Citizen social science and opening up research

Citizen social science and opening up research

We review the key issues and many useful approaches to solving them evolved across the different forms of open citizen social science.

By CIVICA Research Open Science

Date and time

Thu, 9 Mar 2023 03:00 - 04:00 PST

Location

Online

About this event

A key component of open social science (OSS) is to bring the voices of non-professional stakeholders and research ‘subjects’ fully into the undertaking of research, a broad participatory approach best covered by the term ‘citizen social science’. It has three different but inter-related rationales:

  • Extra hands to the pump. Many tasks in the social sciences and humanities (and indeed in some STEMM sciences like ecology or even astronomy) cannot be fully automated. Involving large numbers of non-professional volunteers in collecting data, making observations, recording experiences, coding materials, and making translations has huge potential to expand the feasible scope of research, especially using web-enabled apps and programmes.
  • Participatory research improves methodological rigour, boosts accuracy and reduces the scope for distorting researcher ‘power’ biases that can otherwise be hard to appreciate or address. Involving research ‘subjects’ as co-participants from the outset in surfacing and designing questions, evolving measurements and indices, and commenting on played-back research results and findings requires careful handling, but done well can greatly strengthen the robustness and replicability of research.
  • Specific normative rationales inform some key forms of citizen social science, such as improving individual and community capacities in development research; research encouraging peace and reconciliation in post-conflict situations; ‘decolonizing’ legacy research approaches used by western universities to study colonial people/areas or other historically disadvantaged groups; or deliberative democracy’s push to enhance the scope for reaching more consensual mutual understandings of how best to resolve policy choices and designs.

Committing to open access publishing also provides a capstone element for citizen social science projects.

We review the key issues and many useful approaches to solving them evolved across the different forms of open citizen social science.

This event is part of a series of workshops organised to support the development of the CIVICA Research Open Science Handbook for the Social Sciences.

Speakers:

Professor Patrick Dunleavy FBA FAcSS, Emeritus Professor of Political Science and Public Policy; Editor-in-Chief of the LSE Press, London School of Economics and Political Science

Dr Tim Monteath, CIVICA Open Social Science Researcher, London School of Economics and Political Science

The CIVICA institution hosting this event is London School of Economics and Political Science.

If you have any questions regarding this event, please contact Dr Tim Monteath at t.monteath@lse.ac.uk

ONCE REGISTERED, CIVICA STAFF WILL EMAIL YOU THE ZOOM LINK FOR THIS EVENT. 

Organised by

CIVICA Research Open Science is one of the flagship initiatives of CIVICA – The European University of the Social Sciences. CIVICA Research comprises eight leading European higher education institutions in the Social Sciences. Our work is on the application of Open Science principles to Social Science research. Our Open Science framework invites and encourages our students, researchers, faculty and professional services staff to engage with the principles, processes and tools which help to explore, share, disseminate and maximise research collaboration and outputs in the Social Sciences. Our programme of events includes formal training sessions and an informal webinar series on all topics relevant to the application of Open Science to the Social Sciences. Please feel free to view and join our online CIVICA Research Open Social Science community on Whaller. Recordings and PowerPoint slides from our previous recordings are available on Zenodo.

Co-funded by the Horizon 2020 Programme of the European Union, CIVICA Research institutions are Bocconi University, Central European University, European University Institute, Hertie School, London School of Economics, National School of Political and Administrative Studies, Sciences Po Paris, and Stockholm School of Economics.
Postponed