661 research outputs found
El Tlacuache Núm. 235 (2006). 235 Año 7 (2006) noviembre. El Tlacuache
Templo y Ex convento de la Inmaculada Concepción de María, Zacualpan de Amilpas por Guadalupe Calzada G. - La conservación del Centro Históricode Cuernavaca, Morelos (Primera de dos partes) por Fernando Duarte Soriano
Data and platform co-ops in smart city citizenship: interview with Igor Calzada
Igor Calzada is a senior researcher at universities like Oxford and Cardiff with a focus on urban, regional and technopolitical transformations, considering data issues and social innovation. In November 2020, he launched the book Smart City Citizenship, which proposes another framework at smart cities based on democratic governance and citizenship. Thus, he presents how it is possible to understand and intervene in technopolitical disputes involving algorithms, data, and artificial intelligence based on notions such as digital sovereignty. Among the possibilities, there is the creation of data and platform co-ops based on data and digital commons. For the author, data cooperatives are a subtype of platform cooperatives, in which they focus on business models, while data co-ops share and store data. The book analyzes, among other cases, the Barcelona ecosystem and proposes perspectives for public policies. Currently, Calzada is interested in exploring new models of data governance and artificial intelligence to propose alternative ways to data ecosystems in the European scenario. He defends experimental cities as a reaction to the mainstream idea of the city as a platform, as a reproduction of extractive and panoptic practices through hyperconnectivity. But it will be very difficult in a dangerous context. And he provokes: “how, in the current context, in which we are closed in our homes, can we propose cities with open systems? Other recommendations from the author are an article on platform and data co-ops published in Sustainability journal and a conversation in Spanish about social innovation in smart cities. Read the interview with Igor Calzada: https://digilabour.com.br/2021/01/06/data-and-platform-co-ops-in-smart-city-citizenship-interview-with-igor-calzada
El Tlacuache Núm. 222 (2006). 222 Año 7 (2006) agosto. El Tlacuache
El INAH sede de la reunión internacional de Arqueozoología por Eduardo Corona-M. - La geometría entre los antiguos pobladores de Cacaxtla por Ricardo Ferré D´Amaré. - Servicios educativos, presente en el curso de verano de la Zona Arqueológica de Teopanzolco por Guadalupe Calzada G
El Tlacuache Núm. 232 (2006). 232 Año 7 (2006) octubre. El Tlacuache
La muerte en la época prehispánica por Elsa M. Rodríguez M. - Hablando de “los muertos” por Guadalupe Calzada G. - Chamilpa y Ocotepec: dos ventanas a la tradición de “Día de muertos” en Morelos por Lizandra Salazar Goroztieta. - El Yauhtli por Margarita Avilés y Macrina Fuentes
DigiTranScope: the governance of digitally-transformed society
This volume presents the key outcomes and research findings of the Digitranscope research project of the European Commission Joint Research Centre. The project set out to explore during the period 2017-2020 the challenges and opportunities that the digital transformation is posing to the governance of society. We focused our attention on the governance of data as a key aspect to understand and shape the governance of society. Data is a key resource in the digital economy, and control over the way it is generated, collected, aggregated, and value is extracted and distributed in society is crucial. We have explored the increasing awareness about the strategic importance of data and emerging governance models to distribute the value generated more equitably in society. These findings have contributed to the new policy orientation in Europe on technological and data sovereignty and the sharing of data for the public interest. The digital transformation, the rise of artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things offer also new opportunities for new forms of policy design, implementation, and assessment providing more personalised support to those who need it and being more participative throughout the policy cycle. The use of digital twins, gaming, simulation, and synthetic data are just at their beginning but promise to change radically the relationships among all the stakeholders in governance of our society
Acerca de la fecha de nacimiento de Santo Domingo de la Calzada: Hagiografía, iconografía y tradición
