Work in Progress
DESCRIPTION:Abstract: My presentation will explore informal and informal digital support in the context of a Danish public library and the challenges that library employees\, citizens and their informal helpers encounter when interacting with mandatory digital self-services. Drawing on feminist grounded theory\, I will explore sensitizing concepts (Bowen 2006) that currently guide my analysis such as informal welfare (Lyberaki and Tinios 2014\, )\, collective access (Mia Mingus 2010\, Hamraie 2013\, )\, and relational autonomy (Mackenzie 2019). \n \n\n\n\n \n\n\nHamraie\, Aimi. 2013. “Designing Collective Access: A Feminist Disability Theory of Universal Design.” Disability Studies Quarterly 33 (4). https://doi.org/10.18061/dsq.v33i4.3871.\nLyberaki\, Antigone\, and Platon Tinios. 2014. “The Informal Welfare State and the Family: Invisible Actors in the Greek Drama.” Political Studies Review 12 (2): 193–208. https://doi.org/10.1111/1478-9302.12049.\n\n\nMackenzie\, Catriona. 2019. “Feminist Innovation in Philosophy: Relational Autonomy and Social Justice.” Women’s Studies International Forum 72 (January): 144–51. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2018.05.003.\nMingus\, Mia. 2010. “Reflections On An Opening: Disability Justice and Creating Collective Access in Detroit.” Leaving Evidence (blog). August 23\, 2010. https://leavingevidence.wordpress.com/2010/08/23/reflections-on-an-opening-disability-justice-and-creating-collective-access-in-detroit/.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/barbara-nino-carreras-work-in-progress/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2019/11/Barbara-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220113T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20220113T170000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20220112T145229Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220112T145315Z
UID:6137-1642086000-1642093200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Ester Fritsch PhD Defense
DESCRIPTION:On January 13th at 3pm\, Ester Fritsch will defend her PhD thesis\, “Echoes of Ethics Acorss Europe: An Ethnography of Ethical Interventions in to the Internet of Things”. Please join us in Auditorium 1 for the defense. Note: There will be no reception due to COVID-19. \nFor a copy of the thesis\, see the link below. \nEster Fritsch\, 13 January\, at 3 PM\nLocation: Aud. 1\nThesis: “ECHOES OF ETHICS ACROSS EUROPE – An ethnography of ethical interventions into the Internet of Things“\n \nExamination Committee:\nAssociate professor Marisa Cohn\, IT University of Copenhagen (Chair)\nAssociate professor Maja Hojer Bruun\, Aarhus University\, Denmark\nAssociate professor David Ribes\, University of Washington\, USA\nSupervisor:\nPrincipal supervisor: Rachel Douglas-Jones\, Associate Professor \, IT University of Copenhagen \n 
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/ester-fritsch-phd-defense/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200325T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200325T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20200304T133243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200304T133243Z
UID:5475-1585137600-1585141200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-6/
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/02/Photography-Studio-Etsy-Shop-Icon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200319T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200320T140000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20200304T134329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200304T134514Z
UID:5478-1584612000-1584712800@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Data Times: Immediacies\, Lifecycles\, Forgettings
DESCRIPTION:– Final Conference for the Data as Relation Research Project \nBig data’s time is in the here and now\, which is not to say that big data has no past. Collecting\, archiving and storing data are acts that seek to hold on to elusive happenings of yesterday and yesteryear. Private businesses and public sector institutions are currently intensely busy with understanding and experimenting with data. More data (and more diverse data sources) make their ways into meeting rooms in the hope that societal or company futures can somehow be predicted. \nFor four years members of the Data as Relation project have conducted research into the new roles given to data in Danish public sector institutions and related organizations. Tax administrations\, NGOs\, and municipalities expend a considerable amount of energy and effort ensuring that data\, can be put to good use in the future. During this conference\, we hope to engage participants in discussion and develop a better understanding of different ways of organizing temporalities in data. \nJoin to hear the following keynote speakers: \nKatherine Verdery (City University of New York)\nHannah Knox (UCL)\nKirsten Astrup and Maria Bordorff (visual artists) \nFind more information and the full program here.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/data-times-immediacies-lifecycles-forgettings-final-conference-for-the-data-as-relation-research-project/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/03/DaR-Final.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200318T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200318T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20200304T133147Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200304T133345Z
UID:5473-1584532800-1584536400@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-5/
CATEGORIES:TiP Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/02/Photography-Studio-Etsy-Shop-Icon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200311T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200311T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20200304T133037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200304T133037Z
UID:5471-1583928000-1583931600@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon w/Matthew Archer
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-w-matthew-archer/
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/02/Photography-Studio-Etsy-Shop-Icon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200226T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200226T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20200218T145951Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200218T145951Z
UID:5459-1582718400-1582722000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon w/ Olivia Harre
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-w-olivia-harre/
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/02/Photography-Studio-Etsy-Shop-Icon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200219T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20200219T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20200218T145044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200218T145751Z
UID:5455-1582113600-1582117200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-4/
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2020/02/Photography-Studio-Etsy-Shop-Icon.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191211T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191211T160000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20191210T145658Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191210T145658Z
UID:5413-1576054800-1576080000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:Digital Trust in Denmark - A workshop on trust and mistrust towards public institutions in the world's 'most digitized country'
DESCRIPTION:This workshop aims to debate the hypothesis that Denmark’s increasing digitalization is facilitated by the citizen’s trust in society and the welfare state. \nTo discuss this question\, the organizers wish to bring together a group of researchers and practitioners across universities\, the public and private sectors\, media and organizations. The intention is to create an open and lively discussion where a number of different and perhaps contradictory answers to the workshop’s stated hypothesis – that digitalization in Denmark is based on a special relationship of trust between the state and the citizen – will be gathered. \nThe workshop is organised in cooperation between TiP’s research group Data as Relation\, IT University and SODAS – Center for Social Data Science at Copenhagen University.  \nThe event will take place in Danish. The registration is closed.
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/digital-trust-in-denmark-a-workshop-on-trust-and-mistrust-towards-public-institutions-in-the-worlds-most-digitized-country/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191127T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191127T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20191105T105830Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191105T105916Z
UID:5326-1574856000-1574859600@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon w/ Irina Papazu
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-w-irina-papazu/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2019/11/Salon-Black5.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191120T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191120T120000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20191105T105645Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191105T110034Z
UID:5323-1574251200-1574251200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon w/ Anne-Sofie Sørensen
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-w-anne-sofie-sorensen/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2019/11/Salon-Black3.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191113T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191113T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20191105T105424Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191105T105424Z
UID:5320-1573646400-1573650000@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon w/ Sarah Blacker
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-w-sarah-blacker/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2019/11/Salon-Black2.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Technologies in Practice":MAILTO:tip@itu.dk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191106T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Copenhagen:20191106T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T191054
CREATED:20191105T102727Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191105T144900Z
UID:5317-1573041600-1573045200@tip.itu.dk
SUMMARY:TiP Salon w/ Carsten Østerlund
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://tip.itu.dk/event/tip-salon-w-carsten-osterlund/
LOCATION:IT University of Copenhagen\, Rued Langgaards Vej 7\, Copenhagen\, 2300\, Denmark
CATEGORIES:TiP Salon
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tip.itu.dk/wp-content/uploads/sites/69/2019/11/TiP-Salon-6-1-e1572965328365.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Technologies in Practice":MAILTO:tip@itu.dk
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR