On behalf of the Code4Lib 2022 Keynote Committee, I am pleased to announce the 
keynote speakers for the upcoming conference in May. Thank you to everyone in 
the community who nominated speakers, voted in the selection process, and to 
the members of the committee for their work connecting with potential speakers.

Crystal Lee
---------------
Crystal Lee is a PhD candidate at MIT and a Senior Fellow in Responsible 
Computer Science at Mozilla. Her work investigates what she calls the 
"life-cycle of data representations," or the process by which datasets are 
curated, cleaned, visualized, and circulated. In other words, she works on a 
wide scope of things: from the history of disability and human-computer 
interaction to theories about data visualization. This research has been 
supported by fellowships from the National Science Foundation, Social Science 
Research Council, and the MIT Programs for Digital Humanities. She is also a 
research affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard, where she co-lead 
the Ethical Tech Working Group. Previously, she has worked as a visiting 
research scientist at the European Commission and graduated with high honors 
from Stanford University.

Lauren Chambers
------------------------
Lauren Chambers is a Ph.D. student at the UC Berkeley School of Information. 
Advised by technology law expert Prof. Deirdre Mulligan, she studies the 
intersection of data, technology, and sociopolitical advocacy.

Previously Lauren was the staff technologist at the ACLU of Massachusetts, 
where she explored government data in order to inform citizens and lawmakers 
about the effects of legislation and political leadership on our civil 
liberties. Her projects included tracking the disparate effects of COVID-19 on 
vulnerable populations, analyzing policing budgets and practices, and 
advocating for regulation of government facial surveillance.

Lauren received her Bachelor's degree from Yale in 2017, where she 
double-majored in astrophysics and African American studies. Her undergraduate 
African American studies thesis, "A Different Kind of Dark Energy: Placing Race 
and Gender in Physics" examines how physics and astronomy theory and praxis are 
influenced by race, gender, and identity. After graduating, Lauren spent two 
years in Baltimore supporting NASA's James Webb Space Telescope mission as a 
software developer.


Margaret Heller
Digital Services Librarian // Loyola University Chicago
President-Elect // Core, a division of the American Library Association
Chair // ELUNA Primo Working Group

mhell...@luc.edu<mailto:mhell...@luc.edu> // 773-508-2686 // 1032 W. Sheridan 
Rd., Chicago, IL 60660

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