3 artist/creative writer-in-residence posts for 2025

We are pleased to advertise our 3 artist/creative writer-in-residence posts to work on the Data Stories project at Maynooth University (https://datastories.maynoothuniversity.ie/) from January 2025 to December 2025. The fee is €32,000, with duties expected to average 3 days a week working on two case studies, each running in parallel for the twelve months.

[Images – A data workshop facilitated by one of this year’s artists-in-residence, Joan Somers Donnelly. A map projecting onto our 3D model of Dublin by the project’s creative technologist, Olly Dawkins.]

The project has a broad view of what constitutes an artist or creative writer and will consider applications from: digital and media artists, performance and installation artists, craft workers, novelists, short story writers, playwrights, poets, cartoonists, essayists, and film and documentary makers.

Closing Date: 3rd Sept 2024

Information session on the posts will be held online on 13th August (details in job booklet).

Details are available at: https://universityvacancies.com/maynooth-university/3x-artistswriters-residence-12-month-maynooth-university-social-sciences

Data Stories Artist Briefing #2 (13/08/2024)

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Artwork in Anticipation of Doorknocking Politicians

In the build-up to the local elections of 7th June, Augustine O’Donohue, artist-in-residence with the Data Stories project, in collaboration with the Dublin-based historian Conor McCabe, staged an artistic intervention involving the production and distribution of 18 different custom doormat designs. The mats, printed with a selection of statements, slogans and data relating to the housing crisis, were distributed for free to residents of Dublin 8, the community in which the artist is based and an area particularly affected by housing issues such as homelessness, unaffordability and profit-driven regeneration.

The artists set up a stall on Meath Street on 21st May, creating a space for conversation around housing issues using the doormats as cues. Local residents took doormats home to place outside their homes with the aim of sparking thought and discussion with others, including the politicians who would be arriving on their doorsteps in the coming weeks to garner votes.The intervention produced significant media and political attention, being covered by the Dublin Inquirer, the Irish Independent among others.

Several of the doormats referenced the politics of housing data, such as the growing prevalence of ‘hidden homelessness’ not captured by conventional definitions, and the 2022 census statistic indicating the percentage (41%) of people aged 18-34 living with their parents. As Augustine says, the intervention emerged from “a desire to take the findings of the Data Stories project into communities in a way that could make an impact on their lives.” Furthermore, the idea arose from an interest in how the doorstep itself becomes a political space around election time, inspiring its use as a site for intervention.

Working in collaboration with Conor McCabe and Sam Mutter, a postdoctoral researcher on the project, Augustine will be looking to produce follow-up pieces to the artwork, which could include written works, images or leaflets reflecting on the wider context around the doormats and responses to them. News of these pieces will be communicated through this blog.

A text produced alongside the doormats intervention is available to download here. 

More information on Augustine’s work is available from her website. 

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Library Services for Housing and Planning Publications in Ireland

Library Services for Housing and Planning Publication in Ireland

The second Data Stories working paper has been published authored by Rob Kitchin and Anne Murphy. The paper reports the findings of a workshop co-organised by the Data Stories project and the Housing Agency which examined the archiving of housing and planning literature – reports, policy documents, departmental circulars, legislation, academic papers, books – related to Ireland. At present, published material is scattered across many sites, can be difficult to locate and source, and many documents are vulnerable to being lost as they lack permanent links. The report details existing library resources and their scope and remit, examines the need for a centralised housing and planning publications hub that will collate, catalogue and provide public access to archived material, and considers how such a hub might be produced and maintained.

The working paper is available through MURAL, the university’s open access repository.

Kitchin, R. and Murphy, A. (2024) Library Services for Housing and Planning Publications in Ireland. Data Stories Working Paper 2, Maynooth University Social Sciences Institute.

