
Race + Tech Network Survey
We invite organizations, practitioners, researchers, creatives, and community organizers, who work at the intersections of race and technology to complete our 10-20 minute survey.
The Race + Tech Network Survey will be used to
Map the ecosystem of race + tech

We aim to build, expand, elevate and sustain
a global network of initiatives working at the intersection of race + tech
JOin our Network
We envision supporting community-centered research collaborations, forming working groups around critical topics such as algorithmic discrimination, and funding cultural work that reshapes our technological relations towards justice and collective liberation.
Benefits
Access to data and information from survey, helping organizations, and connecting to broader network
What’s to come
Public deliverable based on survey findings, interactive network visualization, network membership and initial connections
Our Goal
is to provide space for practitioners, researchers, creatives, and community organizers to:
1.
Collectively confront racism within and through technology
2.
Imagine worlds that care for those most marginalized by structural racism
Charlton McIlwain
Vice Provost for Faculty Engagement & Development
Professor, Media, Culture & Communication
New York University
LED BY
scholars of color
The Race and Technology Network is a research project led by Dr. Charlton McIlwain with funding from Microsoft Research to New York University.
The project invited four graduate research assistants to design and carry out research that maps the field of race and technology.
For any questions or inquiries about the project, please e-mail us at RaceTechNetwork@nyu.edu
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Jorge Garcia
Doctoral Candidate, Learning Sciences and Technology Design & Race, Inequality, and Language in Education
Stanford University -
Shamika Klassen
Doctoral Candidate, Information Science
University of Colorado Boulder -
Natalie Araujo Melo
Doctoral Student, Computer Science and Learning Sciences
Northwestern University -
Samuel So
Doctoral Student, Human Centered Design and Engineering
University of Washington
The Center for Critical Race & Digital Studies (CR+DS) lent space on the website for the survey, however this is not a CR+DS sponsored project.