Citizens in Crises: Behavior, Dependencies, and Technological Support of Digital Self-Organization – Congratulations to *Dr. rer. nat.* Steffen Haesler on His Successful Doctoral Defense (#8)
In crises, people naturally self-organize by helping in their communities, volunteering, or working with professionals. Technology plays a crucial role in crisis management and volunteering, with tools like social media and specialized software, such as COVID tracing apps, facilitating collaboration. The PhD thesis of Steffen Haesler explores how individuals spontaneously volunteer during crises, utilizing both familiar and new technologies for disaster response. It addresses the challenge of technological dependence when ICT infrastructure fails or becomes overloaded during crises. The focus is on designing resilient, user-friendly technology aligned with people’s mental models and capabilities.
Beyond traditional crisis support, the thesis examines caregiving and mental health needs, employing quantitative and qualitative methods, human-centred design principles, and user studies. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted gaps in digitization and showcased innovative solutions from tech-savvy volunteers. Decentralized communication technologies like Disruption-Tolerant Networking (DTN) are proposed to enhance neighborhood resilience by reducing reliance on distant servers.
On Wednesday, September 18, 2024, Steffen Haesler successfully defended his PhD thesis, marking the final milestone towards achieving his Dr. rer. nat. degree at the Department of Computer Science at Technical University of Darmstadt.
The entire PEASEC team extends its heartfelt congratulations to our new Dr. rer. nat. Steffen Haesler!
His dissertation was supervised by Prof. Dr. Dr. Christian Reuter, who also acted as first referee. Prof. Dr. Carman Neustaedter (Simon Fraser University, Canada) served as second referee. Prof. Prof. Dr.-Ing. Matthias Hollick (Secure Mobile Networks) and Prof. Dr. Jan Gugenheimer (Human-Computer Interaction) joined the examination committee.
Citizens in Crises: Behavior, Dependencies, and Technological Support of Digital Self-Organization
In times of crisis, individuals spontaneously engage in various forms of self-organization, whether within their neighborhoods, by volunteering, or alongside professional responders. Technology is established in crisis volunteering and management, with people using tools to collaborate, such as social media or integrating new software for disaster response, exemplified by COVID tracing apps. However, this dependence on technology hinders reliable digital actions because of common disruptions or overload of information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure during crises.
This thesis addresses digitized crisis handling of individuals regarding resilience, usability, and social integration by supporting decentralized concepts of connectivity. It explains why neighborhoods are important as a cell of self-organization, how to integrate public warnings in smart homes to create an environment of resilience locally, and how volunteering encapsulates digital actions. As people are vulnerable in a crisis and have limited mental capacities, it is not only about the resilience of used tools but also about having a human-centered perspective on technology by ensuring usability and acceptance through integrity, integrating social structures, and trust.
Findings show that decentralized communication protocols can uphold collaboration during disruptions and have advantages within the scope of neighborhoods, which match both technical dependencies of protocols like disruption-tolerant networks (DTN) and established social behavior of digital self-organization in crises. Complementary smart homes have the potential to enhance resilience further by not only integrating public warning messages but also allowing for automation as a direct crisis reaction. The works conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrate how volunteers from the tech community introduce innovative solutions to mitigate crisis effects. Harnessing the technological expertise within civil society is a vital aspect of crisis volunteering that should be supported. Based on these findings, a human-centered design approach suggests a resilient neighborhood environment that empowers and supports self-organization. Overall, this thesis advocates for the central role of digital resilience as a holistic concept surrounding citizens.
Selected Publications within the PhD thesis:
Projects:
LOEWE-center emergenCITY
Könnt ihr euch noch an #WirVsVirus oder #WeVsClimateCrisis erinnern?
Bekommen wir ein #WeForEducatiion als nationalen #Hackaton auf die Beine gestellt, um mithilfe der #Bildung und #Digitalisierung rechter Hetze und populistischen #FakeNews im Netz etwas entgegenzusetzen. #NetzVerbindet trennt nicht!
Vom #wirvsvirus Hackathon bis zur EUid-Wallet Konsultation: Ein Erfahrungsbericht aus der Zivilgesellschaft
Dito ;)
"Innovating Democracy?
Analyzing the #WirVsVirus #Hackathon"
Neues @Weizenbaum_Institut Research Paper von @thothiel @Seberg Niklas Rakowski und Veza Clute-Simon
"Therefore, our overall assessment of the democratic potential of civic hackathons is skeptical"
https://ojs.weizenbaum-institut.de/index.php/wjds/article/view/3_1_4/76
"Broadly speaking, the hackathon format certainly has democratic potential. However, to realize this potential, it is imperative to move away from ..
New publication: I am happy to let you know that while I was on holiday in lovely Denmark, our article on hackathons as democratic tools was published with the Weizenbaum Journal of the Digital Society! @Weizenbaum_Institut @thothiel
Using the #WirVsVirus hackathon as an example, we critically analyse the implications of hackathons as instruments for democratic politics.
You can find the article #openaccess right here: https://ojs.weizenbaum-institut.de/index.php/wjds/article/view/3_1_4
Nimm Java, haben sie gesagt. Niemand nimmt im Jahr 2020 noch PHP, haben sie gesagt. Auf dem #wirvsvirus-Hackathon haben sie das gesagt.
Ein Glück, dass wir den Schund nicht auch noch in die Testlabore ausgerollt haben damals. Dann hätten wir jetzt ein Riesenproblem in der Pandemie. #log4j ^
The article deals with the case of the civic hackathon #WirVsVirus, which was organised in reaction to the corona pandemic and officially endorsed by the federal government. It aims at discussing the normative implications of this technologically oriented political format. How are different social representation claims formulated and negotiated in and through civic hackathons? Our analysis shows that the hackathon constitutes a successful representative claim on behalf of civic tech initiatives vis-à-vis the administrative state. While this claim is primarily about establishing a new format for efficient and subsidiary problem solving in the wake of the crisis, the hackathon’s participatory promises are only partially fulfilled. The hackathon was rather open towards input from civil society and in this way attracted a great deal of public interest. Despite this fact, due to its technological-organizational structure and its competitive, solution-oriented procedure, decision-making power remains largely with the hackathon’s organizers.
Der @TspBackgroundDi:
"Bei den #WirVsVirus- und #wirfürschule-Hackathons im Sommer 2020 entstanden zahlreiche Projekte, doch die wenigsten davon kamen erfolgreich im deutschen Bildungssystem an"
Fehlende Kompetenzen in der Verwaltung: So wird das nix 🤷♀️
https://background.tagesspiegel.de/digitalisierung/huerden-fuer-soziale-bildungsinnovationen