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Communing Data Literacy

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Communing Data Literacy offers practical strategies for engaging communities in productive dialogue about datafication inspired by Latin American perspectives.
  • 16 December 2025
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Data increasingly forms the backbone of systems and processes that shape how we do things and how we relate to each other. Datafication – the uptake of data to reorganize social processes – is reshaping everything from loyalty programs and digital identification systems to credit card payments and rental pricing platforms. Artificial intelligence accelerates these processes.

Making sense of what these changes mean for our everyday lives is no easy task. Datafied systems are highly technical and designed to be convenient and seamless; we tend to encounter them in brief moments of individualized transaction, which makes them difficult to see, let alone read, and their illegibility makes them very challenging to respond to. Communing Data Literacy offers a novel set of concepts and tools to help people make sense of how technology is altering their communities and their social interactions. Building on three years of design research by digital rights organizations in Chile, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay, the volume analyzes people’s everyday experiences with datafication, rethinking data from the perspective of community and offering practical techniques for community engagement.

Communing Data Literacy pushes back against the individualism and techno-centrism of Western data literacy practice and scholarship, providing English readers with the opportunity to engage with Latin American perspectives.

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Price: $29.95
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 16 December 2025
ISBN: 9780228026150
Format: eBook
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Caribbean & Latin American, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Social Aspects
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"Innovative and thought-provoking, this book foregrounds significant yet underacknowledged Latin American theories that have been largely absent from discussions of datafication." Rafael Grohmann, University of Toronto

Katherine M.A. Reilly (Author)
Katherine M.A. Reilly is associate professor of communications at Simon Fraser University.

Esteban Morales (Author)
Esteban Morales is assistant professor of media and digital cultures at the University of Gronigen, Netherlands.

María Julia Morales González (Author)
María Julia Morales González is a specialist in educational technology at the University of the Republic, Uruguay.