 

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INTERSECT visiting research fellow – University of Copenhagen

Juliette Davret has recently been awarded the INTERSECT Visiting Research Fellowship at the University of Copenhagen  

INTERSECT is an academic community led by Kristin Veel and Henriette Steiner for interdisciplinary collaboration at the intersection of the arts, humanities, social sciences, and design. This knowledge hub combines research on cities, landscapes and communities with questions of inequality and justice. The space offers the possibility of developing new ways of identifying and discussing slippery problems that are difficult to measure, inviting a wide range of methodologies ranging from artistic practice-based approaches to data-driven GIS methods.  

Juliette spent three weeks in April 2024 at the Department of Arts and Cultural Studies of the University of Copenhagen, under the supervision of Kristin Veel. She took the opportunity to present her work during a CIRCLE seminar. Her presentation focused on the research-creation aspect of the Data Stories project. Juliette discussed how the use of research-creation encourages exploration, experimentation, play and improvisation. It creates a sense of estrangement and de-familiarisation to generate critical reflection and enables surfacing knowledge that is not easily expressed with words. Indeed, through phase 2 of the Data Stories project, Juliette is collaborating with two artists in residence, working with research-creation methods on two different case studies. She described the work she has done involving research-creation, in particular how, in collaboration with the artist Mel Galley, she has been using speculative fiction to encourage stakeholders to reflect on their use of data , and how, in collaboration with the artist Joan Somers Donnelly as part of a second case study, she has employed creative mapping exercises to reflect on the relationships that link and build the data ecosystem. She has been able to share her reflections with an audience that uses and facilitates research-creation. The discussion focused on the challenges faced by research projects in using research-creation methods.

Juliette Davret

Juliette made the most of the fellowship by establishing strong links with the Digital Culture Cluster community and discovering research overlaps with the DATALOSS project held by Nanna Bonde Thylstrup. She also benefited from the visit of other researchers in the same group, attending the keynote lecture given by Prof. Orit Halpern (Technische Universität Dresden) about ‘Financializing Intelligence’ – this research traces the relationship between neoliberal thought and neural networks. She took part in the workshop on ‘Digital Humanitarianism’ held by Prof. Fleur Johns (Sydney Law School). Finally, she participated in the ‘Critical Data & AI Lecture Series #4’ given by Amir Anwar (University of Edinburgh) about ‘Reimagining networks and geographies of AI and Machine Learning’.   

This first stay was very interesting and beneficial for the development of research-creation thinking and demonstrates the interest in developing new collaborations at the intersection of the arts, humanities and digital technologies to strengthen the involvement of stakeholders and citizens in planning practices and advocate for more liveable cities. Juliette is looking forward to returning to the Department of Arts and Cultural Studies at the University of Copenhagen in autumn 2024.   

Grant:

Davret, J. (2024) INTERSECT Visiting research fellowship. University of Copenhagen. 10,000 DK.

 

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Reinventing the City – AMS Scientific Conference

Juliette Davret, postdoctoral researcher within Data Stories project, took part in the AMS Scientific Conference from 23 to 25 April 2024. In the second edition of “Reinventing the City”, the overarching theme was “Blueprints for messy cities? Navigating the interplay of order and messiness”. In three captivating days, they explored ‘The good, the bad, and the ugly’, ‘Amazing discoveries’ and ‘We are the city’.

AMS Scientific Conference Banner

DAY 1: THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY  

The first day of the AMS Scientific Conference primarily focused on messiness: the various aspects of urban development and innovation. “The good” refers to success stories and positive developments in cities. “The bad” relates to challenges and issues that cities face, and “the ugly” pertains to less attractive aspects of urban development. This theme explored how cities, both in terms of space and users, are evolving in positive and negative ways.  

