Untitled Document
Online Deliberation 2005 / DIAC-2005
Stanford University, May 20-22, 2005
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Friday
Saturday Sunday
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STANFORD MINI-CONFERENCE (Open to all -
Room 290, Stanford Law School [Click
here for map])
9:00-10:30 [A.1] Introductory
Session: The
Promise of E-Democracy
(Student Chair: Brendan O'Connor, PIECE/Deme Project, Stanford)
Todd Davies, Symbolic Systems Program, Stanford
"Designing an Online Environment for Group Deliberation"
Douglas Rivers, Political Science Department,
Stanford
"The State of the Art in Web Surveys"
Mark Cooper, Free Press and Center for Internet and
Society, Stanford Law School
"The Political Economy of Regime Change in Technology: From Corporate
Commodification and Coercive Hierarchy to Collaborative Production and
Deliberative Decision Making"
10:45-11:30 [A.2] Round Table Discussion: Taking
Philosophy Public: Technology, Pedagogy, and Deliberative Democracy
(Student Co-Chairs: Aaron Tam and Benjamin Newman, PIECE/Deme Project,
Stanford)
Panelists:
Kenneth Taylor, Philosophy Department, Stanford
Joshua Cohen, Political Science and Linguistics and
Philosophy Departments, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
James Fishkin, Communication and Political Science
Departments, Stanford
11:30-1:00 Lunch Break
1:00-2:05 [A.3] Panel: Weblogs:
Decentralized Deliberations
(Student Chair: Alex Cochran, PIECE/Deme Project, Stanford)
Demo of Conference
Blog: Alexandra Samuel, Angus Reid Consultants
Panelists:
Scott Reents, E-ThePeople.org
Michael Weiksner, E-ThePeople.org
Lauren Gelman, Center for Internet and Society,Stanford Law School
2:15-3:15 [A.4] Special Guest Lecture: Douglas
Engelbart
(Student Chair: Brandi Thompson, PIECE/EPA.Net Project, Stanford)
Introduction: Terry Winograd, Computer Science
Department, Stanford University
Douglas C. Engelbart, Bootstrap Institute
"Bootstrapping: Accelerating the Evolution of Collective IQ"
3:15-4:30 [A.5] Panel: Virtual
Communication - From 1985 to 2005 and Beyond
(Student Chair: Andrew Parker, PIECE/Deme Project, Stanford)
Fred Turner, Communication Department, Stanford
"The Countercultural Roots of Virtual Community"
Jeremy Bailenson, Communication Department, Stanford
"Transformed Social Interaction in Immersive Virtual Reality"
Discussant: Terry Winograd, Computer Science
Department, Stanford
MAIN CONFERENCE
(Registration required - all remaining sessions in Buildings
380 and 420 [Click here for map])
5:15-7:00 [A.6] Plenary: Online
Deliberation from Groups to Cities to Nations (420-040) Note: Video missing from this session
Welcoming/Introduction:
Doug Schuler, Public Sphere Project, Computer Professionals for
Social Responsibility (CPSR)
Todd Davies, Symbolic Systems Program, Stanford University
Robert Cavalier, Carnegie Mellon
"Project
PICOLA (Public Informed Citizen Online Assembly)"
Peter Shane, Ohio State University and Carnegie Mellon
"Turning GOLD into EPG: Lessons from Low-Tech Democratic
Experimentalism for Electronic Rulemaking and Other Ventures in
Cyberdemocracy"
Vincent Price, Annenberg School of Communication, University of
Pennsylvania
"Constructing Electronic Interactions Among Citizens, Issue Publics,
and Elites: The Healthcare Dialogue Project"
Beth Noveck, New York Law School
"The Deliberative Interface"
7:00-8:30 Dinner reception, sponsored by Center
for
Deliberative Democracy (420-460 Courtyard)
8:00-9:00 [A.7] Open Discussion with Doug Engelbart (380-380C)
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8:00-9:00 Continental breakfast (420-050)
9:00-10:20 [B.1] Plenary: Keynote address (420-040)
Introduction: Peter Shane, Ohio State University and Carnegie
Mellon
James Fishkin, Communication and Political Science Departments,
Stanford University
"Competing Visions of Online Democracy"
10:30-11:50 [B.2.1] Talks: Public Dialogue and
Participation (380-380C)
Cathryn Staring-Parrish, University of Alberta
"School
Communities, School Decision Making, and ICTs"
Nicole Spencer, Partners of the Americas
