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#media literacy! critical thinking! reading anything other than Twitter posts and hot takes please!
zeb-z · 7 months
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the sooner badboyhalo viewers realize he’s an unreliable narrator the sooner I’ll be able to sleep at night
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16 July 2021
Food for thought
At last week's Data Bites, I noted how 'Wales' is a standard unit of area. This week, along comes a map which shows that all the built-up land in the UK is equivalent to one Wales:
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The map is from the National Food Strategy, published yesterday (and the man has a point).
It has divided opinion, judging by the responses to this tweet. I understand where the sceptics are coming from - at first glance, it may be confusing, given Wales isn't actually entirely built up, Cornwall made of peat, or Shetland that close to the mainland (or home to all the UK's golf courses). And I'm often critical of people using maps just because the data is geographical in some way, when a different, non-map visualisation would be better.
But I actually think this one works. Using a familiar geography to represent areas given over to particular land use might help us grasp it more readily (urban areas = size of Wales, beef and lamb pastures = more of the country than anything else). It's also clear that a huge amount of overseas land is needed to feed the UK, too.
The map has grabbed people's attention and got them talking, which is no bad thing. And it tells the main stories I suspect its creators wanted to. In other words, it's made those messages... land.
Trash talk
Happy Take Out The Trash Day!
Yesterday saw A LOT of things published by Cabinet Office - data on special advisers, correspondence with parliamentarians, public bodies and major projects to name but a few, and the small matter of the new plans outlining departmental priorities and how their performance will be measured.
It's great that government is publishing this stuff. It's less great that too much of it still involves data being published in PDFs not spreadsheets. And it's even less great that the ignoble tradition of Take Out The Trash Day continues, for all the reasons here (written yesterday) and here (written in 2017).
I know this isn't (necessarily) deliberate, and it's a lot of good people working very hard to get things finished before the summer (as my 2017 piece acknowledges). And it's good to see government being transparent.
But it's 2021, for crying out loud. The data collection should be easier. The use of this data in government should be more widespread to begin with.
We should expect better.
In other news:
I was really pleased to have helped the excellent team at Transparency International UK (by way of some comments on a draft) with their new report exploring access and influence in UK housing policy, House of Cards. Read it here.
One of our recent Data Bites speakers, Doug Gurr, is apparently in the running to run the NHS. More here.
Any excuse to plug my Audrey Tang interview.
The good folk at ODI Leeds/The Data City/the ODI have picked up and run with my (and others') attempt to map the UK government data ecosystem. Do help them out.
Five years ago this week...
Regarding last week's headline of Three Lines on a Chart: obviously I was going to.
Have a great weekend
Gavin
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Today's links:
Graphic content
Vax populi
Why vaccine-shy French are suddenly rushing to get jabbed* (The Economist)
Morning update on Macron demolishing French anti-vax feeling (or at least vax-hesitant) (Sophie Pedder via Nicolas Berrod)
How Emmanuel Macron’s “health passes” have led to a surge in vaccine bookings in France* (New Statesman)
How effective are coronavirus vaccines against the Delta variant?* (FT)
England faces the sternest test of its vaccination strategy* (The Economist)
Where Are The Newest COVID Hot Spots? Mostly Places With Low Vaccination Rates (NPR)
There's A Stark Red-Blue Divide When It Comes To States' Vaccination Rates (NPR)
All talk, no jabs: the reality of global vaccine diplomacy* (Telegraph)
Vaccination burnout? (Reuters)
Viral content
COVID-19: Will the data allow the government to lift restrictions on 19 July? (Sky News)
UK Covid-19 rates are the highest of any European country after Cyprus* (New Statesman)
COVID-19: Cautionary tale from the Netherlands' coronavirus unlocking - what lessons can the UK learn? (Sky News)
‘Inadequate’: Covid breaches on the rise in Australia’s hotel quarantine (The Guardian)
Side effects
COVID-19: Why is there a surge in winter viruses at the moment? (Sky News)
London Beats New York Back to Office, by a Latte* (Bloomberg)
Outdoor dining reopened restaurants for all — but added to barriers for disabled* (Washington Post)
NYC Needs the Commuting Crowds That Have Yet to Fully Return* (Bloomberg)
Politics and government
Who will succeed Angela Merkel?* (The Economist)
Special advisers in government (Tim for IfG)
How stingy are the UK’s benefits? (Jamie Thunder)
