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Can Big Data Save the World?

 
  September 30, 2015  
     
 


Battle of Ideas, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS
12midday-1pm, Saturday 17 October 2015


A public discussion of Big Data and the developing world taking place at the Barbican Centre, as part of the Battle over Life and Death strand of the Battle of Ideas festival.

One of the biggest barriers to development in poorer countries has been a lack of good data to inform decisions about everything from the economy to planning and healthcare. The spread of information technology could be a major asset in solving such problems. Access to the internet and to mobile phones has broadened rapidly in recent years, even in the most impoverished countries. Data from these devices could be used in a variety of ways. For example, a team of Belgian researchers was able to show strong correlations between mobile-phone credit purchases and food availability in developing countries. While such data is no substitute for proper surveys of food supply, they could be a cheap and very fast way of identifying potential problems, allowing aid to be supplied before a situation became really serious.

But having lots of data is not the same as being able to use it. The Haiti earthquake in 2010 was the first time social media and satellite mapping using thousands of volunteers around the world came together to provide a wealth of information on the post-disaster situation. According to a report 
(.pdf 5.72MB) from the United Nations, the aid response 'was not tooled to handle these two new information firehoses - one from the disaster-affected community and one from a mobilised swarm of global volunteers'. There are other problems, too. If governments gain access to call records, that data could be used as a means of regulating the population or undermining their privacy. On the other hand, a lack of openness can prevent such data from being used. So while social media data is relatively open, and was therefore of great benefit after the Nepal earthquakes, the proprietary nature of mobile phone records prevented these from being used during the Ebola crisis.

There is also always the danger of ignoring problems because data is not available, focusing relief on areas where data has provided a better picture, in effect punishing people for being too poor to have phones and data connections. Moreover, using data to find and ameliorate specific problems may come at the expense of more ambitious solutions, such as the broad-based development that is required to tackle poverty more fundamentally.

How seriously should we take the idea that big data can solve acute and chronic problems in developing countries? Are the gains to be made worth the risk of undermining privacy? How can we prevent a 'digital divide' emerging between the poorest countries, where technology is less widely available, and the rest? Has our fascination with data become a displacement activity for the ambitious development required to tackle poverty?
 
 
Organized by: Battle of Ideas
Invited Speakers: Timandra Harkness (science writer and broadcaster, presenter of the BBC Radio 4 programmes FutureProofing and Data, Data Everywhere, and author of the forthcoming book Big Data: Does Size Matter?)

Dr Marie McIntyre (Epidemiologist and Research Associate at the University of Liverpool's Institute of Infection and Global Health)

Paul Jasper (Development Economist and Consultant at Oxford Policy Management)

David Chandler (Professor of International Relations and Director of the Centre for the Study of Democracy at the University of Westminster, and author of books including Resilience: The Governance of Complexity, Freedom vs Necessity in International Relations: Human-Centred Approaches to Security and Development and International Statebuilding: The Rise of Post-Liberal Governance)

Sandy Starr (Communications Officer at the Progress Educational Trust, and Webmaster of BioNews)

[All of the speakers listed above are confirmed]
 
Deadline for Abstracts: N/A
 
Registration: Details of how to book for the Battle of Ideas festival can be found online here.
E-mail: sstarr@progress.org.uk
 
   
 
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