EiJ Global Record Panel 4S Hawaii 2023
Nov 9, 2023
113. Environmental Injustice Global Record: Rural Spaces: Part 1
Room: 306A 08:30 to 10:20
Reading Data Sets
Digital collection of annotated data sets.
Teaching and Governing Radiated Places
Monday March 29 6pm PST (Tuesday March 30 10am JST)
Teaching and Governing Radiated Places
被曝地域および施設に関するガバナンスと教育
Radiation Education, Past and Future
This essay focuses on radiation pedagogy and educational programs.
Radiation Regulation, Past and Future
Monday March 15, 6 pm PST (Tuesday March 16, 10am JST)
Radiation Regulation, Past and Future
放射能規制 過去と未来
Radiation Archives, Past and Future
放射能アーカイブ 過去と未来
Ina Kim
InaI am a Ph.D. candidate in anthropology at the University of California, Irvine. I am working on my doctoral dissertation that explores post-disaster ecological imaginary shaped and performed through data practices in post-Fukushima Japan. My project examines how data practices of citizen radiation detection activities construct and reconfigure the understanding and experience of citizen scientists regarding post-Fukushima “Japan” as part of the ecosystem. For further projects, I am also interested in the sociocultural role of small data in the era of big data and how small data that represent and intervene in environmental issues are intersected and interacted with big data in various domains.
I am currently participating in the Transnational Disaster STS COVID-19 project and the COVID-19 and Data group as a subgroup of the project above. As a member of these groups, I am unraveling COVID-19 data practices and the relationships among multiple data actors such as the government, research institutions, media, and citizen scientists in Japan. I am also interested in how differently citizen data platforms have been gaining scientific and political authorities in Japan, the U.S., and South Korea during the pandemic.
I am particularly interested in these questions:
What do different disciplines and communities involved in COVID-19 response mean by “good data”?
How do local, national, and global data intersect, interact, and compete with each other?
What is shown and what is revealed or disregarded in COVID-19 data produced about different settings (a particular city, region, or country, for example)?
How are COVID-19 GIS data integrated with other data forms? What is the role of the GIS data in different COVID-19 settings?
What is the role of civic data as COVID-19 information in comparison to governmental or institutional data?
What do people expect from data within the COVID-19 pandemic?
How is the data circulated for COVID-19 different from data produced in another pandemic period?
I can be contacted at inahk[at]uci.edu.
3/11 Tōhoku earthquake, tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster
Resources related to Next Generation Radiation Governance —Radiation Archives, Past and Future
(放射能アーカイブ 過去と未来)
This links to the Philadelphia Department of Public Health's website. Alex Skula is a Public Health Preparedness Analyst in the Division of Disease Control at the