On this first day, Juliette presented a paper entitled “Counting matters, but how we count matters too: considering the spatial and data politics of homelessness”. Building upon the insightful work of Cobham (2020), which underscores the significance of what we count, this paper argues that the methods employed in counting are just as crucial. As demonstrated by Cobham (2020), policies and decisions are underpinned by evidential data; thus, being excluded from these datasets equates to being overlooked. This paper delves into the analysis of homelessness counts and considerations in Ireland, aiming to illustrate how counting methodologies lead to significant underestimations of the homeless population. Utilizing a critical data approached combined with interviews of state and NGO stakeholders, this paper seeks to document and reconsider the political, social and spatial implications of homelessness data flows and their implications for homelessness and housing policies. In the context of digitization, it highlights the data politics of administering homeless services, inaccessibility of census services, the lack of coordination among data-collection organizations and financial and resource constraints that contribute to fragmented efforts and the underrepresentation of the most marginalized populations. The paper contends that achieving a more comprehensive understanding of homelessness is essential for informing effective policies and interventions to address this humanitarian crisis. By exploring the intricacies of counting methodologies and their impact, it aims to contribute to the ongoing discourse on the importance of robust data collection in shaping policies that truly reflect the realities of homelessness.

This paper was presented during a session on ‘Data for Inclusivity’ in which participants discussed the lack of certain datasets to support city governance. 

DAY 2: AMAZING DISCOVERIES  

The second day of the conference concentrated on pioneering research and innovations, both technical and social in the field of urban renewal and sustainability. Participants presented and discussed news and exciting discoveries that have a positive impact on urban areas. The focus was on areas such as mobility, food, circularity, energy, climate resilience, and smart city.

DAY 3: WE ARE THE CITY 

This theme emphasised that the people living and working in cities play an essential role in urban renewal and development. This can involve community engagement, citizen participation, public-private partnerships, and the importance of involving all stakeholders in the city.  

On the final day, Juliette presented a paper entitled “The role of citizens in the urban planning process: power and inequality through the analysis of data flows”. This presentation discussed how the digitalization of the planning process can potentially improve stakeholders’ involvement. Indeed, digital tools potentially improve interaction between planners and citizens, reduce barriers to participation, encouraging creativity and expression. However, this can only be an improvement if citizens are able to participate effectively. As Rosener (2008) has shown, it is not enough to evaluate the success of participation based on more citizens taking part, but rather its impact, to achieve better public policy. This study examines the challenges faced by citizens in actively participating in the planning process in the digital age through an ethnographic approach of a citizens’ association in Dublin. Specifically, this paper investigates how citizens strive to gather and mobilize data and integrate themselves into the planning system to voice their opinions, particularly during the planning appeals stage. In the context of the increasing digitization of the planning process, this paper scrutinizes the data flow within the system and its implications for citizen interaction within the planning and building control process. Additionally, this research examines how citizens leverage data to pursue collective or personal goals, probing the extent of their influence on the planning process. By demonstrating the significance of citizen engagement, this makes it possible to assess its impact on transparency and accountability, shedding light on biases in participation. The paper discusses power inequalities within the planning process, underscoring that only a minority of citizens familiar with the process are actively involved. This analysis encourages reflection on open data and transparency on the generation, flow, and analysis of planning data, and how citizen participation can be enhanced and equitably distributed in the age of digitized urban planning.

This paper was presented during a session on ‘Digital Tools for Cities (Digitalization)’ in which participants presented different tools to improve the digitalization of urban planning or to reflect on the challenges of digitalization.

Conference website: https://reinventingthecity24.dryfta.com/ 

References:

Cobham, A., 2020. The uncounted. Polity press, Cambridge Medford, Mass. 

Rosener, J. B. (2008). Citizen Participation: Can We Measure Its Effectiveness? In The Age of Direct Citizen Participation. Routledge. 

 

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The Data Politics of Housing and Planning, CFP + travel bursaries

Call for papers, with travel bursaries

The Data Politics of Housing and Planning  

2nd – 3rd September, 2024

Maynooth University, Ireland

We are seeking participants for a two-day workshop that will explore the data politics of housing and planning. The workshop is organised as part of the ERC funded project, ‘Data Stories: Telling Stories about and with Planning and Property Data’ (https://datastories.maynoothuniversity.ie/). We are offering:

  • 4 travel bursaries for speakers of either up to €800 with 3 night’s accommodation (for beyond-Europe travel) or up to €250 with 2 night’s accommodation (for within-Europe travel)*. The bursary is open to doctoral students, early career researchers and senior academics.
  • 3 travel bursaries for doctoral students to attend the workshop of up to €250, plus 2 night’s accommodation.*

Speakers will be expected to contribute a full chapter to an edited book of the workshop proceedings.