"Virtual
Deliberation: Creating a Shared Hemispheric Agenda"
Mariano-Florentino Cuellar, Stanford Law School
"Rethinking
Regulatory Democracy"
Ed Bice, The POP
"A
Dialogical Approach to International Education"
10:30-11:50 [B.2.2] Invited Panel: Making It Real
(420-041)
Armando Arroyo and Michael Levin, Plugged In
Stephen Bender, AmericanIdealism.com and United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 101
Marilyn Davis, Deliberate.com
Michael Shirts, 2020 Democrats and the Principles Project
10:30-11:50 [B.2.3] Paper Presentations: Content
Analysis
(380-380X)
Gilly Leshed, Information Science, Cornell University
"Silencing
the Clatter by Removing Anonymity in a Corporate Online Community"
Jennifer Stromer-Galley, University at Albany, SUNY
"Decoding
Deliberation"
Ka-Ping Yee, UC Berkeley, Computer Science Division
"Content-Centered
Discussion Mapping"
Chair/Discussant: Paul Resnick, School of Information, University
of Michigan
10:30-11:50 [B.2.4] Paper Presentations:
Deliberation and
Media Law (380-380Y)
Mark Cooper, Free Press and Stanford Law School
"The
Importance of Collateral Communications and Deliberative Discourse in
Building an Internet-Based Media Reform Movement"
Péter Munkácsi, Hungarian Patent Office
"Copyleft
- Copyright? Challenges for Civil Societies in the New EU Member States
from Eastern Europe"
Eric Goldman, Marquette University Law School
"Media
Regulation and Deliberative Democracy"
Chair/Discussant: Jackie Phahlamohlaka, Department of
Informatics, University of Pretoria
11:50-1:10 Lunch Served (420-050) [Take food to
lunch plenary in 420-040]
12:00-1:00 [B.3] Plenary: Technologies for
Deliberation
(420-040)
(Student Chair: Alla Genkina, School of Informatics, Indiana
University)
Paul Resnick, School of Information, University of Michigan
"The Design Space of Asynchronous Deliberation Systems"
Doug Schuler, Public Sphere Project, Computer Professionals for
Social Responsibility (CPSR)
"Working in the small, striving towards the global"
Danyel Fisher, Community Technologies Group, Microsoft Research
"Social Accounting Metadata in Online Conversation: Recent Work in
NETSCAN and SNARF"
1:10-2:30 [B.4.1] Talks: Designing for
Participation
(380-380C)
David Fono, University of Toronto
Ronald Baecker, University of Toronto
“Augmenting
Online Chat for Long-Term Knowledge Management”
Jill Coffin, Digital Media, Georgia Institute of Technology
“Transfer
of open source culture to diverse collaborative communities”
Henry Williams, VoteFast.org
“CitizenGroups.org
and VoteFast.org”
Miso Kim, School of Design, Carnegie Mellon
Sam Zaiss, HCII, Carnegie Mellon
“Designing
PICOLA and Mobile PICOLA”
1:10-2:30 [B.4.2] Invited Panel: Collaboration
Tools for
the E-Deliberation Community (420-041)
Elisabeth Richard, Public Works and Governmnent Services, Canada
Beth Noveck, New York Law School
Marianne Law, New York Law School
Alexandra Samuel, Angus Reid Consultants
1:10-2:30 [B.4.3] Paper Presentations: Designing
for
Groups
(380-380X)
Bayle Shanks, Computational Neurobiology Program, University of
California, San Diego
Dana Dahlstrom, Department of Computer Science and Engineering,
University of California, San Diego
“Parliament:
a module for parliamentary procedure software”
Dana Dahlstrom, Department of Computer Science and Engineering,
University of California, San Diego
“Motivations
and principles for software supporting face-to-face parliamentary
procedure”
Valerie Landau, ITCD California State University, Monterey Bay
“Augmenting
the Collective IQ”
Co-Chairs/Discussants: Derrick L. Cogburn, School of Information
Studies and Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, Syracuse University,
and Jane Finnerup Johnsen, The Danish United Nations Association
(UNA-Denmark)
1:10-2:30 [B.4.4] Paper Presentations: Online
Deliberation
and Nonvirtual Communities (380-380Y)
Andrea Kavanaugh, Department of Computer Science, Virginia Tech
“Detecting
and Facilitating Deliberation at the Local Level”
Russell Stockard, California Lutheran University
“Is
There a Deliberation Divide?”