A decade of change for children's services funding (Pro Bono Economics)
National Food Strategy (independent review for UK Government)
National Food Strategy: Tax sugar and salt and prescribe veg, report says (BBC News)
Air, space
Can Wizz challenge Ryanair as king of Europe’s skies?* (FT)
Air passengers have become much more confrontational during the pandemic* (The Economist)
Branson and Bezos in space: how their rocket ships compare* (FT)
Sport
Euro 2020: England expects — the long road back to a Wembley final* (FT)
Most football fans – and most voters – support the England team taking the knee* (New Statesman)
Domestic violence surges after a football match ends* (The Economist)
The Most Valuable Soccer Player In America Is A Goalkeeper (FiveThirtyEight)
Sport is still rife with doping* (The Economist)
Wimbledon wild card success does not disguise financial challenge* (FT)
Can The U.S. Women’s Swim Team Make A Gold Medal Sweep? (FiveThirtyEight)
Everything else
Smoking: How large of a global problem is it? And how can we make progress against it? (Our World in Data)
Record June heat in North America and Europe linked to climate change* (FT)
Here’s a list of open, non-code tools that I use for #dataviz, #dataforgood, charity data, maps, infographics... (Lisa Hornung)
Meta data
Identity crisis
A single sign-on and digital identity solution for government (GDS)
UK government set to unveil next steps in digital identity market plan (Computer Weekly)
BCS calls for social media platforms to verify users to curb abuse (IT Pro)
ID verification for social media as a solution to online abuse is a terrible idea (diginomica)
Who is behind the online abuse of black England players and how can we stop it?* (New Statesman)
Euro 2020: Why abuse remains rife on social media (BBC News)
UK government
Online Media Literacy Strategy (DCMS)
Privacy enhancing technologies: Adoption guide (CDEI)
The Longitudinal Education Outcomes (LEO) dataset is now available in the ONS Secure Research Service (ADR UK)
Our Home Office 2024 DDaT Strategy is published (Home Office)
The UK’s Digital Regulation Plan makes few concrete commitments (Tech Monitor)
OSR statement on data transparency and the role of Heads of Profession for Statistics (Office for Statistics Regulation)
Good data from any source can help us report on the global goals to the UN (ONS)
The state of the UK’s statistical system 2020/21 (Office for Statistics Regulation)
Far from average: How COVID-19 has impacted the Average Weekly Earnings data (ONS)
Health
Shock treatment: can the pandemic turn the NHS digital? (E&T)
Can Vaccine Passports Actually Work? (Slate)
UK supercomputer Cambridge-1 to hunt for medical breakthroughs (The Guardian)
AI got 'rithm
An Applied Research Agenda for Data Governance for AI (GPAI)
Taoiseach and Minister Troy launch Government Roadmap for AI in Ireland (Irish Government)
Tech
“I Don’t Think I’ll Ever Go Back”: Return-to-Office Agita Is Sweeping Silicon Valley (Vanity Fair)
Google boss Sundar Pichai warns of threats to internet freedom (BBC News)
The class of 2021: Welcome to POLITICO’s annual ranking of the 28 power players behind Europe’s tech revolution (Politico)
Inside Facebook’s Data Wars* (New York Times)
Concern trolls and power grabs: Inside Big Tech’s angry, geeky, often petty war for your privacy (Protocol)
Exclusive extract: how Facebook's engineers spied on women* (Telegraph)
Face off
Can facial analysis technology create a child-safe internet? (The Observer)
#Identity, #OnlineSafety & #AgeVerification – notes on “Can facial analysis technology create a child-safe internet?” (Alec Muffett)
Europe makes the case to ban biometric surveillance* (Wired)
Open government
From open data to joined-up government: driving efficiency with BA Obras (Open Contracting Partnership)
AVAILABLE NOW! DEMOCRACY IN A PANDEMIC: PARTICIPATION IN RESPONSE TO CRISIS (Involve)
Designing digital services for equitable access (Brookings)
Data
Trusting the Data: How do we reach a public settlement on the future of tech? (Demos)
"Why do we use R rather than Excel?" (Terence Eden)
Everything else
The world’s biggest ransomware gang just disappeared from the internet (MIT Technology Review)
Our Statistical Excellence Awards Ceremony has just kicked off! (Royal Statistical Society)
Pin resets wipe all data from over 100 Treasury mobile phones (The Guardian)
Data officers raid two properties over Matt Hancock CCTV footage leak (The Guardian)
How did my phone number end up for sale on a US database? (BBC News)
Gendered disinformation: 6 reasons why liberal democracies need to respond to this threat (Demos, Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung)
Opportunities
EVENT: Justice data in the digital age: Balancing risks and opportunities (The LEF)
JOBS: Senior Data Strategy - Data Innovation & Business Analysis Hub (MoJ)
JOB: Director of Evidence and Analytics (Natural England)
JOB: Policy and Research Associate (Open Ownership)
JOB: Research Officer in Data Science (LSE Department of Psychological and Behavioural Science)
JOB: Chief operating officer (Democracy Club, via Jukesie)
And finally...
