Eurograd message

Message posted on 10/09/2025

Fri, September 26 Community Call: “Eq=?utf-8?q?uality of Access Requires Equity in Design=3A Rethinking Open Sci?= ence Infrastructures”

                On behalf of the SEEKCommons Project, which is funded by the U.S. 
National Science Foundation (NSF), we would like to invite you to our 
next community call:
Friday, September 26
6:00 p.m. CET / 12:00 p.m. EST / 9:00 a.m. PST
Via Zoom

In NSF SEEKCommons, we work in a distributed network of STS researchers, 
OS practitioners, and socio-environmental researchers to promote science 
and technology commons for participative socio-environmental research. 
Our call series offers an opportunity to discuss the possibilities of 
the commons as a governance framework, with speakers presenting on its 
challenges, benefits, lessons learned, and the uncharted possibilities 
for “open technologies.”

— - — - — - —
FRI 26 SEPTEMBER 2025 - 6:00 PM (CET) / 12:00 PM (EST) / 9:00 AM (PST)
— - — - — - —
This month’s Community Call topic:
“Equality of Access Requires Equity in Design: Rethinking Open Science 
Infrastructures” with Louise Bezuidenhout
The 2021 UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science underscored the global 
commitment to Open Science. The declaration defines Open Science through 
the values of inclusivity and equity and the principle of 
sustainability. This commitment to equity hinges on a key implicit 
assumption: that diverse stakeholders around the world will be able to 
add value to their lives by accessing and applying the resources made 
available through Open Science infrastructures and practices. Despite 
these strong commitments, engagement around what equitable access to 
open resources looks like in practice is low. Being able to meaningfully 
utilize available online resources is influenced by a range of other 
technical, infrastructural, cultural and geopolitical factors.

This call presents research on infrastructural equity. Using 
computational methods, access to open infrastructures has been tested 
from different locations around the world. The data illustrates a highly 
heterogeneous landscape of accessibility of open resources that links to 
the design decisions inherent in these infrastructures and the contexts 
in which they are trying to be used. How can we ensure that 
infrastructures are not geo-blocked to specific countries? How can we 
support use of infrastructures in low-bandwidth settings? How can we 
enable engagement with infrastructures through diverse ICT devices? How 
can we ensure that equal access to open resources is supported by equity 
in infrastructure design?

The series is open to public participation, and registration is 
required: https://bit.ly/4gaQgyG

Complete details can be found in our September 26 Community Call Flyer: 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1--yukjZBCNwgA2AWRUcJCBKKJdobEixJ/view?usp=sharing

For more info about the series, visit: 
https://seekcommons.org/community-calls.html
We hope you can join us!

Warm regards,
The NSF SEEKCommons Project

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pdf which had a name of Louise Bezuidenhout_CC SEEKCOMMONS.pdf]
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