Workshop focus

Planning and property data are the key evidence base for how cities are understood, planned and developed, informing public perception, guiding investments, and shaping policy. Administrative records, official statistics, commissioned surveys, spatial data, and industry information have long been used to facilitate these endeavours. More recently, there has been a proliferation of digital, data-driven systems and platforms for managing the planning system, construction and market activity, and property assets and tenants. Much of these planning and property data are proprietary and closed, used to drive competitive advantage, though data produced by city administrations are increasingly made openly available, enabling citizens to produce their own civic media and companies to create commercial apps and data products. In some cases, citizens create their own counter-data and enact forms of data activism to challenge housing and planning policies and market operations.

Despite the centrality and value of planning and property data for highly consequential decisions, little critical attention has been paid to them and their lifecycles, circulation, politics, power and use in policy and stakeholder decision-making. If attention is paid, it is usually concerned with the availability, coverage and veracity of datasets in a technical sense, rather than exposing the inherent politics and praxes in their generation and use. This workshop will address this lacuna by making data the central focus of analysis, exploring the data assemblages, data politics and data power of housing and planning. It is expected that papers will examine the nature of housing and planning data, the data governance and data politics of data-driven systems and evidence-informed policy and decision-making, issues of data justice and data sovereignty, and the enactment of data activism.

The workshop will have five sessions, with 30 minutes allocated for each paper (to include Q&A), plus panel discussion. It is anticipated that the sessions will cover the following topics, each focusing on their specific data politics.

  • Land registries, planning, construction activity and supply
  • Financialisation, housing, prop tech, residential/commercial real estate
  • Renting, evictions, vacancy
  • Homelessness and housing inequalities
  • Data activism, counter-data, and housing and planning

The workshop will be held immediately after the International Geographic Congress, which is taking place in Dublin, Ireland, 24th-30th August, https://igc2024dublin.org/

Application process

To apply to present a paper and receive a travel bursary please submit a short cover letter explaining why you would like to attend, a title and a short abstract (100-150 words) to Rob.Kitchin@mu.ie (using the subject line ‘CFP data politics of housing and planning’) by February 2nd 2024.

To apply for a doctoral student travel bursary to attend the workshop please submit a cover letter explaining why you would like to attend to Rob.Kitchin@mu.ie (using the subject line ‘Bursary data politics of housing and planning’) by February 2nd 2024.

A decision on selection will be made by the end of February.

For any queries please email Rob.Kitchin@mu.ie

* Payments will be made on a receipts basis for the amount paid for travel up to the value of the bursaries and travel plans will have to be confirmed with workshop organisers in advance. Any costs beyond the bursary will need to be met by the attendee.

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Call For Papers (3/3) – Critical perspectives on planning and housing data (IGC 2024)

This is the third of three calls for papers from the Data Stories team for the next International Geographical Congress (IGC) in 2024. 

IGC 2024 is an international conference bringing together geographers from all fields, from the social sciences to physical geography and beyond. The theme for 2024 is “Celebrating a world of difference”, for which 44 different commissions are proposing sessions. The IGC 2024 will be held in Dublin from August 24 to 30: https://igc2024dublin.org/ 

CFP Critical perspectives on planning and housing data  

Dr. Carla Maria Kayanan (chair), Dr. Juliette Davret, Prof. Rob Kitchin, Dr. Sophia Maalsen, Dr. Samuel Mutter and Dr. Maedhbh Nic Lochlainn are organising a session on critical perspectives on planning and housing data.  

Session abstract: Planning and property data are the key evidence base for how cities are understood, planned and developed (e.g., Kitchin, 2021; Loukissas, 2019; Marquarts, 2026; Meng and DiSalvo, 2018). The increased use of data in urban planning, housing management and development financialisation has led to profound shifts in how we understand, design, and manage our built environments. However, this transition towards a more data-driven approach raises a series of critical questions concerning who controls the data infrastructures, the generation, analysis, and interpretation of data, and data-driven decision-making, as well as issues of spatial justice, privacy, representativeness and data ethics. 

