Wednesday, February 8, 2023 12:15pm to 1:15pm
About this Event
Case-Geyer Library, 13 Oak Dr, Hamilton, NY 13346, USA
http://jfinnell.colgate.domains/horizons/Join us for a conversation about democracy's data cartels with Sarah Lamdan and Dan Bouk.
Sarah Lamdan is a law professor at the City University of New York’s School of Law. She also has a master’s degree in library science and legal information management. Her research focuses on information law and policy, and her book Data Cartels: The Companies that Monopolize and Control our Information was published by Stanford University Press in 2022.
Dan Bouk is a history professor at Colgate University and researches the history of bureaucracies, quantification, and other modern things shrouded in cloaks of boringness. He studied computational mathematics as an undergraduate, before earning a Ph.D. in history from Princeton University. His first book, How Our Days Became Numbered (Chicago, 2015), explored the life insurance industry’s methods for quantifying people, discriminating by race, and thinking statistically. In Democracy’s Data, Dan Bouk examines the 1940 U.S. census, uncovering what those numbers both condense and cleverly abstract: a universe of meaning and uncertainty, of cultural negotiation and political struggle.
This talk is sponsored by the Colgate University Horizons Series and the Colgate University Data Science Collaboratory.
Lunch will be provided for attendess and a limited number of free copies of Data Cartels and Democracy's Data will be available on a first-come basis.
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