Digital Humanities Initiative

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Fwd: [DHSI] Digital Humanities 2017 workshop – Call for Proposals: Privacy-sensitive Collections for Digital Scholarship

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    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Ian Milligan <ianmilligan1@gmail.com>
    Date: Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 1:09 PM
    Subject: [DHSI] Digital Humanities 2017 workshop – Call for Proposals:
    Privacy-sensitive Collections for Digital Scholarship
    To: DHSI List <institute@lists.uvic.ca>

    Hi all –

    I was asked to forward this – they’re really hoping to make sure word gets
    out to the Canadian DH community, so if you can forward it on that would be
    wonderful.

    All the best,

    Ian

    This Call for Proposals is available on the workshop web page at:
    https://saab.ischool.utexas.edu/pc4ds2017/

    ————————————————-
    Overview

    Humanities scholars have historically used archives that include restricted
    or privacy-sensitive collections in order to conduct their investigations
    about sensitive topics. The recent developments in digitization and
    dissemination technologies present the possibility of making archival
    collections broadly available. Furthermore, collections of new,
    born-digital documents will be readily available to support and enhance
    scholarship. However, such access has also exacerbated threats to the
    privacy of individuals named in these records. Examples of such
    privacy-sensitive records include mental health institutional records,
    prison records, records of the Truth and reconciliation commissions, Nazi
    archives, and the Guatemalan national police archives. Access to paper
    records is protected by distance, physical barriers, and varying state and
    national policies and laws. In some cases, the legal frameworks for digital
    records are substantially less clear than those for physical records.
    Furthermore, the online availability of such records has a potential to
    stigmatize or embarrass the families or descendants of those named in the
    records when they bear no responsibility for the acts or health conditions
    of the named individuals, raising ethical issues in providing broad, open
    access to these records. In addition to scholars, demographics such as
    family members, journalists, social services providers, and policy makers
    can all benefit from access to these historical collections.
    Topics

    We invite scholars and practitioners who work with or are interested in
    issues surrounding humanities scholarship supported or enhanced by digital,
    privacy-sensitive collection to contribute to and participate in this
    workshop. A non-exhaustive list of topics includes:

    – Digitization, curation, and preservation of privacy-sensitive
    collections
    – Theoretical and metadata models
    – Policies, workflows, and protections for accessing materials
    – Issues in using cloud services for privacy-sensitive materials storage
    and scholarship
    – Scholarly information behavior and needs
    – Models that recognize diverse user needs (for example, aggregate data,
    individual information)
    – Institutional and political negotiations surrounding access to
    privacy-sensitive collections
    – Mechanisms and models for data retrieval from handwritten documents
    – Privacy-aware digital repository architectures
    – Privacy-aware crowdsourcing and transcription methods
    – Privacy issues in designing user interfaces and data visualizations
    – Privacy mitigation in data analytics and presentation
    – Evaluation of existing software, infrastructure, and techniques
    – Social justice issues and non-scholarly outcomes of work with
    restricted collections

    Proposals: formats and submission

    All contributions must be written in English.

    We encourage you to submit proposals for:

    – *full papers (up to 3,000 words, exclusive of references)*:
    submissions that report on mature work or stake out a position in an area
    of interest
    – *work-in-progess papers (up to 1,500 words, exclusive of references)*:
    submissions that present early results or a nascent project

    Please submit papers via the workshop’s *EasyChair submission page*:
    https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=pc4ds2017.
    Important dates:

    – *May 15 (http://airmail.calendar/2017-05-15%2012:00:00%20EDT)*: due
    date for all proposals
    – *May 31 (http://airmail.calendar/2017-05-31%2012:00:00%20EDT)*:
    Notification of acceptance
    – *June 7 (http://airmail.calendar/2017-06-07%2012:00:00%20EDT)*(expected):
    Early registration date for DH 2017 ends (workshop participants must
    register for both the conference and the workshop)
    – *August 1 (http://airmail.calendar/2017-08-01%2012:00:00%20EDT)*:
    Submission of final, camera-ready papers
    – *August 7 (http://airmail.calendar/2017-08-07%2012:00:00%20EDT)/8*:
    PC4DS 2017 Workshop

    Program Committee (evolving)

    Donald Fyson, Département des sciences historiques, Université Laval
    Pat Galloway, School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin
    Unmil Karadkar, School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin
    Organizers

    Please contact us in case of questions.

    Unmil Karadkar (unmil@ischool.utexas.edu
    <unmil@ischool.utexas.edu?subject=Physical%20Samples%20iConf%20workshop%20inquiry>
    )
    School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin

    King Davis(king.davis@austin.utexas.edu
    <king.davis@austin.utexas.edu?subject=PC4DS-DH%202017%20workshop%20inquiry>)
    School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin
    Acknowledgement

    The organizers are funded by Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (grant number:
    11500653) under the scholarly communications program.

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