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Research Themes Minimize
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Research Training Sessions Minimize

Date: March 29 2007
Time: 11:00am - 12:00 Noon
Topic: Social Network Analysis (UCINET)
Facilitator: Jon Gant and Ben Addom
Link to the Meeting (change in schedule - check back for update)

Date: April 5 2007
Time: 11:00am - 12:00Noon
Topic: Social Network Analysis (UCINET)
Facilitator: Jon Gant and Ben Addom
Link to the Meeting
 

PAST TRAINING SESSIONS

Date: February 1 2007
Topic: Atlas.ti I
Facilitator: Michael Scialdone
Link to the Recorded Meeting

Date: February 8 2007
Topic: Atlas.ti II
Facilitator: Derrick Cogburn
Link to the Recorded Meeting

Date: February 15 2007
Topic: Ultimate Survey
Facilitator: Derrick Cogburn and Ben Addom
Link to the Recorded Meeting

Date: February 22 2007
Topic: Elluminate Webconferencing
Facilitator: Derrick Cogburn
Link to the Recorded Meeting

Date: March 22 2007
Topic: CSM-DNN
Facilitator: Kiran Najarag
Link to the Recorded Meeting

 

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Research Agenda Minimize

Research Agenda
 Derrick Cogburn
The broad research agenda of the lab is to achieve a better understanding of three areas: (1) the institutional mechanisms of global governance for information and communication technology; (2) the role, development, and functioning of transnational policy-actor advocacy networks in global regime formation and their linkages with epistemic communities; and finally (3) the socio-technical infrastructure for geographically-distributed collaboration in knowledge work.  

Currently, we are studying the participation of transnational advocacy networks in elite global information and communication technology policy processes such as the United Nations-sponsored World Summit on the Information Society. We are specifically interested in the impact of web-based socio-technical collaboration infrastructure – configured as a “policy collaboratory” – on the interaction and density of these policy networks and on the epistemic communities that nourish them. 

Research Themes

 To accomplish the goals of our research program, we are currently engaged in three interrelated research projects, which are as follows:

a. Collaboratories and Cyberinfrastructure: This research theme focuses on presenting and studyingCollaboratories and Cyberinfrastructure blended learning approaches that involve the strategic and principled use of information and Tuesday, communications technologies to create “centers without walls;” and the widespread use of information and communication technologies to facilitate geographically distributed collaboration by social scientists and humanities scholars.

 

Global Governance and Transnational Networksb. Global Governance and Transnational Networks: This theme investigates the socio-technical infrastructure required to enhance the participation of developing countries and civil society organizations in global governance processes in information and communication policy.

 

c. Geographically Distributed Collaborative Learning: This research area examines geographically distributed collaborative learning between students and faculty in developed and developing countries. Geographically Distributed Collaborative LearningThe investigation focuses on an interdisciplinary seminar involving graduate students at two universities in the United States and two in other countries outside the U.S. The seminar, entitled “Globalization and the Information Society: Information, Communication and Development” (“Globalization Seminar”), involves students from up to six universities, including participating institutions in the United States, South Africa; Rwanda; and the Caribbean.

 

 

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Research Practices Minimize

As a social science collaboratory, we try to “practice what we preach”. This means that we are not only studying geographically distributed collaboration, but we are constantly applying the findings from our research to our own practice. As such, we have established a suite of collaboration tools for use in the lab. This suite of tools supports our synchronous and asynchronous collaboration in three ways: (1) enhances our people to people communication; (2) strengthens our access to digital resources; and finally (3) facilitates our remote access to physical spaces.

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

Cotelco uses a mixed-methods approach in its research, including qualitative techniques (interviews, focus groups, participant observation, and content analysis); quantitative techniques (survey research, statistical analysis); and social network analysis.

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