Research Agenda
The term digital sovereignty has been used for some time as a new leitmotif for navigating the digital world, that focuses on the competences, duties and rights of the individual in times of increasing data analysis, profiling and dwindling privacy. At European and national governance levels, the definition and safeguarding of digital sovereignty of citizens and organisations is increasingly being put on the agenda. The different discourses thus encompass both the sovereignty of individual users and the sovereignty of collectives and states.
Against this background, the task of Research Group „Inequality and digital sovereignty“ is to develop a better understanding of the various dimensions of digital sovereignty and thus contribute to the construction of the concepts and leitmotifs under discussion. The constitution and coordination of personal and collective spaces for manoeuvre and decision-making will come to the fore at two levels:
- The first is how individuals and collectives deal more or less confidently with increasingly complex technologies, i.e. the sovereign use of digital infrastructures. Relevant for this are central topics such as digital competence, consumer sovereignty and the digital divide.
- On the other hand, positions of inequality and sovereignty with regard to the formability of lifeworlds are examined, which increasingly brings aspects of the social into the transformation discourse. With such a perspective, the research group develops practical and project-led approaches that allow technology and digitality to be understood as processes that can be shaped.
The different perspectives of the research group are rooted in participative and transdisciplinary design research, in which methodological approaches such as “Reallabore” and social living labs are anchored. The integrative approaches address real-world questions along the lines of practices and value systems from civil society, the public and private sectors. Against this backdrop, complex possibilities of knowledge transfer and knowledge integration are to be identified and developed, which at the same time outline social, political and economic options for action.
Research Group 8
Research Group Lead: Dr. Bianca Herlo
Research Associates/PhD candidates: Elizabeth Caldéron Lüning, Corinna Canali
Research Associate: Dr. Daniel Irrgang
Student Assistants: Athena Grandis
Research Fellows: Dr. Daniel Irrgang, Dr. Bastian Lange, Dr. Paola Pierri, Dr. Thomas Ramge, Dr. Hagit Keysar, Dr. Denisa Kera, Adam Harvey, Dr. Mario Daniels, Dr. Mona Sloane, Joana Moll
Associated Researcher: Dr. Andreas Unteidig
Principal Investigator: Prof. Dr. Gesche Joost
Alumnae: Emilia Knabe, Tomma Hinrichsen, Katharina Schmidt, Alexa Beckmann, Ben Siegler, Sarah Grant, Juan Pablo García Sossa, Philipp von Becker, Lisa Hofmann, Jan-Willem Marquardt, Sonia Anastasia Steinmann