Blog | Digitalisation

9. July 2021

Digital care: How social support during the Covid-19 pandemic shifted to the digital and our worries became “surplus value”

Daniela Krüger | Nina Margies | Robert Vief | Prof. Dr. Talja Blokland

This blog post shows that the Covid-19 pandemic and contact restrictions changed the how and where of exchanging social support with others shifting increasingly to the digital. This may be in part a result of the Berliners’ attempt to create a new private outside. Krüger et al. argue, however, that this new private relies on an illusio of privacy. Especially during the pandemic, they hold, our worries might have become “surplus value” in an unregulated and intransparent market of data on and by us.

Read more
1. February 2021

Apart Yet So Close – A report on Cairo’s Pandemic Experience

Dina Nageeb

The Coronavirus outbreak has had an impact on cities and populations all over the world. Although the virus itself is only a tiny, invisible thing, it has set a challenge for humanity: public spaces in cities have become empty, airports are closed, prayers have been cancelled and people are told to stay home for the first time in our lifetime. As cities are not meant to only satisfy basic human needs but provide crucial physical and social environments for human interaction, the changes the virus has brought to urban spaces have left stark impressions on their inhabitants and vice versa. Our daily habits influence our lives, and the way we act and interact reforms our built environment.

Read more
21. December 2020

Leaving the house to talk in private. How COVID19 restrictions affected how and where we find someone to talk to.

Prof. Dr. Talja Blokland | Robert Vief | Daniela Krüger

Talja Blokland, Robert Vief and Daniela Krüger ask how the political measures to slow down the coronavirus, especially by not meeting other people, affected how people organised their support for challenges they faced. Drawing on representative survey results from four neighbourhoods in Berlin in both 2019 and 2020, they show that, before the lockdown, a majority of their respondents communicated face-to-face to confront their most pressing personal challenges and did so outside of their home. Under COVID19 restrictions, digital exchanges became more important – but curiously, they did not make us stay home.

Read more
13. July 2020

How We Accidentally Became Pandemic Communication Researchers

Dr. Daniela Stoltenberg | Prof. Dr. Barbara Pfetsch | Prof. Dr. Annie Waldherr | Neta Kligler-Vilenchik | Hadas Gur-Ze’ev | Maya de Vries Kedem

With the Covid-19 pandemic touching all parts of life, academic research has not been an exception. Even for researchers who are able to maintain access to their field – for instance, through online research – considerable changes in the objects of study force them to rethink their research questions and study designs as they go along. The team behind CRC project B05 “Translocal Networks” reflects on their experiences of conducting a survey of intense Twitter users at the height of the first Covid-19 wave in Jerusalem.

Read more
17. April 2020

Corona und der öffentliche Raum

Volkan Sayman

Wie konnte sich so rapide eine virologisch-statistische Deutung des öffentlichen Raums bei so vielen Menschen durchsetzen? Was zeigt Corona über die gesellschaftlichen Probleme auf, die sich auch in „normalen“ Zeiten im und am öffentlichen Raum abspielen? Der Beitrag nimmt aktuelle Veränderungen im öffentlichen Raum zum Anlass, um seine Veränderbarkeit zu betonen und auf bestehende Ungleichheiten hinzuweisen, die sich während der Krise verschärfen können. Im Einzelnen geht es um kleine Geschäfte, Bier, politischen Aktivismus, Digitalisierung, Obdachlose und Mobilität.

Read more