Alfredo Covaleda,
Bogota, Colombia
Stephen Guerin,
Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
James A. Trostle,
Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, USA
Published by Don Begley at 10:09 pm under Complex News, event
It’s human nature: Elections and disinformation go hand-in-hand. We idealize the competition of ideas and the process of debate while we listen to the whisper campaigns telling us of the skeletons in the other candidate’s closet. Or, we can learn from serious journalism to tap into the growing number of digital tools at hand and see what is really going on in this fall’s campaigns. Join journalist Tom Johnson for a three-part workshop at Santa Fe Complex to learn how you can be your own investigative reporter and get ready for that special Tuesday in November.
Over the course of three Tuesdays, beginning September 30, Johnson will show workshop participants how to do the online research needed to understand what’s happening in the fall political campaign. There will be homework assignments and participants will contribute to the Three Tuesdays wiki so their discoveries will be available to the general public.
Everyone is welcome but space will be limited. A suggested donation of $45 covers all three events or $20 will help produce each session. Click here to sign up.
This workshop is NOT a sit-and-take-it-in event. We’re looking for folks who want to do some beginning hands-on (”On-line hands-on”, that is) investigation of New Mexico politics. And that means homework assignments and contributing to our Three Tuesdays wiki. Participants are also encouraged to bring a laptop if you can. Click here to sign up.
Tom Johnson’s 30-year career path in journalism is one that regularly moved from the classroom to the newsroom and back. He worked for TIME magazine in El Salvador in the mid-80s, was the founding editor of MacWEEK, and a deputy editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. His areas of interest are analytic journalism, dynamic simulation models of publishing systems, complexity theory, the application of Geographic Information Systems in journalism and the impact of the digital revolution on journalism and journalism education. He is the founder and co-director of the Institute for Analytic Journalism and a member of the Advisory Board of Santa Fe Complex.
http://medialab-prado.es/article/visualizar08_database_city_-_convocatoria_para_comunicaciones
VISUALIZAR'08: Database City – Call for Papers
Open call for the presentation of theoretical works on data visualization focused on the city context. A maximum of five papers will be selected to be presented during VISUALIZAR'08: Database City Seminr (November 3 and 4, 2008).
Deadline: October 5, 2008.
VISUALIZAR'08: Database City Seminar
Curated by: José Luis de Vicente Dates: November 3-4, 2008
Venue: Medialab-Prado, Madrid (C/ Alameda, 15 ∙ 28014 Madrid, Spain)
INTRODUCTION Data Visualization is a transversal discipline which harnesses the immense power of visual communication in order to explain, in an understandable manner, the relationships of meaning, cause and dependency which can be found among the great abstract masses of information generated by scientific and social processes. Visualizar, one of Medialab-Prado's lines of work, is directed by José Luis de Vicente, and is conceived as an open and participartory research project around theory, tools and strategies of information visualization.
VISUALIZAR'07 was held for the first time in November 2007 and explored the social, cultural and political possibilities of the art and science of data visualization. This year, VISUALIZAR'08: Database City will have the city as its sole focus. Urban environments, which are becoming increasingly dense, complex and diverse, are one of contemporary society’s largest “databases”, daily generating volumes of information that require new methods of analysis and understanding.
How can we use the data visualization and information design resources to understand the processes governing contemporary cities and better manage them? What can we learn from studying traffic and pedestrian movement flows through the streets of Madrid? What would happen if we filled the streets with screens providing information updated each moment about water and electricity consumption?
For two weeks, lectures, presentations, and an intense project development programme will involve participants from all over the world in a collaborative process that will culminate in eight new proposals for the city.
Foreclosures and Crime: A Geographical Perspective
Foreclosures and Crime: A Geographical Perspective – Volume 1, Issue 3 of the Geography and Public Safety Bulletin The Mapping and Analysis for Public Safety (MAPS) program at NIJ and the Community Oriented Policing Service (COPS) office would like to announce the third issue of the Geography and Public Safety Bulletin. This newsletter will be useful for all police practitioners who are interested in geography and its relationship to crime. Additionally, researchers, policymakers, and others may be interested in reading it to better understand the impact of geography on public safety. Readers will also find practical articles on how to use geographic information systems (GIS), including technical tips and techniques. Issue 3 of Geography and Public Safety examines how the nationwide home foreclosure crisis is affecting crime, police practice, and public policy from a geographic perspective. Articles show that GIS can assess how foreclosures influence crime trends and improve city cleanup of graffiti and blight. Additionally, the issue describes the tenets of the broken windows policing theory, and how this theory explains why police and public planners must react quickly, before crime has a chance to escalate. The articles bring to the fore how the varying geography within a metropolitan area, as well as across metropolitan areas, has an impact on understanding the patterns that are occurring and how to approach the problem.
The publication is available in electronic format at:
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/bulletin.htm
Or
http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/RIC/ResourceDetail.aspx?RID=464 A subscription is available by request, in either print or electronic format. If you request a print copy it will be automatically mailed to you, beginning with the next edition. If you request an electronic copy, you will receive a notification that the new issue is ready for download. To make a request, go to:
https://puborder.ncjrs.gov/Listservs/nij/MAPSBulletin.asp
Sincerely, Ronald E. Wilson Program Manager Mapping & Analysis for Public Safety Program and Data Resources @ the National Institute of Justice http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/ 810 7th Street, NW Room 7201 Washington, DC 20531