All Data Are Human

The Human Infrastructure of Civic Data

This research project is grounded in issues related to the publicizing of data, which include issues of equitable access, interpretation and use. By engaging with scholarship from Human Computer Interaction and Science and Technology Studies, I contribute to a situated understanding of the local values and infrastructural arrangements that are required to build, use and maintain equitable data infrastructures that would enable marginalized communities to benefit from the publicizing of data through dashboards. I do this by taking a participatory design based anthropological approach in which I collaborate with local community leaders in order to foreground their needs and values when reimagining their civic data infrastructure. 

Doing so led me to identify the key elements of the human infrastructure that need to be considered when designing civic data infrastructures with resource-constrained communities. Bringing these elements of the human infrastructure together and reflecting on how my role as a design researcher changed during the scope of this project, I argue that all data are human, and the way we do justice to them is by identifying and building relationships between the human elements of the civic data infrastructures that we are trying to build. This implies that we focus on identifying the human actors that are crucial to these civic data infrastructures, strengthen their working relationships and prioritize their values and needs by including them in our infrastructuring efforts. Ultimately, I hope this dissertation helps researchers and practitioners move beyond the mere publicizing of data as a strategy for data equity, but instead think about realigning the human elements of the underlying data infrastructure in order to empower communities.

Publications

Peer, Firaz. "The Human Infrastructure of Civic Data: A Taxonomy for Participatory Infrastructuring of Civic Data." Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) (2023): 1-35.

Peer, Firaz. "A participatory approach to eliciting local values of civic data justice." In Proceedings of the Participatory Design Conference 2022-Volume 1, pp. 147-157. 2022.

Peer, Firaz, and Carl DiSalvo. "The Work of Infrastructural Bricoleurs in Building Civic Data Dashboards." Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 6, no. CSCW1 (2022): 1-25.

Peer, Firaz and Carl DiSalvo. “Workshops as Boundary Objects for Data Infrastructure Literacy and Design”. In Proceedings of the 2019 Designing Interactive Systems Conference, pp 1363-1375. ACM DIS 2019, (25% Acceptance Rate)

Katie O'Connell, Yeji Lee, Firaz Peer, Shawn M. Staudaher, Alex Godwin, Mackenzie Madden, and Ellen Zegura. "Making Public Safety Data Accessible in the Westside Atlanta Data Dashboard." In Proceedings of Bloomberg Data for Good Exchange Conference, New York, NY, USA. D4GX 2016.