En 1606 fray Luis de la Vega publicó una de las hagiografías más co-nocidas de Santo Domingo de la Calzada. En ella dejó escrito por primera vez que este santo había muerto a los noventa años, es decir, en 1019. La intención del autor fue rescatar devocionalmente su figura y atribuirle una longevidad inusual como signo de virtud cristiana, sin embargo, los pos¬teriores hagiógrafos otorgaron veracidad al dato. Este artículo analiza el origen y arraigo de una tradición que aún es repetida a pesar de carecer de fundamento histórico, y que por ejemplo llevó en 2019 a la celebración del milenario del nacimiento de Santo Domingo de la Calzada.In 1606 fray Luis de la Vega published one of the most famous hagio¬graphies of Santo Domingo de la Calzada. In it was written for the first time that this saint had died at the age of ninety, in 1019. The intention of the author was to devoutly rescue the figure and attribute to him an unusual longevity as a sign of Christian virtue, however, the subsequent hagiographs gave truthfulness to the fact. This article analyzes the origin and roots of a tradition that is still repeated despite its lack of historical foundation, and which led in 2019 to the celebration of the millennium of the birth of Santo Domingo de la Calzada
Network Competition and Entry Deterrence
We develop a model of logit demand that extends the traditional duopoly framework of network competition to a multi-firm industry. First, we show that incumbents establish the reciprocal access charge inefficiently below cost when they compete in prices but they behave efficiently if they compete in utilities. Secondly, we study how incumbents determine the industry-wide access charge under the threat of entry. We show that incumbents may accommodate all possible entrants, only a group of them, or may completely deter entry. When entry deterrence is the preferred option, incumbents distort the access charge upwards. Copyright (C) The Author(s). Journal compilation (C) Royal Economic Society 2008.
LABorategiak (LABoratories)
This article draws on the proliferation of 'Living Labs' in the Basque Country. After revolving around previous initiatives and projects that were deployed in the past, the author concludes with several policy recommendations and final remarks. To cite this article: Calzada, I. (2021), LABorategiak, Retrieved from https://www.sarean.eus/LABorategiak/ DOI:10.13140/RG.2.2.20036.14721/
DigiTranScope autumn institute 2020: governance of digitally transformed societies
DigiTranScope is a research project of the JRC (Joint Research Centre), Centre for Advanced Studies at the European Commission, focusing on the governance of digitally transformed human societies. The project aims to provide a deeper understanding of key aspects of digital transformation to help policy-makers address the challenges facing European society over the next decades. Core Topics of the Autumn Institute: Data Governance: This is a key battleground to find a European way to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Digital Transformation. We need to find new ways of sharing data between the public sector, commercial sector, and civil society so that the value created out of data analytics and new algorithms is redistributed more equitably across all stakeholders to the benefit of European society. New Forms of Policy Design, Policy Learning: This is a topic exploring how we can develop new forms of more participative policy design, monitoring, feedback/assessment, learning loops that exploit the characteristics of digital transformation including, smart cities, gaming, digital twins, and personalisation. Digital Empowerment and Social Inequalities: How can we develop/design/foster a new path exploiting the benefits of digital transformation so that it is aimed at reducing existing social, economic, and spatial inequalities rather than exacerbating them? What is the role of local data ecosystems and co-operatives, and in general more geographically diversified policy measures, in tapping into the intrinsic characteristics of European regions and cities
DigiTranScope: some key findings
Digitranscope originated from the JRC Strategy 20301. The strategy identified ten strategic topics on which the JRC should concentrate to anticipate future policy requests. One of these topics was ‘Data and Digital Transformation’, to which the JRC set up two initiatives: the first being a transversal project on ‘Artificial Intelligence and Digital Transformation’, the second being a CAS research project on digital transformation, which was to be more exploratory in nature. The CAS project originally proposed to address two key issues: i) how the information glut triggered by digital transformation reverses the cognitive balance between humans and machines, and ii) the impact of digital information technology on the rules and institutions that guide modern societies. This proposal therefore led to the establishment of two projects in 2017: ‘Human behaviour and machine intelligence’ (HUMAINT)2 and our project, ‘Digital transformation and the governance of human society’ (Digitranscope)
- …