Brandi Thompson, Stanford University
Todd Davies, Symbolic Systems Program, Stanford University
Rolando Zeledon, Plugged In
“Building
Digital Bridges: Lessons from Technology Initiatives in East Palo Alto”
Chair/Discussant: Ezendu Ariwa, Dept of Accounting, Banking and
Financial Systems, London Metropolitan University
2:40-4:00 [B.5.1] Short Workshop: Democratic
Renewal
(380-380C)
Joseph Peters and Robert Mariani, Ascentum
“Democratic
Renewal: How online deliberation is transforming the development of
public policy”
2:40-4:00 [B.5.2] Paper Presentations: Opinion
Diversity
(420-041)
Bernard Manin, Dept. of politics, New York University
Azi Lev-on, Dept. of politics, New York University
“Online
Deliberation and Exposure to Opposing Views”
John Kelly, Center on Organizational Innovation, Columbia
University
Marc Smith, Community Technologies Group, Microsoft Research
Danyel Fisher, Community Technologies Group, Microsoft Research
“Opinion
Diversity in Online Political Discussion Networks”
Warren Sack, Film & Digital Media Department, UC Santa Cruz
John Kelly, Columbia University, Center on Organizational Innovation
Michael Dale, Digital Arts New Media Program, UC Santa Cruz
“Searching
the Net for Differences of Opinion”
Chair/Discussant: James Fishkin, Communication and Political
Science Departments, Stanford University
2:40-4:00 [B.5.3] Paper Presentations: Combining
Online
and
Offline Deliberation (380-380X)
Alexandra Samuel, Angus Reid Consultants
"'Found' Engagement: Lessons from Hacktivism and Blogging"
Laurence Monnoyer-Smith, University of Technology of
Compiègne, France
“Is
deliberation on the Internet a democratic improvement for a better
governance ?”
Tomas Ohlin, Telo Konsult
“Online
supported citizen participation in Sweden”
Chair/Discussant: Russell Stockard, California Lutheran University
2:40-5:30 [B.5&6.Ex] Extended Workshop: xVRML
(380-380Y)
Jeffrey Sonstein, Department of Information Technology, Rochester
Institute of Technology
“The
xVRML Project: Building Web-based 3D virtual environments in XML”
4:10-5:30 [B.6.1] Demonstrations and Talk: Tools for
Political
Participation (380-380C) Note: Audio missing from beginning of talk by David C. James
Tracy Westen, Annenberg School for Communication, University of
Southern California
Elenia Saloutsi, Center for Governmental Studies
“Digital
Democracy Demonstration”
Brian Sullivan, Public Dialog Systems
“Presentation
of CivicEvolution: An online initiative for practical civic engagement”
Jane Finnerup Johnsen, The Danish United Nations Association
(UNA-Denmark)
Derrick L. Cogburn, School of Information Studies and Moynihan
Institute of Global Affairs, Syracuse University
“Uses
and implications of the Internet for democratic participation—An online
Collaboratory for participation in the WSIS process”
David C. James, University of Texas
"Modeling How People Think About Sustainability" (Talk)
4:10-5:30 [B.6.2] Paper Presentations:
E-Consultation
(420-041)
David Schlosberg, Northern Arizona University
Stephen Zavestoski, University of San Francisco
Stuart Shulman, University of Pittsburgh
“Deliberation
and Mass Participation in U.S. Regulatory Rulemaking”
Stuart Shulman, School of Information Sciences and Graduate
School of Public and International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh
“Whither
Deliberation? Mass E-Mail Campaigns and U.S. Regulatory Rulemaking”
Hossana Twinomurinzi, Department of Informatics, University of
Pretoria
Jackie Phahlamohlaka, Department of Informatics, University of Pretoria
“Enhancing
procedural fairness in administrative action of the Administrative
Justice Act of South Africa using web - based Group Support Systems”
