Data

Collaboratively Managed Data

An Opportunity Brief exploring what collaborative data stewardship can look like in varying environmental contexts, in service of frontline communities.

Open Science Hardware Research Series

A summary of the upcoming research series on Open Hardware, in collaboration with The Wilson Center.

Climate Justice & the Knowledge Commons

Coming in Spring 2022.

Concept Deep Dive: The History of Climate Justice, Environmental Justice, and the Digital Rights Space

A supplementary deep dive into the history of CJ, EJ, and Digital Rights Space.

Environmental Data as a Public Good

This brief presents the opportunity to firmly establish environmental data as a public good in both the traditional sense of being non-rival and non-excludable, as well as in expanding the conceptualization of public goods to include utility and equity. To fully reach its potential as a public good, government, community, and academic stakeholders must address four major barriers: (i) lack of awareness of, (ii) overabundance of, (iii) the potential to misuse, and (iv) lack of infrastructure for environmental data resources. The data and its infrastructure must also be workable and useful for users with diverse experiences, capacities, and access to resources.

Generative Environment Framework Insights

Insight slides from working with the Open Environmental Data Project brain trust during October-December 2020.

Generative Environmental Governance: Part 2

A breakdown of how we are designing for systems change within our environmental policy, data and decision-making frameworks.

Understanding the problem space: Part VI: Regulation

An initial exploration evaluating how new data governance models (trusts, collectives, commons, guilds) could provide better insights and solutions to the topics of extractive industries, the climate crisis, and natural resource management.

Data Governance Models and the Environmental Context: Part 3

An initial exploration evaluating how new data governance models (trusts, collectives, commons, guilds) could provide better insights and solutions to the topics of extractive industries, the climate crisis, and natural resource management.