Research Centre Centre for Digital Citizenship
The Centre for Digital Citizenship investigates the social and political consequences of current developments in digital media technologies – smartphones, social media, algorithms, data, and beyond – and asks how these technologies shape individuals, citizens, collectives, and publics. While digital technologies offer progress in terms of political mobilization and public conversation, they also hold the potential to enhance old inequalities and divides, countering trust in society. The Centre for Digital Citizenship seeks interdisciplinary explanations to these complex digital developments and their societal effects.

Research Themes
The Centre conducts research on pressing societal challenges, focusing on the implications from the development, deployment, and diffusion of digital media technologies in all walks of public life, from governmental and private organizations, to the everyday lived realities of citizens.
Algorithmic Societies & Justice
As societies increasingly turn to data streams to model and understand human behaviour, automated and algorithmic decision-making processes gain increasing power to influence public policy and corporate strategy. Such processes raise pressing questions around issues of equality and ethics, demanding critical research into the politics of algorithms and their orientation in the public interest.
Mediated Publics & Engagement
Networks and social media have the capacity to bring diverse and distant individuals together for productive ends, but also afford those with harmful motives the ability to associate with relative anonymity. These outcomes of everyday media use require greater understanding how the affordances and infrastructures of platforms facilitate the formation of new publics and politics, including how individuals anticipate and respond to these developments.
Organizational Data & Governance
The digitalization and datafication of human behaviour and communication results in massive amounts of data in institutions and organizations, be they large tech companies, governmental bodies, or private companies. This aggregation and accumulation of personal and collective data relates to pressing question around privacy, GDPR regulations, surveillance and ownership, demanding enhanced governance to ensure standards, avoid malfeasance, and manage innovation.
(Dis)information & Trust
Transformations in mediated communication intensify and polarize issues of public concern, leading to a situation where even the most well-documented truths can be denounced as ‘fake’ while blatantly false statements seem to thrive. These new ideological battlegrounds and online shouting matches engender crises of trust in the platforms that mediate public opinion formation and those we encounter on them, ultimately leading to legitimacy crises in traditional democratic institutions.
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Contact
Email: digitalcitizenship@ruc.dk
Co-directors
Chris Peters, tt备用网址, cpeters@ruc.dk
Sine N?rholm Just, tt备用网址, sinenjust@ruc.dk
Reseachers
See the members of the Centre for Digital Citizenship at the Roskilde University Research Portal
The Centre has been founded by researchers at the Department of Communication & Arts but is open to everyone. If you would like to know more about the Centre and/or join, you are most welcome to get in touch at digitalcitizenship@ruc.dk or to e-mail the co-directors.
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The following projects are currently affiliated with the Centre:Algorithms, Data & Democracy
Sine N?rholm Just – Villum and Velux FoundationAlternative Media and Ideological Counterpublics
Eva Mayerh?ffer – Carlsberg FoundationAlterUse – Digital Alternative News Use in Denmark
Eva Mayerh?ffer, Steering Committee - Independent Research Fund Denmark (Inge Lehmann), 2023 . DKK 2,879,859Beyond the Here and Now of News
Chris Peters & Kim Schr?der – Independent Research Fund DenmarkDATAPUBLICS
Jannie M?ller Hartley – Velux FoundationDIS-TRUST – Digital Society and Trust
Esther Oluffa Pedersen, Steering Committee - Velux Foundation, 2023. DKK 5,697,697#echopol – Modelling Polarization Dynamics on Danish Social Media
Eva Mayerh?ffer, Steering Committee - Independent Research Fund Denmark (Research Project I), 2023. DKK 2,879,556Feminist Activism in Transition
Lene Bull Christiansen – Independent Research Fund DenmarkScandinavian Border Crossings
Rikke Andreassen – ForteThe Future of Cultural Policy
Anja M?lle Lindelof - Independent Research Fund Denmark (Network grant), 2023. DKK 718,479
Learn more about the projects at the Roskilde University Research Portal