Data in a human context
March 6, 2012 to Data Art • Comments (3)
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Jer Thorp, a data artist in residence at The New York Times, shows off some of his work (like this and this) and speaks about the connection between the real world and the mechanical bits we know as data. Worth your 17 minutes.
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in title, tags, annotations or urlResidents remix their neighborhood's streets through platform | Springwise - 0 views
Data in a human context - 0 views
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a data artist in residence at The New York Times, shows off some of his work (like this and this) and speaks about the connection between the real world and the mechanical bits we know as data.
California city to give universal income to transgender, nonbinary residents regardless of earnings - 0 views
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Mayors for a Guaranteed Income
How Community Design Advocates Can Be a Force for Design Justice - 0 views
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Currently, Colloqate is working with community design advocates on Midland Library in Portland and restorative justice space in Dallas.
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The project in Dallas, which deals with a former jail, allows us to think about restorative justice through the lens of those who have been most harmed by that space. We were able to hire CDAs that were formerly incarcerated and hire others who were part of the broader network of the city and they were working together to ask questions of their own specific communities,
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Design as Protest (DAP) began as a yearlong organizing effort, involving 250 design professionals and design advocates across the United States and Canada. They examined how injustice can be challenged through the built environment. Issues such as ending the prison industrial complex, defunding and reallocating the police, and advocating against architecture projects that are hostile to communities of color.
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Four Ways to Keep the Museum Experience Relevant | Fast Company - 0 views
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The event was successful from both historical and new metrics. Attendance surpassed projections and 1,700 new memberships were generated just from people waiting in line for the exhibition. More importantly for Ferriso, the city-wide experience changed how people perceive the museum.
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Chinese residents from Chinatown got involved for the first time.
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Kids showed up by the busloads. Local restaurants hosted after-parties for young patrons, and robust blog discussions were moderated by some of Portland's design community. By extending the conversation throughout the city, the museum was able to attract a new audience and re-energize its traditional base.
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Natural disasters can take a real toll on mental health - Futurity - 0 views
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individuals who have been repeatedly exposed to major disasters show a reduction in mental health scores
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many communities that reside along the Gulf Coast are at the nexus of exposures from natural and anthropogenic, or human-caused, hazards,
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a composite score for both mental (MCS) and physical (PCS) health
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Why Embedding an Artist in Your Nonprofit Is a Sound Investment - 0 views
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