Principal Investigator
SUSAN WINTER
University of Maryland College Park
Susan J. Winter is the Associate Dean for Research and co-Director of the Center for Advanced Study of Communities and Information at the University of Maryland’s School of Information Studies. She currently serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Information Technology, Information and Organization, and Group and Organization Management. Susan received her PhD from the University of Arizona and her MA from the Claremont Graduate University. Her research interests are on the post-industrial relationship between information, technology and new forms of work. She is especially interested in work as collective action and the interplay between institutions and individuals.
Senior Personnel
ANDREW MACKENZIE FELLOWS
University of Maryland College Park
Andrew Fellows coordinates Campus Community Connection at the University of Maryland, in a joint appointment to the National Center for Smart Growth Research and Education/School for Architecture, Planning and Preservation and the College of Information Studies. He served as Mayor of College Park from 2009-2015, and has over 30 years of grassroots organizing and management experience, including as Chesapeake Regional Director for Clean Water Action from 1999 through 2014. He earned an M.A. at the University of Maryland after serving for two terms as President of the Graduate Student Government, following a B.S. in Broadcasting and Film at Boston University.
JOEL CHAN
Assistant Professor in the University of Maryland’s College of Information Studies (iSchool), and Human-Computer Interaction Lab (HCIL). Previously, he was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow and Project Scientist in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. He received his PhD in Cognitive Psychology at the University of Pittsburgh. His research and teaching focus on the intersection of people, information, and creativity. He wants to know how they (can best) combine to enable us to design the future(s) we want to live in.
Graduate Students
JONATHAN BRIER
University of Maryland College Park
Jonathan Brier is a Ph.D. student at the School of Information at University of Maryland College Park, advised by Susan Winter and Brian Butler. His research covers the evaluation, development, and evolution of cyberinfrastructure and online communities. Currently, he is focused on the evaluation of the sustainability of online communities in the domain of citizen science. He is a Junior Fellow at the Center for the Advanced Study of Communities and Information (CASCI) in the iSchool.
MYEONG LEE
University of Maryland College Park
Myeong is a Ph.D. candidate studying information science. His research interests are in understanding the dynamics of cities, local groups, and local information inequality. He also designs and implements systems that demonstrate geographically-embedded structures of information and associated issues. He is a Junior Fellow at the Center for the Advanced Study of Communities and Information (CASCI) in the iSchool; also, he is affiliated with the Digital Curation Innovation Center (DCIC) and Platial Analysis Lab. In the professional world, he is a Data Science & Technology Fellow at The Center for Open Data Enterprise, a non-profit based in Washington D.C. that advocates for open data movements, where he led the development of the Open Data Impact Map and advised the SDG National Reporting Initiative on technological strategy.
Undergraduate Students
ZAHRA FARHADI
University of Maryland College Park
Zahra Farhadi is a senior at the School of Information at the University of Maryland College Park, where she is majoring in Information Science with a concentration in Data science. She currently serves as an undergraduate research assistant at iSchool. Her research interests are Data Science, Machine Learning, and AI for social good. She is interested in solving real-world problems through data-driven decision making.
Community Partners and Collaborators
Maryland
KYLE BAYLISS
Maryland Small Business Development Center
JIM COLEMAN
Prince George’s County Economic Development Corporation
MICHELLE HAMIEL and MICHAEL GANNON
Prince George’s County Memorial Library System
DAVID HARRINGTON
Prince George’s County Chamber of Commerce
MALCOLM SLOVIN
Ohio
JODIE DELAMATRE
Hudson Library & Historical Society
ANASTASIA DIAMOND-ORTIZ
Lorain County Public Library System
LINDA HALE
Akron-Summit County Public Library
KIMBERLY IRVIN-LEE
Minority Business Assistance Centers-Akron
JIM LAIPPLY
Ohio Small Business Development Centers
JULIE MESSING
LaunchNET, Kent State University
JOHN SKRTIC
JOHN SKUTNIK
Akron-Summit County Public Library
Affiliated Investigators
EMAD KHAZRAEE
Kent State University
Emad Khazraee is an Assistant Professor in the College of Communication and Information, School of Information at Kent State University and a fellow at Berkman-Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard. He holds a Master’s Degree in Architecture from the University of Tehran and a Ph.D. in Information Studies from the College of Computing and Informatics, Drexel University. Emad’s research is formed around the interplay between social and technical phenomena. Relying on sociotechnical approaches to social media studies and conceptual frameworks developed in Science Technology Studies (STS), he is exploring the role of social media in social transformations.
KAREN MACDONALD
Kent State University
Karen MacDonald is the Business & Entrepreneurship Outreach Librarian at Kent State University. She also serves on the KSU Patent & Trademark Review Committee. Her approach to “outreach” includes promoting the use of the Library’s business information resources to any and all potential users, especially entrepreneurs. Karen co-edited the book, Business Librarianship & Entrepreneurship Outreach (2010), which profiles programs at colleges and universities that provide information research assistance to entrepreneurs. She is an active member of the Special Libraries Association (SLA). She received her BBA from Eastern Michigan University and her MBA and MLIS from Wayne State University.
DAVID JURCA
Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative, Kent State University
David Jurca is the Associate Director at Kent State’s Cleveland Urban Design Collaborative (CUDC), where his work integrates professional practice, applied research, and teaching. Responding to dynamic community needs, he advances the CUDC’s various advocacy initiatives and spearheads efforts to develop effective techniques for public engagement. David is also an Assistant Professor of Urban Design in Kent State’s College of Architecture and Environmental Design, and serves as Chair of the City of Cleveland’s Near West Design Review Committee. He has a Bachelor’s degree in Architecture from The Ohio State University and received his Master of Architecture from Kent State University.
WILLIAM T. SOUTHARDS
Small Business Development Center, Kent State University