Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Social Innovation camp

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

I’m spending this weekend with fellow enthusiasts at the Social Innovation camp in east London. This group of around 60 developers, designers and campaigners have met up to work on technologies that build social capital. One of the six ideas being developed is Barcode Wikipedia, described by the Guardian as follows:

The basic idea is to build a system that lets people quickly identify information about products they find in the shops; particularly things like ethical information, news items about it or reviews. Ideally this would work through a mobile phone – you could snap a photo of your product’s barcode or tap in the numbers and get back information that helps you decide whether it’s good to buy.

I’m trying to feed in everything we have learned so far on Fair Tracing, which focuses more on information from producers, distributors and retailers. Barcode Wikipedia should generate some extremely useful ideas on incorporating user-generated content from consumers into product information systems.

‘Black gold’ coffee leaves a bitter taste for some

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

‘Black gold’ coffee leaves a bitter taste for some — The Guardian

Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee sells for a staggering £66 a kilogram in Britain, four times the price of a good espresso blend. It is a £20m a year business in Jamaica and its clean, refined taste and hint of natural sweetness is so popular in Japan that coffee aficionados there buy up 70% of the harvest.

But not everybody benefits. More than 200 women sort the beans for up to 14 hours a day, often six days a week, for no more than £10 a day.

How the myth of food miles hurts the planet

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

How the myth of food miles hurts the planet — The Observer

‘An airplane sticker is of no environmental value whatsoever, as studies have shown air-freighted products are not necessarily less sustainable than local produce grown in heated greenhouses,’ said a spokesman for Tesco. ‘Thus we may remove those plane labels in future. What people are actually interested in is the amount of carbon that is emitted during a product’s manufacture and import.’ As a result, Tesco has promised to put carbon labels on 30 of its own-brand products in the near future: six types of potatoes, 11 types of tomatoes, five types of washing power and liquid capsules, four types of orange juice and six types of light bulbs. ‘We want to see how customers react and find out how it affects their purchasing behaviour,’ added the spokesman.

Pig traceability

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Looks like this Borough Market butcher might be interested in some Fair Tracing technology.

Advisory Board Meeting and Presentation at Holloway

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

On March 6, Fair Tracing held its annual Advisory Board meeting at Royal Holloway, University of London, followed by a presentation titled “Global Social Responsibility, Technology and Consumer Choice: the EPSRC Fair Tracing Project” at the New Political Communication Unit of the Department Politics and International Relations. It was really interesting to receive feedback first from industry (particular thanks to Roger Tucker from Outside Echo) and then from an interdisciplinary audience of political science postgraduates, geographers and computer scientists. We take away a set of feedback points and suggestions which we will engage with as the project progresses. Many thanks to all who contributed!

Kids take over Fair Tracing stand at Holloway Science Open Day

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Dorothea and Maria-Jose at Science Open Day

Over 1500 kids and their parents visited Royal Holloway’s Science Open Day this weekend. As part of Fairtrade Fortnight, Dorothea Kleine and Maria-Jose Montero organised the Fair Tracing section ot the event: Kids could vote which of the photos taken of or by our producer partners in India and Chile they found most interesting.

Photos to vote on

Two internet terminals allowed visitors to test out the Fair Tracing demo, typing in the barcodes from a bottle of Los Robles wine and a bag of Indian coffee. Our partners from Nokia had supplied us with a Nokia N95 which proved a great hit with kids trying out the barcode scanning feature on the Fairtrade chocolate bars we provided…and on the Ribena and Coca Cola bottles they had brought with them.

using the bar-code reader

Maria-Jose had put together four short video-clips from our visit to producers in Chile which we showed in our very own Fair Tracing cinema. In the midst of all the buzz, we managed to have interesting conversations with people about their attitudes to Fair Trade, their own buying behaviour and what they thought of the project. Many expressed a desire to buy ethically but were skeptical about ethical labels and claims, including the FLO Fairtrade label. The issue of where information was coming from was key and there was great interest in the possibilities for alternative information dissemination Fair Tracing offered. Meanwhile, kids were learning about Fair Trade in school and asked for it at home. We gave away lots of free Fairtrade chocolate - in return for over 150 filled-out voting sheets telling us more about what potential consumers would like to see in terms of photo and video material on the Fair Tracing system.

“Fairtrade Fortnight” at the University of Bradford

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Fairtrade continues to raise its profile across the UK. In the case of the University of Bradford (home of the Fair Tracing project’s principal investigator Dr Apurba Kundu), an institution-wide Fairtrade status was acheived in December 2006 by making more ethically-sound food and drink choices available for its staff and students.