This session aims to examine the most crucial and contentious aspects of data politics and power in urban planning and housing management. We seek contributions that explore critical perspectives on planning and housing data, including but not limited to the following topics: 

  • Data infrastructures of planning and housing; 
  • Data utilization in addressing housing crises;  
  • Data capitalism and housing financialisation 
  • Biases and inequalities in housing and urban data; 
  • Activist uses of planning and housing data 
  • The impact of automation and artificial intelligence on urban planning; 
  • Ethical and privacy issues in planning and housing data practices; 
  • Visual narrative and other representations of data in urban planning; 
  • Historical perspectives on data in urban planning and housing; 
  • Challenges of public participation in a data-centric context; 
  • New methodologies for critically analysing data in urban planning. 

Critical Perspectives on Planning and Housing Data CFP Banner

The deadline for abstract submission is on 12th January 2024. Abstract submissions must be made via the conference website. Details on submitting can be found here: https://igc2024dublin.org/call-for-abstracts/ 

The Congress Commission for this abstract is C.42 Urban Commission. Ensure you make clear you are submitting for this session when submitting your abstract. 

Please direct questions to session chair: Carla.Kayanan@mu.ie  

See our two other blog posts for calls for papers for the pre-event and the IGC conference. 

Links: 

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Call For Papers (2/3) – The digital turn in planning practices and policy making (IGC 2024)

This is the second of three calls for papers from the Data Stories team for the next International Geographical Congress (IGC) in 2024. 

IGC 2024 is an international conference bringing together geographers from all fields, from the social sciences to physical geography and beyond. The theme for 2024 is “Celebrating a world of difference”, for which 44 different commissions are proposing sessions. The IGC 2024 will be held in Dublin from August 24 to 30: https://igc2024dublin.org/ 

CFP The digital turn in planning practices and policy making  

Dr. Juliette Davret (chair), Oliver Dawkins, Dr. Carla Maria Kayanan and Prof. Rob Kitchin are organising a session on the use of the digital in planning and policymaking.  

Session abstract: Planning has long used digital tools such as GIS and decision-support systems. Yet, much of the practice of planning has remained paper-based. In recent years, a concerted effort to digitalise planning has occurred, shifting all aspects of planning (from strategic, to development, to enforcement) onto an amalgam of data infrastructures and systems. This digital turn is altering the day-to-day work of planners, shifting external body engagement, enabling wider access to information, raising questions about the public’s proficiency and ability to engage, and enabling new data flows (Daniel & Pettit, 2021; Willow & Tewdwr-Jones, 2020). The change management introduced by the adoption of digitally-mediated planning is not straightforward and is complicated by the multiplicity of sectors, stakeholders, data systems and flows intersecting through different stages of planning processes. 

This session explores the impact of digitalisation on the field of planning (Potts, 2020; Datta, 2023). We seek papers that shed light on innovative approaches, challenges and opportunities presented by the digitalisation of planning whilst also implementing a critical lens (e.g., critical data studies, critical geography, critical planning studies, STS, etc.).  

Topics include (but are not limited to): 

  • Digital change management of planning systems and practices; 
  • Planning’s data infrastructures and data ecosystem; 
  • Smart cities and urban planning;
  • Data-driven decision making; 
  • Geographic Information Systems (GIS) in planning; 
  • Emerging technologies in planning development; 
  • Sustainable and resilient infrastructure planning; 
  • Community engagement in the digital age; 
  • Policy implications and ethical considerations of digital planning; 
  • Data policy in digital planning. 

Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit abstracts. 

The Digital Turn in Planning CFP Banner

The deadline for submitting an abstract is on 12th January 2024. Abstract submissions must be made via the conference website. Details on submitting can be found here: https://igc2024dublin.org/call-for-abstracts/ 

The Congress Commission for this abstract is C.31 Local and Regional Development. Ensure you make clear you are submitting for this session when submitting your abstract. 

