Grants and residencies Research Citizen Agency in AI? Democratizing Algorithmic Services in the City Main applicant Professor of Practice Sawhney Nitin and working group (CAAI) Members of the project Recipients of monthly grants:Drobotowicz Karolina, Kajava Kaisla Other Members of the team: De Castro e Silva Bruna, Friis Henriette, Ylipulli Johanna, Mattila Janne, Rastas Taru, Choroszewicz Marta, Haataja Meeri, Pulli Romeo Amount of funding 326500 € Type of funding Thematic grant calls Fields Social work and social policy Grant year 2021 Jos omistat hankkeen, voit kirjautua sisään ja lisätä hankkeen tietoja. Log in Share: Back to Grants listing Algorithmic tools are increasingly being incorporated into public sector services in cities today. The rapid growth of these emerging technologies and services necessitates new forms of algorithmic literacy and awareness among everyday citizens for sufficient understanding in grappling with their implications. How can we involve a wide range of citizen voices in bottom-up engagement, and increase algorithmic literacy and civic agency to make algorithmic public services more accessible? The project aims to understand citizens’ algorithmic literacy, agency and participation in the design and development of AI services in the Finnish public sector in order to advance more democratic and citizen-centric digital infrastructures. The project identifies the following research objectives: 1) understanding the values, narratives and discourses embedded in public sector data-centric and algorithmic services, 2) understanding citizens’ level of literacy and perceived agency with regards to algorithmic public services, 3) empowering citizens to critically engage with algorithmic public services, and 4) transforming design of public sector AI services to ensure civic participation. The role of language is amplified in the translation of information between these domains, both in shaping wider public discourses and in creating transparent and accessible technical documentation. Because the wider impact of algorithmic services, or AI systems in general, is more than the sum of their ones and zeros, extending beyond technical details, this project requires an interdisciplinary exercise of interpretation. The project will offer policy recommendations for Public Administrators and Digital Service Providers, and digital citizenship guides highlighting tools for Citizen Recipients and Citizen Advocates in exercising civic rights and co-designing imaginaries that truly democratize data and algorithmic services in the public sphere. Back to Grants listing