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Are you a U.S.-based researcher who has done or wanted to do a
computational text analysis (or “text data mining” / TDM) project on
materials held in countries outside the U.S.? Have you ever collaborated
with a colleague outside of the U.S. on a TDM project? Or conducted TDM on
content created by people living outside the U.S.?

You may be eligible for up to $800 to tell us about your research as part
of a UC Berkeley Library and Internet Archive, NEH-funded Advancement Grant
project: Legal Literacies for Text Data Mining, Cross-Border (LLTDM-X)
<https://update.lib.berkeley.edu/2022/08/16/uc-berkeley-library-and-internet-archive-co-directing-project-to-help-text-data-mining-researchers-navigate-cross-border-legal-and-ethical-issues/>
.


*About LLTDM-X*Our project team has previously created guidance
<https://berkeley.pressbooks.pub/buildinglltdm/> around copyright,
licensing, privacy, and ethical issues for U.S. TDM researchers working
with data in the U.S. But these legal and ethical issues necessarily become
more complex when:

   - the materials you want to mine are housed in a foreign jurisdiction /
   are subject to foreign licensing or law,
   - the human subjects you are studying or who created the content you are
   studying reside in another country, or
   - the colleagues with whom you’re collaborating are abroad, and you are
   not sure whose law applies or what’s allowed.

We now want to help you text data mine corpora that are held or created
beyond the U.S. border or that you access via foreign license agreements.
We also want to help you collaborate with colleagues around the world on
cross-border TDM projects.

You can help us help you, by sharing your experiences in a virtual
roundtable discussion if you’ve ever done, or tried to do, any of the
above. What law, policy, privacy, or ethics problems popped up, and what
questions did you face or do you anticipate facing?


*Eligibility & Application*The LLTDM-X team seeks to compensate *10
additional U.S.-based* (living or working in U.S.) humanities and social
sciences researchers with *up to $800 stipends* for discussing the legal
and ethical issues they face or will face when conducting their
cross-border TDM research.

Not sure if your TDM research counts as “cross-border”? We created this
brief explanatory video to help you.
https://youtu.be/Y-dF9x-y8ow

If after watching the video, you think we’re describing your research and
you want to participate in the LLTDM-X roundtable, please submit an
application <https://forms.gle/nqU95DqPYfFySZJu6> no later than *5 p.m. PST
November 4, 2022*.

We will evaluate your application using the criteria described below. We
will notify applicants in December 2022 about the results of the selection
process.


*Selection Criteria*The project team believes that the project will work
best when it reflects the race and gender demographics of the broader
population, and not just those of higher education–and will strive to
achieve equity by reflecting these more representative demographics.

Additionally, we will work to develop a researcher participation group that
is representative of different institution types, research advising and
support experience, professional roles, levels of experience with digital
humanities text data mining research career stages, and disciplinary
perspectives.

Our selection process will prioritize the following criteria:

   - Digital humanities researcher or professional
   - Experience working with at least one cross-border digital humanities
   text data mining project
   - Articulated interest in the relationship between text data mining and
   the law
   - Articulated reason for participating in the roundtable
   - Demonstrated commitment to diversity and equity

*Participation*
If we grant your application to participate, you would be expected to
*participate
in approximately 6-8 hours of work* comprised of:

   - *Preparation for Roundtable  (~3 hours):* Researchers will each write
   up a 2-page description of their TDM research, and cross-border law and
   policy challenges they have faced or that they expect will affect or impede
   them. The description will be due in February 2023.
   - *Participation in Roundtable (~3 hours):* Researchers will share and
   explain their experiences in the first half of the virtual Roundtable. In
   the second half, legal and ethical experts will interact with researchers,
   and ask you questions in order to inform the experts’ law and policy
   analysis.The roundtable will be held in February or March 2023.

*Questions*
If you have any questions not answered above or in our brief explanatory
video <https://youtu.be/Y-dF9x-y8ow>, contact [log in to unmask]

We look forward to receiving your application
<https://forms.gle/nqU95DqPYfFySZJu6> by *5 p.m. PST on November 4, 2022.*


Stacy Reardon (she/her)
Literatures and Digital Humanities Librarian

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