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Session Chair: Shan Shi Session Chair: Christian Stegbauer
Presentations
12:00pm - 12:20pm
Integrating Projects Working Around An Open Database Of Published Music Recordings
Toni Sant
University of Salford, United Kingdom
Outside the immediate purview of the expansive WikiProject Music on Wikipedia, there are at least three other projects relating to capturing structured data about published music recordings through Wikidata, Wikibase, and other Wikimedia platforms. One is the AfroSounds project, led by Oreoluwa (Wikimedia User:ReoMartins) from Nigeria since 2022. Another is the proposal by Daniel Antal (presented at the 2024 CEE Meeting) to build a music data sharing space with Wikibase starting with music published in Slovakia, inspired by the Luxembourg Shared Authority File project. And the third is the work of the Malta Music Memory Project, developed by the author with the M3P Foundation since 2009, using a MediaWiki site and Wikidata. The author extends an open-ended invitation to academic researchers to collaborate on the development of an integrated data structure and workflow model – including possibilities for automation through bots – for published music recordings that is applicable to Wikidata. The aim is to enable systematic data gathering on a global level, building on existing datasets currently held by music publishing platforms and organisations who seek to make it more findable. Considerations for restrictive database rights that sometimes preclude integration into Wikimedia's open knowledge ecosystem, may require staging via Wikibase, rather than Wikidata, in the first instance.
12:40pm - 1:00pm
Social Networks in Post-Memorandum Greece: Two Comparative Case Studies of Social Reflexes
Maria Georgia Antonopoulou
University of Athens, Greece
Greece faced bankruptcy in the 2010s, leading to three economic adjustment memoranda that lasted over eight years. These memoranda caused a collapse in GDP, a significant decrease in workers' purchasing power, and a dramatic rise in unemployment, culminating in a social crisis that remains latent to this day.
This article examines two distinct yet significant cases of social mobilization through social media and networking. The first case study focuses on the Efood cancellation incident in the fall of 2021. Through social media, particularly Facebook, a movement emerged advocating for delivery workers and their protection from the termination of their employment contracts by the Efood platform. We explore how the movement began, its rapid expansion throughout the day, the factors that influenced significant mobilization via social media, and the subsequent demobilization following the positive reaction of the employer to the workers' demands.
The second case we investigate is Stefanos Kasselakis's election as leader of the Syriza party within less than a month. Kasselakis launched a campaign primarily through Facebook and TikTok, aimed at engaging Meso-level networking and fostering a sense of identity and change within the Syriza party's network. This paper examines his influence on social networking platforms and the measurable quantitative data from the subgroups that formed almost spontaneously to support his candidacy in September 2023.
Finally, we compare the social reflexes activated in both cases to gain a deeper understanding of the social and institutional crisis resulting from Greece's ongoing polycrisis.