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About This Project

Grassroots Data Practices to Address Public Safety

Research Project
Ongoing

ABSTRACT

In this research, I examine the local data practices of citizens in Mexico who use Facebook sites as a platform to report crimes and share safety-related information. We conducted 14 interviews with a variety of participants who collaborate as administrators and contributors of these online communities. The communities we examined have two central components: the citizens who crowd-source data about instances of crime in different neighborhoods in and around Mexico City, and the administrators of the Facebook sites who use the crowd-sourced data to intervene and collaborate with other stakeholders. From our interviews, we identify the community, data, and action practices used by group administrators to collect, curate, and publish information on about public safety that would otherwise go unreported. The combination of these practices improves the reputation of the groups on Facebook, increases trust, and encourages sustained participation from citizens. These practices also legitimize data gathered by group members as an important grassroots tool for responding to issues of public safety that would otherwise not be reported or acted upon. Our findings contribute a growing body of work that aims to understand how social media enable political action in contexts where people are not being served by existing institutions.

Workshop Publication

Adriana Alvarado & Christopher A. Le Dantec (2018) Designing data-centered technologies to leverage civic data Workshop on Latin America as a Place for CSCW Research at CSCW 2018.

Date

November 2018

Category
Research
Tags
Research
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