Author: eusset

  • Server issues…

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    We have experienced issues with our web servers and will have to do some serious troubleshooting. During this time the server will be down. We apologise for any inconvenience and hope to be back soon.

  • Algorithmic systems and their role in society

    Under the hot sun of Portugal and in the cool rooms of a beautiful former church, we gathered for a ECSCW 2022 workshop on CSCW and Algorithmic Systems. Instead of considering algorithms or data in a narrow technical sense, our workshop focused on algorithmic systems and their increasing role in society

  • Robots in Heterogeneous Contexts

    Author: Richard Paulch What can different disciplines say about learning and negotiation, using robots as an example? Here we discuss the experiences gathered during the workshop “Robots in heterogeneous contexts: Negotiation of co-creative lifelong learning spaces through participatory approaches”. The workshop was integrated into the 20th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (ECSCW). With other…

  • Thank you Coimbra and hello Trondheim!

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    EUSSET thanks the organisers for the great 2022 ECSCW Conference in Coimbra. We are now looking forward to the 2023 ECSCW conference, that will take place in Trondheim. In the meantime the proceedings are avialable in the EUSSET Digital Library, which is Open Access.

  • Gender and Uncertainties – glimpses from the Summer School 2021

    The Fifth International Summer School on Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) held in Como, Italy gave us an opportunity to deepen our understanding of CSCW as a research field. The experienced scholars of CSCW focused on building the understanding of collaborative work practices and the design of artefacts supporting collaboration that have become pervasive in…

  • Rethinking Financial Inclusion: from Access to Autonomy

    The winners of the 2019 David B. Martin Award are Srihari Hulikal Muralidhar, Claus Bossen & Jacki O’Neill for their paper “Rethinking Financial Inclusion: from Access to Autonomy” (access via >> EUSSET DL). Abstract. Financial inclusion has been defined and understood primarily in terms of access, thereby constituting ‘inclusion’/‘exclusion’ as a binary. This paper argues such a view…