Hi everyone!

Next Tuesday,* May 14th*, Change Seminar is excited to have Dr. Michaelanne
Thomas from UMSI's Anthropology & Technology Lab (ATL) research group. Her
talk is titled "*Community as Connectivity: The relationality of digital
ecosystems in contexts of precarity*"

*Seminar Details*
Location: Tuesdays from 12-1pm in 271 CSE2 (The Bill and Melinda Gates
Center)
Zoom: https://washington.zoom.us/my/innoobi (subscribe to our public
calendar
<https://calendar.google.com/calendar/u/0?cid=Y19kZjM0MjNlMjE4NzFhYWRhNWY0MjRkYTc3NzdmNmViNDYxYmVjNjJhODdiNGE2OTRhZDA1MDI1YWEzM2I3ODRhQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20>
or
check our website <https://change.washington.edu/>)

*Description:* Over the past several decades, Cubans have developed
multiple collective strategies to navigate extended periods of constraint
and precarity, from resource shortages to a global pandemic. With the
increasing presence of internet technologies in Havana, digital media has
become entangled in these processes, resulting in overlapping internet
ecosystems supported by human relationships. In this talk I unpack the
social nature of internet engagements in Havana through the lens of
relational infrastructure—the people, relationships, and social practices
that Cubans rely on to sustain overlapping internet ecosystems as they
adapt and endure through social, economic, and political pressures. Drawing
on in-person and virtual ethnographic data from the last 10 years, I
describe how people in Havana achieve their goals: by stitching together
the digital, the physical, and the social. Looking at sociotechnical
engagements through this lens reveals innovative strategies alongside power
dynamics and structural inequalities, thereby challenging reductive
assumptions regarding the impact of internet technologies. I argue that if
we want to understand the impact of the “internet” in Havana—in addition to
exploring the economic, political, and recreational dimensions of digital
engagements—we must also consider how relationships enable and constrain
networked exchanges within communities.

*Bio:*
Dr. Michaelanne Thomas is an Assistant Professor in the School of
Information at the University of Michigan where she directs the
Anthropology & Technology Lab (ATL) research group. As a sociotechnical
anthropologist, Thomas and her students use ethnographic methods to explore
how marginalized communities collaboratively design and engage with
information communication technologies (ICTs) for survival, resistance, and
social change. Her primary fieldsite is Havana, Cuba, where she has been
investigating the collaborative creation of internet ecosystems since 2014.
Her work has been published and awarded in top venues, such as CHI, CSCW,
WWW, and The Society for the Social Studies of Science (4S), and her work
has been featured in The Atlantic, New Scientist, Motherboard, CNN, Reuters,
and Vice, among others. Before her professorship, Thomas earned a
Presidential Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Michigan and a
Microsoft Research PhD fellowship while receiving her PhD in Human-Centered
Computing from Georgia Tech.

Best,

UW Change Organizers
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