Fair Tracing Fortnight

This year, the University of Bradford is holding a “Fairtrade Fortnight” beginning from 25 February to 7 March that will include a public debate on “Fairtrade and Trade Justice”, a screening of the documentary “Coca Cola: Drinking the World Dry”, a presentation of the play “Dreams of an African Child”, storytelling events and special Chololate and Nut days.

Tracing Chianti

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Want to obtain more information about the bottle of Chianti you just purchased? You can trace it here (in Italian). Each bottle has a code than can be entered via the web form or by sending a text message.

Poster Presentation at the University of Bradford Annual Research Showcase

Monday, February 11th, 2008

The University of Bradford held its Annual Research Showcase on Tuesday, 5 February 2008, attended by staff, students and community representatives. The Showcase consisted of an exhibition of the  best research currently being conducted in the University, as well as a programme of seminars delivered by external speakers from Research Councils and Yorkshire universities.

Fair Tracing poster

The Fair Tracing Project entered the above poster (PDF) as part of the display of the School of Informatics. Research student Ashima Chopra was on hand to answer queries about the project. In the end, the Fair Tracing poster helped contribute to the School of Informatics winning first prize as the best School display!

Fair Tracing Team reports at second BGDD Conference

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

The network of researchers involved in the four EPSRC-funded projects met in at Emmanuel College, Cambridge on 7-8 January 2008 for a second “Bridging the Global Digital Divide” conference. The aim of the two-day meeting was to bring the project teams together to share news and information about our ongoing work, as well as plan for the months ahead. Attending on behalf of Fair Tracing were Dr Apurba Kundu, Dr Ann Light and Christian Wallenta (both days), as well as Dr Dorothea Kleine and Ashima Chopra (day one), and Maria Jose Montero (day two).

Our own presentation — close to the halfway point of the Fair Tracing project – gave details of our recent field visits to Chile and India (including news that Professor N. Shantha Mohan has joined the project as a consultant), as well as initial results of our UK Consumer Study, and aspects of the prospective data collation, storage and retrieval technologies that the project will use. The report also highlighted presentations made by team members on aspects of Fair Tracing, including

  • D. Kleine, ‘Anything but neutral: The role of technology in development’, Open University, Milton Keynes, 28 Mar 2007;
  • D. Kleine & A. Light, ‘Found in Translation: Experiences from the Fair Tracing Project’. Human Computer Interaction annual conference, Lancaster University, 4 Sept 2007;
  • D. Kleine, ‘Linking local realities: Using technology to connect Fair Trade consumers and producers’, Royal Geographical Society annual conference, 31 Sept 2007;
  • I Brown, ‘Current research’, Oxford Internet Institute,  10 Oct 2007;
  • A. Light , ‘A Year in Pictures: Some Issues in Developing a Representation of Ethical Producers for Consumers’, Sheffield Hallam University, Nov 2007; and
  • D. Kleine, ’The Fair Tracing project: Using the internet to track Chilean Fairtrade wine’, Centre for Latin American Studies, Cambridge University, 18 Jan 2008,

as well as recent and forthcoming publications concerning the project, including

  • D. Kleine (2007) ‘Striking a Balance’, Engineering and Technology, 2:2, 30-33;
  • A. Chopra & A. Kundu (2008, forthcoming) ‘The Fair Tracing project: digital tracing technology and Indian coffee, Contemporary South Asia, 16:2 June;
  • D. Kleine (2008, forthcoming) ‘Negotiating partnerships, understanding power: Doing Action Research on Chilean Fairtrade Wine’, Geojournal;
  • D. Kleine (2008, forthcoming) ‘How fair is fair enough? Negotiating alterity and compromise within the German Fair Trade movement’, in D. Fuller, A.E. Jonas & R. Lee, Alternative Economic and Political Spaces (Ashgate);
  • D. Kleine (in preparation)  ‘From solidarity coffee to fine wine: The changing images of Fair Trade’, Antipode; and
  • D. Kleine & A. Light (in preparation) ‘Designing with Partners in the Global South: Empowering producers, informing consumers’ .

While the conference itself proved a very useful means of communication between groups, fair tracing also benefitted from the time alloted for the separate teams to meet to plot our next steps. These include the following presentations:

  • A. Chopra, ‘Fair Tracing and the digital divide: tracking Indian coffee across the internet’, Critical Internet Studies seminar series, Liverpool John Moores University, 21 Feb 2008;
  • I. Brown, A. Chopra, .D. Kleine, A. Kundu, A. Light, M. Montero & C. Wallenta, ‘The Fair Tracing Project’, Department of Politics and International Relations, Royal Holloway, University of London, 6 Mar 2008; and
  • A. Chopra (under consideration) , ‘The Fair Tracing project: Indian coffee and the digital divide’, British Association for South Asian Studies (BASAS) annual conference , Leicester, 26-28 Mar 2008.

All in all, it was a very productive two days!