Information Nations Research Group

Information Nations Research Group

The Information Nations Research Group is dedicated to the study of how public information systems shape and are shaped by the nation, for Australia and around the world.

The Information Nations Research Group sees information as a key resource in modern society that is highly charged with meaning across our personal and professional lives. Information is the thing that bridges between the purely computation 1s and 0s of digital systems and the analogue world that we live in. Information is increasingly accumulated by digital systems as data, and information is rendered into the content of our social and culture world.

The Information Nations Research Group takes a viewpoint onto the nation that considers both how information is and was involved in shaping nations. This approach includes the way that the nation is constituted and understood as a cultural and political body, looking inwards on its peoples, addressing citizenship, participation, access, and identity. This also means looking outwards from the nation as a part of an increasingly complex globalised system of person-to-person and culture-to-culture questions, and the interactions within the nation state system in bilateral, transnational, and international modes.

Methodological innovations

Our research assesses both cases and general society-wide developments. We use quantitative research methods including data analytics, data capture and analysis; humanistic and qualitative methods including survey, interview, and case study approaches; and analytical methods built from our research experience, including policy analysis, platform and infrastructure studies, and intercultural communication.


Capabilities

Our research capacities are aligned towards expert strategic analysis, public policy, user-centred design, social distribution of technologies, literacy around technology use, risk and regulation, externalities and consequences from conception to delivery.

We have a number of research snapshots indicating our prior research successes:

  • Big Data and Surveillance – SSHRC (Canada). A $2.5 million grant to study potentials and pitfalls of data driven forms of monitoring and surveillance.
  • Australian Research Council’s QEII Fellowship and Discovery Grant – DP1092606. This $390,000 grant project researched Australians' attitudes toward the collection and use of their personal information online.
  • New Transparency – SSHRC (Canada). A major $1.2 million Collaborative Initiative Grant to build capacity in the study of emerging forms of data collection and data mining.
  • 3D Printing Initiative – ACCAN project. This $100,000 project investigated the risks and barriers involved in 3D printing use by interested Australians.
  • Cycling in Melbourne – AMSI-funded project. $20,500 funding research into socio-cultural aspects of equality in cycling in Melbourne.
  • eSports Australia – Internally-funded project investigating the habits of Australian eSports consumers and producers in the context of a global market.
  • Dark ads and experiences – Category 2 funding being sought for research into Australians’ experiences of automated advertising in their social media feeds.

Contributions

Our team is especially interested in connecting with industry and government groups, particularly those interested in humanistic or user-orient services, or the impact of social services. We are interested in making contributions to public knowledge through submissions to official government bodies and/or reviews at the federal and state level. We have an ambitious plan for publication that we believe will be well received in the international academic community, and seek to bridge conventional disciplinary divides in our work.


Research team

Data lab

The ASWG’s Data Lab is a practical and experimental digital work environment for studying the emerging automated society. Our lab makes use of data science methodologies that are informed by research in the social sciences to develop insights into the social, political, and cultural uses of media technology.

We primarily work with data that emerge from digital and networked technologies including social media, digital platforms, wearable devices, smart technologies, and emerging automated services. The digital landscape is an ever-evolving environment with new risks, benefits, and challenges developing with little warning. On almost a daily basis we see changes in web infrastructure, platform design, digital ethics, as well as new regulation concerning data privacy.

The Automated Society Working Group  presents a unique research environment for analysing social issues associated with digital media. Our analytical expertise is supported by data acquisition and analysis tools that allow us to offer ground-breaking and relevant insights into emerging developments. Below are some of the data acquisition tools used by our lab's members.

Our Data Lab offers a range of research training opportunities, including online modules and live seminars, that seek to upskill researcher capacity in contemporary data acquisition, analysis and visualisation practices. We also offer services in data analysis, observation, consulting, and risk assessment from a data ethics perspective. We welcome applications from competitive PhD students.

Please contact us if you are looking to upskill your data practices; collaborate on projects that explore questions related to cultural, social, political and regulatory issues with digital technology; or are interested in studying with us.

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Free version Uses PythonPlatformAPI
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TAGS ✔️ ✔️ ✔️  twitter iconTwitter ✔️
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The Unofficial TikTok API
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Tweepy   ✔️ ✔️ twitter iconTwitter ✔️
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YouTube Data Tools ✔️ ✔️ ✔️  YouTube iconYouTube ✔️