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06 Mar 2024

A new paper from CIM members Carlos C谩mara-Menoyo and Greg McInerny, along with Jo茫o Porto de Albuquerque, Joanna Suchomska and Grant Tregonning has just been published in Environmental Science and Policy

The paper, "Co-designing grounded visualisations of the Food-Water-Energy nexus to enable urban sustainability transformations" tackles a particularly significant knowledge gap in the Food-Water-Energy nexus by presenting the experience, decisions and lessons learnt from the co-design process of an interactive tool to visualise these complex interrelations for a particular case: food choices in kindergartens in Poland.

To make the FWE nexus understandable and actionable for the various stakeholders, our approach had two distinctive features: 1) grounding the FWE nexus following a pedagogical/Freirean approach that connects to lived experiences and problematises frames of references to activate transformation; and 2) the use of data visualisations to critically enquiry and learn about the nexus. The combination of these features resulted in data visualisations that 鈥済round鈥 FWE nexus by connecting to lived experiences and problematising frames of references to open transformation pathways.

The outcomes demonstrate a shift in perspectives towards the FWE Nexus that resulted from the design process and the interaction with our visualisation tool. Although further investigation is needed, we see it as a first step to opening new data-enabled transformation pathways to sustainability, not only through improved individual choices, but also by enabling new collective action, change of policies and organisational procedures, as well as new governance arrangements.

Tags: publication
04 Mar 2024

Research Talk: "How Do Decision Makers Use Visualisation? A Population Health Perspective" by Dr Mai Elshehaly, City, University of London. Wed, March 6th, 14:30 - 16:00 , A0.23 Social Sciences

We will be having from the giCentre at City, University of London for a talk titled "How Do Decision Makers Use Visualisation? A Population Health Perspective". The talk will take place on Wednesday, March 6th, 14:30 - 16:00 at A0.23 at the Social Sciences buildings.

26 Feb 2024

Upcoming event: Public Lecture: Richard Rogers, Post-Truth Spaces, March 11th

Post-truth spaces: Studying authenticity and influence on the internet
Richard Rogers
Room: OC1.09; Date: Monday, 11/03/2024; Time: 17:00-19:00.

22 Jan 2024

The global food system is in crisis. Climate change, ecological degradation, and economic and military conflict have exposed significant vulnerabilities in how the world produces, distributes, and consumes food. While governments aim to address these intersecting crises, they typically overlook another critical factor - the unprecedented concentration of corporate control in the global food system driven by contemporary processes of financialization. The incursion of new financial actors and imperatives have encouraged food firms to implement mergers and acquisitions (M&As) to improve financial performance, generate shareholder value, and capture market share. This has resulted in record levels of concentration, with more power controlled by fewer firms. Surprisingly, there is little empirical detail concerning the uneven pace, scale, and geographies of this concentration. Our article develops a novel M&A-based approach to investigate the concentration of power and corporate control throughout the global food system. Drawing from a sample of 4449 M&A deals throughout 2001–20, we reveal the uneven geographical and sectoral characteristics of food systems concentration, showing that the majority of M&A deals are horizontal (within the same sub-sector) and domestic (within the same country). These findings allow us to reflect on when, where, and why corporate control and decision-making power are shifting between different actors and geographies throughout the global food system, ultimately underscoring the importance of bringing finance and financialization into closer dialogue with food systems research.

15 Jan 2024

鈥楽uper apps鈥 are on the rise. This study explores the characteristics, origins, and manifestations of these apps worldwide, presenting the concept of 鈥榮uper-appification鈥 to describe processes of conglomeration in the global digital economy. Super apps aim to become deeply integrated into people鈥檚 everyday lives, capturing and monetising essential activities. By analysing 41 super apps, we identify four distinct types of 鈥榮uper-app constellations鈥, showcasing different patterns and dynamics of conglomeration: 鈥楽wiss-Army Knife鈥 apps that consolidate services in one app, 鈥楩amily鈥 apps that expand through subsidiaries, and 鈥楬ost鈥 and 鈥楬ub鈥-style apps that leverage external developers. This typology offers a comprehensive understanding of the conglomeration patterns underpinning the rise of super apps, involving corporate, development and international expansion strategies. Ultimately, super-appification represents an intensified form of 鈥榓ppification鈥, as these apps increasingly pervade and commodify various aspects of everyday life, such as payment, insurance, grocery delivery, mobility and travel, with significant sociopolitical implications.

12 Jan 2024

New paper: The De-Perimeterisation of Information Security: the Jericho Forum, Zero Trust, and narrativity

New paper: The De-Perimeterisation of Information Security: the Jericho Forum, Zero Trust, and narrativity

CIM academics Matt Spencer and Daniele Pizio have published their latest paper on their work from the 鈥楽caling Trust鈥 UKRI project. They examine processes of conceptual change in the recent history of the field, focusing in particular on the efforts of the Jericho Forum pressure group to 鈥榙e-perimeterise鈥 security thinking. The article is open access in Social Studies of Science:
doi.org/10.1177/03063127231221107

19 Dec 2023

Here is a commentary from Meg Davis and co-authors for the somewhat glossy publication, Health: A Political Choice – From Fragmentation to Integration: https://bit.ly/hapc23

The magazine will be published at the World Health Summit, in Berlin, 15–17 October.


Meg's article is "Alternative Futures for Digital Health"

Tags: publication
15 Dec 2023

This has a quick turnaround timeframe deadline 17 Jan 2024 and only if funding is still available, a second deadline will be on the 21st Feb 2024. The call is to develop collaboration activity between the UK and EU Associated Countries for Pillar 2 proposals, awards are up to 拢10K.

The aim of the call is to develop collaborative activity between UK and EU/Associated Countries鈥 entities in Pillar 2 of Horizon Europe. Applicants will need to identify a specific upcoming call and topic in this Pillar as the focus of their proposed collaboration with the goal of submitting an application to that upcoming call building on this pump priming funding.

Award activity and use of funds must conclude with an interim report by the deadline of the Horizon Europe call being applied to. Awards will be required to provide further reporting on their award, including in relation to the outcome of their application to Horizon Europe.

Funding may be used to support costs for concept or proof of market work and proposal development, costs of meetings, travel and subsistence, research/clerical assistance (based in the UK or internationally), due diligence work on partners, costs towards child or parent care, and contributions towards support services such as proposal writing.

Any questions please contact Lelia Buretia, EU research development Office: lelia.buretia@warwick.ac.uk

Tags: funding
15 Dec 2023

11 Dec 2023

Seeing Like a Model: Exploring and Understanding Generative AI Methods

Drs. Janna Joceli Omena and Michael Castelle participated in the 3-day conference 鈥溾 held at Aalborg University in Copenhagen, which aimed to explore the multifaceted impact of generative AI as both instruments and objects of research.

 

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