Deconstructing the data life-cycle in digital humanitarianism
Deconstructing the data life-cycle in digital humanitarianism
The role that technologies have historically played in producing and reproducing global inequalities is well documented. Although technological innovation is associated with progress that does not mean that it necessarily narrows the gap between rich and poor, instead technological inequalities tend to exacerbate other inequalities. This applies also to information and communication technologies (ICT) and Big Data, which play an increasingly important role in humanitarianism. In this article, we address the socio-technical work that is necessary to acquire, process, store and use data and study the power relations that are embedded in these processes. We focus in particular on the use of Big Data in digital humanitarianism and argue that at each stage of the digital data life-cycle (data acquisition, data processing, data storage, and data usage and decision making) different resources are required. These include not only access to hardware, software and connectivity but also the ability to make use of the affordances of digital technologies. We posit that in the context of humanitarianism, ICT and Big Data are a particularly intriguing to study due to their ambivalent position of seeking to address inequalities while at the same time perpetuating them.
Big Data, data life-cycle, digital humanitarianism, inequality, power
555-571
Roth, Silke
cd4e63d8-bd84-45c1-b317-5850d2a362b6
Luczak-Roesch, Markus
a1b0e20a-1ed6-426e-8970-837fc9b0a6a2
20 March 2020
Roth, Silke
cd4e63d8-bd84-45c1-b317-5850d2a362b6
Luczak-Roesch, Markus
a1b0e20a-1ed6-426e-8970-837fc9b0a6a2
Roth, Silke and Luczak-Roesch, Markus
(2020)
Deconstructing the data life-cycle in digital humanitarianism.
Information, Communication and Society, 23 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/1369118X.2018.1521457).
Abstract
The role that technologies have historically played in producing and reproducing global inequalities is well documented. Although technological innovation is associated with progress that does not mean that it necessarily narrows the gap between rich and poor, instead technological inequalities tend to exacerbate other inequalities. This applies also to information and communication technologies (ICT) and Big Data, which play an increasingly important role in humanitarianism. In this article, we address the socio-technical work that is necessary to acquire, process, store and use data and study the power relations that are embedded in these processes. We focus in particular on the use of Big Data in digital humanitarianism and argue that at each stage of the digital data life-cycle (data acquisition, data processing, data storage, and data usage and decision making) different resources are required. These include not only access to hardware, software and connectivity but also the ability to make use of the affordances of digital technologies. We posit that in the context of humanitarianism, ICT and Big Data are a particularly intriguing to study due to their ambivalent position of seeking to address inequalities while at the same time perpetuating them.
Text
Roth and Luczak Roesch 2018 Digital humanitarianism accepted 20 August 2018
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 20 August 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 September 2018
Published date: 20 March 2020
Keywords:
Big Data, data life-cycle, digital humanitarianism, inequality, power
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 423349
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/423349
ISSN: 1369-118X
PURE UUID: 050ebdb2-e50e-47d7-88f5-2a27b1f840ac
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Date deposited: 20 Sep 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:02
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Author:
Markus Luczak-Roesch
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