me: can’t believe we didn’t date sooner... (@MNateShyamalan)
Are you closer to Georgia, or to Georgia? (@incunabula)
A masterpiece in FOIA (Chris Cook)
How K-Pop conquered the universe* (Washington Post)
Does everything really cost more? Find out with our inflation quiz.* (Washington Post)
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brooklynblerd · 4 years
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So You Want To Be An Ally
Over the last 2 weeks, I have been fielding many white-guilt questions at work and having very interesting conversations and Zoom calls. Overall, they have been well received, but I am not sure if anything will happen once this is no longer a hot topic. I hope we keep up the momentum, but the media and Politicians and other power holders will try to silence us as quickly as possible. All of the companies realizing that #BlackLivesMatter will inevitably fade away as well. WE HAVE TO KEEP THE PRESSURE ON. So I made a list of talking points for the company that I work for, I hope they put it to use. I will begin sending this to anyone that reaches out to me to “talk” or “to see if I am ok”. While I appreciate the concern (if it’s genuine), I cannot continue being your only Black friend or the only Black person that you feel comfortable speaking to. 
I saw this on Twitter recently, White privilege doesn't mean that your life hasn't been hard, it just means that the color of your skin isn't one of the things that makes it harder. I think this pretty much sums up what white people need to understand, what those people calling themselves our allies need to understand. Having Black pride & saying Black Lives Matter should not offend anyone. It does not mean that we are anti white people.
Black people are not a monolith. While we have all experienced racism in some form or another, we do not share the exact same experiences with it. To try and get an overall view of the different types of racism, you need to speak to many different Black people. Stop treating us as a collective, we are all individuals.  Racism has permeated every single institution in this country. Education, Housing, Banking, Healthcare, Criminal Justice, Entertainment, etc. Racism is very much systemic, not always overt. There are also many different microaggressions that do not present as overt racism. Also, if we are going to have these discussions, please make sure that we feel safe, that we will be heard without reprimand or cynicism or disbelief. Our silence is the reason why this has gone on for so long. We want to be heard. We are no longer willing to stay invisible. Fear makes many of us stay silent, not willing to upset the status quo.
Revamp your hiring strategy/quota. People and organizations tend to conflate diversity and inclusivity. They are NOT the same. While there are many women, LGBTQIA members, Black and other People of Color, the Executives, Sales Management, and HR do not reflect this.
Conversations about race and other social justice issues are uncomfortable. Having these conversations without any Black and People of color present is pointless. Make sure you have Black people and other People of Color in any discussions you have regarding race relations and any other social justice issues. Empathy and sympathy is great, but it will not replace an actual experience.
Understand that the current state of the world has been a long time coming. George Floyd was the straw that broke the camel's back. The only difference is that everyone has a camera now and the police aren't doing themselves any favors by brutalizing everyone who is protesting police brutality.
Acknowledge your privilege. Acknowledge that the system is built to benefit you more than it does us and that it always has.
Saying "I'm not racist" isn't enough anymore. You have to be anti-racist. You have to stop the jokes, stereotypes, etc amongst your circle of friends and family members. This will be hard. But Black and Brown lives have to matter more than offending anyone that is unwilling to change.
Racism is not up to Black people and other People of Color to solve. This wasn't created or instituted by us and as we remain the "minority" in positions of power, we are unable to change it. We only have the ability to fight it, to rise up and demand change. To show that we will no longer take it. We will no longer be silent. We were all taught to be quiet and hold our feelings in to make sure that white people are comfortable. To make sure that we don’t appear threatening or angry. That is changing. Things will not go back to the way that they were. 
