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SIGCAS Computers and Society, Volume 49
Volume 49, Number 1, February 2020
- Douglas Schuler:
How might SIGCAS make history in the next era? 9-10 - Michelle Trim:
Moving from consciousness: raising to foster a social conscience. 11-12 - Komal Aheer, Cameron Macdonell:
Hello, world: an internalization at home project for computing for social good. 13-14 - Richard Blumenthal, Johanna Blumenthal:
Intentionally educating for the social good in computer science. 15-16 - Belce Dogru, Matthew Sun, Vik Pattabi:
CS+Social Good: building a curricular ecosystem for impact at stanford and beyond. 17-18 - Cynthia Bailey Lee:
Race and gender in silicon valley. 19-20 - Sarah Monisha Pulimood, Kim Pearson, Diane C. Bates:
Encouraging CS students to compute for social good through collaborative, community-engaged projects. 21-22 - Kelly S. Steelman, Charles Wallace:
Breaking barriers, building understanding: a multigenerational approach to digital literacy instruction for older adults. 23-24 - Richard Blumenthal:
When voting, trust computer scientists: not computers? 25
Volume 49, Number 2, September 2020
- Douglas Schuler:
Extraordinary times now and stretching out as far as the eye can see. 7-9 - CSG-Ed team:
Global issues. 9 - Johanna Blumenthal:
Thinking like a lawyer: a new computer and society column. 10 - Michelle Trim:
Essentialism is the enemy of the good: how the myth of objectivity is holding computing back. 11-13
- Marc Sunet:
Data feudalism. 14 - Johanna Blumenthal, Richard Blumenthal, Lisa C. Kaczmarczyk, Mikey Goldweber:
Diversity and its role in computing resources for further reflection: computing for the social good in education members. 15-16 - Richard Blumenthal:
Is computing hiding behind a mask of software neutrality? 17-18
Volume 49, Number 3, December 2020
- Douglas Schuler:
Sunset in seattle. 7 - Johanna Blumenthal:
Thinking like a lawyer: trust me, i'm a professional. 8-10 - SIGCAS Team:
Life turns fifty: computing history. 10 - Michelle Trim:
Corrections, repudiations, and revisions: how computing made 2020 a year for change. 11-13
- Taney Shondel:
Computer and social scientists collaborate to solve social problems. 13 - Tapan Parikh, Samar Sabie:
On destruction in design. 14-15 - Douglas Schuler:
SIGEnergy everything. 15 - Aldo de Moor:
Smart cities: heading toward panopticions or smart societies? 16-17 - Norberto Patrignani:
Computer professionals without borders: what computer professionals do with their free time? volunteering. 17 - Miguel Angel Perez Alvarez:
Is there intelligence in artificial intelligence? 18 - Michael J. Heron, Pauline Belford:
Authoritarianism and anonymity: continuing to explore the "scandal in academia". 19-27 - Richard Blumenthal:
Descriptive and prescriptive software: a societal challenge? 28-30
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