Please direct questions to session chair: Juliette.Davret@mu.ie 

See our two other blog posts for calls for papers for the pre-event and the IGC conference. 

Links: 

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Call For Papers (1/3) – Reimagining local governance: Just, sustainable and diverse (IGC 2024)

This is the first of three calls for papers from the Data Stories team for the next International Geographical Congress (IGC) in 2024.

IGC 2024 is an international conference bringing together geographers from all fields, from the social sciences to physical geography and beyond. The theme for 2024 is “Celebrating a world of difference”, for which 44 different commissions are proposing sessions. The IGC 2024 will be held in Dublin from August 24 to 30: https://igc2024dublin.org/ 

Pre-IGC CFP (23-24 August) 

Prior to the official start of the congress, the IGU Commission Geography of Governance is hosting a free two-day conference on the topic ‘Reimagining local governance: Just, sustainable and diverse’. The event will take place on our Maynooth Campus with Dr. Carla Maria Kayanan as co-conference convener and head of the Local Organising Commission.

IGU Commission Geography of Governance Conference Banner

 

 

Three tracks will shape the event: 

  • Track 1 – Territorial Reforms, Multi-level Governance, and Democracy 
  • Track 2 – Sustainability, Resilience and Justice in Local Governance 
  • Track 3 – Spatial Planning Systems and Local Governance

For more information and to submit an abstract, visit: https://sites.google.com/view/geogov2024/home  

See our two other blog posts for calls for papers for the week-long IGC.

Links: 

 

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Data City Dublin at Beta Festival 2023

This November saw the introduction of a new festival of art and technology on Dublin’s annual arts calendar: Beta Festival. The festival programme centered around a free two-and-a-half-week exhibition running from the 2nd to the 19th of November at the Digital Hub in Dublin’s Liberties. The Data Stories team were pleased to be invited to exhibit Data City Dublin for the festival’s opening and first weekend.

The purpose of Data City Dublin is to collect and present evidence regarding Dublin’s housing crisis in a public forum, and to stimulate debate. Combining a large 3D printed model with projected data overlays, the exhibit seeks to bridge the gap between official accounts of housing, planning and property issues and the individual experiences of the city’s inhabitants. While searching the surface of the model for points of interest such as schools, homes and workplaces, visitors are encouraged to share their stories and experiences with each other. In this way the model provides a tangible reference linking spatially located data to personal narrative via their association with familiar places across the city, here represented in miniature.

Visitors search Data City Dublin

Data City Dublin Discussion

News Headlines

A new element introduced especially for Beta Festival was the incorporation of news headlines concerning housing, planning, and property stories from the past twenty years. Borrowing the concept from Jeneen Naji’s work River Poem, this stream of news headlines was projected floating down the River Liffey and out to sea. By revisiting the diverse range of opinions, reactions, and speculations represented by these headlines, visitors were prompted to reflect on the events leading to the current housing crisis and encouraged to consider alternative approaches for the future.

Data City Website on Mobile Phone  

Accompanying the exhibit was a dedicated website which provided further information about each of the datasets being projected onto the model. Access to the website was exclusive to Beta Festival visitors who could access them by scanning QR code on their mobile phones. Data City Dublin was just one of many exhibits including photographic images, films and computer animations, installations, an interactive AI chatbot and a large central 360-degree immersive space. However, measuring 3.5 x 2 metres, the 3D printed model and vivid data overlays comprising Data City Dublin provided a strong physical and visual presence in the space.  

Data City Dublin’s appearance in the festival aligned well with Beta’s overarching themes of critically engagement with emerging technologies and interrogation of their societal impact. Emphasising values of collaboration, integrity, empowerment and curiosity, Beta provided an ideal forum for a work like Data City Dublin which combines novel uses of technology with critical research. With a five-year commitment from The Digital Hub to host the festival we look forward to it becoming a key event for future explorations of the crossover between art and technology.

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