Books to read in your journey of becoming an ally:
How To Be An Antiracist - Ibram X. Kensi
White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism - Robin Diangelo
So You Want To Talk About Race - Ijeoma Oluo
Me and white Supremacy - Layla F. Saad
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration In The Age of Colorblindness - Michelle Alexander
Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America - Ibram X. Kendi
Between the World and Me - Ta-Nehisi Coates 
Notes of A Native Son - James Baldwin 
Born A Crime - Trevor Noah
Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower - Brittany Cooper
Reproductive Injustice: Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth - Dana-Ain Davis
Racism without Racists: Colorblind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States - Edwardo Bonilla-Silva
Towards the Other America: Anti-Racist Resources for White People Taking Action for Black Lives Matter - Chris Crass
Two Faced Racism: Whites in the Backstage and Frontstage - Leslie Picca and Joe Feagin
How To Be Less Stupid About Race: On Racism, White Supremacy and the Racial Divide - Crystal Fleming
The Ethnic Project: Transforming Racial Fiction into Ethnic Factions - Vilna Bashi Treitler
Race and Racisms: A Critical Approach - Tanya Golash Boza
Racist America: Roots, Current Realities, and Future Reparations - Joe Feagin
White Rage; the Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide - Carol Anderson
Black Americans - Alphonso Pinkney
Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to Present - Harriet Washington
The Hollywood Jim Crow: The Racial Politics of the Movie Industry- Maryann Erigha
Code of the Street - Elijah Anderson
The Wretched of the Earth - Frantz Fanon
The Mis-Education of the Negro - Carter Woodson
UNESCO General History of Africa, Vol.1 - Joseph Zerbo
UNESCO General History of Africa, Vol. 2 - G. Mokhtar
Black Wealth/White Wealth - Melvin Oliver and Thomas Shapiro
Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? And Other Conversations About Race - Beverly Daniel Tatum
Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice - Paul Kivel
Witnessing Whiteness - Shelly Tochluk
Race Talk and the Conspiracy of Silence: Understanding and Facilitating Difficult Dialogues on Race - Derald Wing Sue
The Emperor Has No Clothes: Teaching about Race and Racism to People Who Don't Want to Know - Tema Jon Okun
Understanding White Privilege: Creating Pathways to Authentic Relationships Across Race - Frances Kendall
The Possessive Investment in Whiteness: How White People Profit from Identity Politics - George Lipsitz
Waking Up White, and Finding Myself in the Story of Race - Debby Irving
How I Shed My Skin: Unlearning the Racist Lessons of a Southern Childhood - Jim Grimsley
Everyday White People Confront Racial and Social Injustice: 15 Stories - editors = Eddie Moore, Marguerite W. Penick-Parks & Ali Michael
Understanding and Dismantling Racism: The Twenty-First Century Challenge to White America - Joseph Barndt
Beyond the Pale: White Women, Racism, and History - Vron Ware
Charleston Syllabus: Readings on Race, Racism, and Racial Violence - editors = Chad Williams, Kidada E. Williams & Keisha N. Blain
We Have Not Been Moved: Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America - editors = Elizabeth Betita Martinez, Matt Meyer & Mandy Carter. Forward by Cornel West. Afterword by Alice Walker & Sonia Sanchez
killing rage: Ending Racism - bell hooks
Acting White? Rethinking Race in Post-Racial America - Devon W. Carbado and Mitu Gulati
Towards Collective Liberation: Anti-Racist Organizing, Feminist Praxis, and Movement Building Strategy - Chris Crass
White Like Me: Reflections on Race form A Privileged Son - Tim Wise
White Trash: Race and Class in America - editors = Annalee Newitz & Matt Wray
Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America's Police Forces - Radley Balko
Race Traitor - editors = Noel Ignatiev & John Garvey
Feeling White: Whiteness, Emotionality, and Education (Cultural Pluralism #2) - Cheryl E. Matias
Disrupting White Supremacy
Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels, and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times - AmySonnie, James Tracy
For White Folks Who Teach in The Hood...and the Rest of Y'all Too: Reality Pedagogy and Urban Education (Race, Education, and Democracy) - Christopher Emdin
Benign Bigotry: The Psychology Subtle Prejudice - Kristin J. Anderson
Subversive Southern: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South (Civil Rights and the Struggle for Black Equality in the Twentieth Century) - Catherine Fosl
How Jews Became White Folks and What That Says About Race in America - Karen Brodkin
America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege, and the Bridge to a New America - Jim Wells
Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race - Reni Eddo-Lodge
Living Into God's Dream: Dismantling Racism in America - editor = Catherine Meeks
Promise And A Way Of Live: White Antiracist Activism - Becky Thompson
What Does It Mean to Be White?: Developing White Racial Literacy (Counterpoints #398) - Robin Diangelo
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