Posts Tagged ‘Geoffrey Bowker’

e-Government in Access of Nutrition Assistance Programs - May 15th, 2013

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to LUCI grad student Lynn Dombrowski on passing her advancement to candidacy exam!

The Role of e-Government Intermediaries in Access and Use of Government Nutrition Assistance Programs

“E-Government technologies are assumed to transform the relationship between citizens and their governments through creating new forms of interactions provided by the Internet, but there are few empirical examinations on how this transformation might take place for low-resource populations. In this work, I detail the social, informational, and technical practices of nonprofit workers, who I call “e-Government intermediaries”, in their work of assisting their clients with gaining access to and use of government nutrition assistance programs. I explore the four mediation activities these workers engage in to make the online application and government program a viable option for their communities: outreach, technological assistance, providing knowledge, and ongoing engagement. I then examine two major challenges that occur in their work of mediating government programs: access and trust. These two challenges directly relate to the mediation activities. The challenge of access relates the mediation activity of technical assistance. I detail the practical accomplishment of access, which enables outreach workers to perform technical assistance. The other challenge of the mediation activities is trust, which pervades all of the mediation activities, as it must be continually negotiated, but is most strongly associated with the mediation activity of outreach. Lastly, I articulate design implications to support these e-Government intermediaries’ and their practices that facilitate digital and social inclusion.”

Committee:
Gillian Hayes (Co-Chair), Melissa Mazmanian (Co-Chair), Paul Dourish, Geoffrey Bowker, Bill Tomlinson, Michael Montoya

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Posted: 5/15/13 8:34 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
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Bowker in U.S. News - April 3rd, 2012

Computers Today

Newly arrived Informatics Professor, Geoffrey Bowker makes bold statements in a recent U.S. News and World Report article:

“Yes, it absolutely should be,” says Geoffrey Bowker, professor of informatics at the University of California—Irvine. “All aspects of our personal lives and our work lives are affected by computers. We need to know about the tools that we’re working with.”

But, “Wait!” you say, “What should be? Why are our personal lives invoked? What tools?”

Read more here:

Computer Science Transitions From Elective to Requirement

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Posted: 4/3/12 9:22 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Post-mortem Social Networking: Unearthing new spaces of death and grief - January 31st, 2012

Jed Brubaker’s Advancement to Candidacy is coming up. He’s on the ball enough that there is time to announce it!

February 29th, 12:00PM, DBH 5011

Committee:
Gillian R. Hayes (advisor)
Paul Dourish
Melissa Mazmanian
Geoffrey Bowker
Martha Feldman (PPD)

Post-mortem Social Networking: Unearthing new spaces of death and grief

“After we die, our online accounts live on. By one estimate, over 408,000 U.S. Facebook users died in 2011 alone. This leaves friends and families with both the opportunity and struggle of incorporating these identities into their practices of grief and mourning. The presence of post-mortem profiles raises important questions: How are practices of online memorialization connected to conventional rituals of grief and mourning? What is the role of the profile post-mortem? How do trajectories of death and dying incorporate both online and offline concerns? I present findings from two studies that detail the emerging phenomena of post-mortem profiles and of ongoing experiences with the deceased via social network sites (what I call “post-mortem social networking”). These new practices highlight spatial, temporal, and social expansions enabled by social network site infrastructure, and let us consider their impact on online behavior more broadly.”

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Posted: 1/31/12 6:54 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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