Chair/Discussant: Vincent Price, Annenberg School of
Communication, University of Pennsylvania
4:10-5:30 [B.6.3] Paper Presentations: Designing
for
Political Engagement (380-380X)
Peter Mambrey, Fraunhofer - FIT Institute for Applied Information
Technology
“Community
Interface Design to foster the Political Engagement of Citizens: What
can we learn from groupware experiences”
Matthew W. Wilson, Department of Geography, University of
Washington
Kevin S. Ramsey, Department of Geography, University of Washington
Timothy L. Nyerges, Department of Geography, University of Washington
Michael J. Patrick, Department of Geography, University of Washington
“Design
considerations for supporting online, analytic-deliberative, public
participation”
June Woong Rhee, Dept. of Communication, Seoul National University
Eunmee Kim, Dept. of Communication, Yonsei University
Taejoon Moon, Dept. of Communication, Seoul National University
“The
Effects of Structural and Regulative Conditions on the Quantity and
Quality of Online Deliberation”
Chair/Discussant: Shanto Iyengar, Communication and Political
Science Departments, Stanford University
5:45-7:15 [B.7] Plenary: Does Better Technology
Make
Better Citizens? (420-040)
(Chair: Peter Mambrey, Fraunhofer - FIT Institute for Applied
Information Technology)
Arthur Lupia, Political Science Department and Institute for
Social Research, University of Michigan
“Necessary
Conditions for Improving Civic Competence”
Robert Luskin, Department of Government, University of Texas,
Austin
"Online versus Face-to-Face Deliberation"
Shanto Iyengar, Communication and Political Science Departments,
Stanford University
Simon Jackman, Political Science Department, Stanford University
"Technology and Politics: Incentives for Youth Participation"
Discussant: Alexandra Samuel, Angus Reid Consultants
7:15-9:00 Dinner reception (420-460 Courtyard) and
Birds-of-a-Feather Groups (Various locations)
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8:00-9:00 Continental breakfast (420-050)
9:00-10:20 [C.1.1] Paper Presentations: Online
Facilitation
(380-380C)
Scott Wright, University of East Anglia
“Moderating
Censorship? The Role of the Moderator: Problems and Possibilities”
Matthias Trénel, Social Science Research Center Berlin
“Facilitating
deliberation online”
Ray Pingree, School of Journalism and Mass Communication,
University of Wisconsin - Madison
“Prioritizing
Together: Agenda Building in Democratically Structured Deliberation”
Chair/Discussant: June Woong Rhee, Department of Communication,
Seoul National University
9:00-10:20 [C.1.2] Paper Presentations: Online
Collaboration and Decision Making (380-380Y)
Lori Herod, OISE/UT, Dept of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning
“Deliberating
Online in Education”
Kate Raynes-Goldie, Habitat New Media Lab, Canadian Film Centre
David Fono, University of Toronto
“Wiki
Use by Political Parties: A Case Study”
Gunnar Ristroph, Caltech
“Case
Studies of Online Deliberation: The Debian Project and Wikipedia”
Chair/Discussant: Elisabeth Richard, Public Works and Government
Services Canada
9:00-11:50 [C.1&2.Ex] Extended Workshop: XML
for Deliberation
(380-380Y)
Todd Davies, Stanford University
“Developing
an XML Format for Deliberation”
10:30-11:50 [C.2.1] Short Workshop: Online
Deliberation in
the Government of Canada (380-380C)
Elisabeth Richard, Public Works and Government Services Canada
“Online
Deliberation in the Government of Canada: Organizing the Back Office”
10:30-11:50 [C.2.2] Paper Presentations:
Technology and
Voting (380-380X)
Hélène Michel, IREGE - Université de Savoie
“Cognitive
