Archives Unleashed: Web Archive Hackathon<http://archivesunleashed.ca/>

Robarts Library, University of Toronto
3-5 March 2016
Travel grants available for graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and 
contingent faculty
Applications due 7 December 2015



The World Wide Web has a profound impact on how we research and understand the 
past. The sheer amount of cultural information that is generated and, 
crucially, preserved every day in electronic form, presents exciting new 
opportunities for researchers. Much of this information is captured within web 
archives.

Web archives often contain hundreds of billions of web pages, ranging from 
individual homepages and social media posts, to institutional websites. These 
archives offer tremendous potential for social scientists and humanists, and 
the questions research may pose stretch across a multitude of fields. Scholars 
broaching topics dating back to the mid-1990s will find their projects enhanced 
by web data. Moreover, scholars hoping to study the evolution of cultural and 
societal phenomena will find a treasure trove of data in web archives. In 
short, web archives offer the ability to reconstruct large-scale traces of the 
relatively recent past.

While there has been considerable discussion about web archive tools and 
datasets, few forums or mechanisms for coordinated, mutually informing 
development efforts have been created. This hackathon presents an opportunity 
to collaboratively unleash our web collections, exploring cutting-edge research 
tools while fostering a broad-based consensus on future directions in web 
archive analysis.

This hackathon will bring together a small group of 20-30 participants to 
collaboratively develop new open-source tools and approaches to hackathon, and 
to kick-off collaboratively inspired research projects. Researchers should be 
comfortable with command line interactions, and knowledge of a scripting 
language such as Python strongly desired. By bringing together a group of 
like-minded scholars and programmers, we hope to begin building unified 
analytic production effort and to continue coalescing this nascent research 
community.

At this event, we hope to converge on a shared vision of future directions in 
the use of web archives for inquiry in the humanities and social sciences in 
order to build a community of practice around various web archive analytics 
platforms and tools.

Thanks to the generous support of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research 
Council of Canada, the University of Waterloo's Department of History, the 
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science and the University of Waterloo, 
the University of Toronto Library, the School of Communication and Information 
at Rutgers University, the University of Québec in Outaouais, the Internet 
Archive, Library and Archives Canada, and Compute Canada, we will cover all 
meals and refreshments for attendees. We are also providing sample datasets for 
people to work on during the hackathon, or they are happy to use their own. 
Included datasets are:
·         the .gov web archive covering the American government domain;
·         the Government of Canada web archive from Library and Archives Canada;
·         the Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups web 
archive from the University of Toronto.



Those interested in participating should send a 250-word expression of interest 
and a CV to Ian Milligan (i2mil...@uwaterloo.ca<mailto:i2mil...@uwaterloo.ca>) 
by 7 December 2015. This expression of interest should address the scholarly 
questions that you will be bringing to the hackathon, and what datasets you 
might be interested in either working with or bringing to the event. Applicants 
will be notified by 18 December 2015.



For graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and researchers in contingent 
positions, we have a limited number of travel grants available. These grants 
can cover up to $750 in expenses. If you are in an eligible position, please 
indicate in your statement of interest that you would like to be considered for 
the travel grant. A letter of support from your graduate supervisor will also 
strengthen your application.

On behalf of the organizers,

Ian Milligan (University of Waterloo), Nathalie Casemajor (Université du Québec 
en Outaouais), Jimmy Lin (University of Waterloo), Matthew Weber (Rutgers 
University), Nicholas Worby (University of Toronto)


Nicholas Worby | Government Information & Statistics Librarian | Robarts 
Library | t.416-978-1953

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