School of Information Sciences

CDI co-sponsors, participates in CIRN conference

Martin Wolske
Martin Wolske, Teaching Associate Professor

Representatives from the Center for Digital Inclusion (CDI) are slated to participate and present at the 2013 Community Informatics Research Network (CIRN) Conference. The topic of the conference, scheduled for October 28-30 in Prato, Italy, will be "Nexus, Confluence, and Difference: Community Archives Meets Community Informatics." CDI is a sponsor of the event.

CIRN is an international network of researchers, practitioners, and policy makers concerned with enabling communities through the use of information and communications technologies and specifically with research and practice in community informatics and community networking.

Martin Wolske, senior research scientist at GSLIS, is a member of the programming committee for CIRN and will lead a workshop titled, "Toward a CIRN Diversity and Inclusion Statement."

"At the 2012 CIRN conference we had many discussions on diversity, privilege, inclusion, and participation," said Wolske. "There was a general agreement that we should strive for diversity in our field of study and practice, that we should foster inclusive participation in our research, and that we should do this in an ethical manner. To achieve this, we need to create a definition of these terms, an assessment of the need, and a statement of priorities and goals. My workshop will help participants create a draft of possible principles and beliefs to be included in an official CIRN Diversity and Inclusion Statement. This work will serve as an informal guide for the community informatics field."

Christine D’Arpa, doctoral candidate in the Information in Society specialization, will discuss her work co-developing and teaching a new course on digital public history, where student work engages the idea of a public and examines issues of community, identity, expression, and representation.

“The international context and focus of the CIRN meeting is not only interesting intellectually, it presents a unique opportunity to delve into some of the conceptual and ethical issues of archival work and community informatics,” said D’Arpa. “I am especially excited to participate in the research meeting at CIRN where we will identify and discuss research projects in which archives, memory, communities, and information technology intersect.”

Jon Gant, research associate professor and CDI director, said the CIRN conference is an important event for GSLIS faculty, staff, and students interested in community informatics.

"This key conference brings together researchers from around the world who are interested in community informatics issues and I'm proud that the Center for Digital Inclusion is a sponsor of the event," said Gant. "It's a great opportunity for us to present our research and interact with other researchers. This conference has an especially significant connection to GSLIS because of our community archiving work and community participation work in managing localized data sets." 

Tags:
Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Wiegand to deliver 2026 Gryphon Lecture

Wayne A. Wiegand, the F. William Summers Professor of Library and Information Studies Emeritus at Florida State University, will deliver the 2026 Gryphon Lecture on March 4. Sponsored annually by the Center for Children's Books, the lecture features a leading scholar in the field of youth and literature, media, and culture.

Wayne Wiegand

PhD student Fobazi Ettarh passes away

PhD student Fobazi Ettarh passed away on January 28, 2026. Ettarh entered the doctoral program at the University of Illinois in 2022. She held an MLIS from Rutgers University and bachelor's degree in English and sociology from the University of Delaware. Prior to joining the iSchool, Ettarh served as an academic librarian at Temple University Libraries; California State University, Dominguez Hills; and Rutgers University. She was also a school library media specialist at Hawthorne (NJ) Public Schools.

Fobazi Ettarh

Gregory B. Newby passes away

Gregory B. Newby passed away October 21, 2025. Newby was an assistant professor at the iSchool at Illinois from 1991 to 1997 and taught graduate-level courses in information technology; networking tools and use; information organization and system design; and user-based design and analysis. He was the founder of Prairienet and instrumental in the design of the iSchool's Leep program in 1996.

Gregory B. Newby

School of Information Sciences

501 E. Daniel St.

MC-493

Champaign, IL

61820-6211

Voice: (217) 333-3280

Email: ischool@illinois.edu

Back to top