maps of e-voting : An exploratory approach of citizens representations”
Karen Smith, School Of Communication, Simon Fraser University,
BC, Canada
“Democratic
Renewal and Rationalization: Mobilizing Citizens Before Technology”
Katherine Murray, Dept. of Communication , Stanford U
Daniel Schneider, Dept. of Communication , Stanford U
“Young
voters and political web sites as means of deliberation. How young
Americans and Germans use political web sites to get information,
participate in discussions and get involved in politics”
Chair/Discussant: David Schlosberg, Department of Political
Science, Northern Arizona University
11:50-1:10 Lunch (420-050) [Take lunches to
plenary discussion in 420-040]
12:00-1:00 [C.3] Plenary: Discussion About Forming
a
Society for Online Deliberation (420-040)
1:10-2:30 [C.4.1] Demonstrations: Tools for
Groups(380-380C)
Matthew Easterday, Human-Computer Interaction Institute, Carnegie
Mellon University
Jordan Kanarek, Human-Computer Interaction Institute, Carnegie Mellon
University
Maralee Harrell, Philosophy Department, Carnegie Mellon University
“Design
Requirements of Argument Mapping Software for Teaching Deliberation”
Ben Hill, School of Information Management & Systems at UC
Berkeleley
Sarita Yardi, School of Information Management & Systems at UC
Berkeley
“VERN”
Gunnar Ristroph, Caltech
“Burgess:
Decision Making on the Web”
Peter Thoeny, TWiki.org
“Maintain
an open source project collaboratively with Twiki”
1:10-2:30 [C.4.2] Paper Presentations and Talk:
E-Democracy:Prospects and Approaches (380-380X)
Kjell Ohlsson, Linköping University
Hans Persson, Institute for Humane Technology, Bollnäs
Olle Östlin, Institute for Humane Technology, Bollnäs
“The
Bollnäs’ model for testing, evaluation and design of information
and communication technology services”
Cliff Lampe, School of Information, University of Michigan
“Talking
politics on the side: political conversation on Slashdot”
Scott Aikens, AikensPro Strategy
“E-Democracy
in America: Then and Now” (Talk)
Chair/Discussant: Warren Sack, Film and Digital Media Department,
University of California, Santa Cruz
1:10-4:00 [C.4&5.Ex] Extended Workshop:
Democracy Lab
(380-380Y)
James Knauer, Center for Civic Life, Lock Haven University of
Pennsylvania
Lawrence Ross, Center for Civic Life, Lock Haven University of
Pennsylvania
Kimberly Powell, Pennsylvania State University
“Democracy
Lab: An Online Deliberative Learning Community for High Schools and
Colleges”
2:40-4:00 [C.5.1] Short Workshop: Parliamentary
Procedure
Software (380-380C)
Dana Dahlstrom, Department of Computer Science and Engineering,
University of California, San Diego
Gunnar Ristroph, California Institute of Technology
Doug Schuler, Public Sphere Project for Computer Professionals
for Social Responsibility (CPSR)
Bayle Shanks, Computational Neurobiology Program, University of
California, San Diego
Summary
2:40-4:00 [C.5.2] Paper Presentations: Games,
Simulations,
and Virtual Environments (380-380X)
Hélène Michel, IREGE Université de Savoie
Domique Kreziak, IREGE Université de Savoie
“Can
simulation games influence citizen's attitude and behaviour
vis-à-vis online public debate?”
Michael Meehan, Stanford University
“Virtual
Property and the Rule of Law”
Mark Phair, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science, UC Irvine
Adam Bliss, Universisty of California, Berkeley
“PerlNomic:
Rule Making and Enforcement in Digital Shared Spaces”
Chair/Discussant: Mark Cooper, Free Press and Center for Internet
and Society, Stanford Law School
4:00-4:30 [C.6] Closing (420-040)
4:30- Informal excursion to San Francisco
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