15:30 - 17:00,
Monday 23 February, 2026
58a Banbury road
Oxford Digital Ethnography Group Seminar Series
About
Despite recent advances in AI’s computational capabilities, data work—the human labour required for training, fine-tuning, and evaluating AI systems—remains indispensable to AI production. Yet, data work is constituted as a routine and repetitive activity, with little scope for applying expertise and skill, and often conducted under unfair conditions of work. As the restrictive, uneven structures shaping data work become increasingly visible, there is a crucial need to
consider how data work might be repaired and reoriented towards a more just and equitable practice. In this talk, I will present reflections on some of the work that lies ahead in this regard, drawing on my ethnographic engagement with a civic-tech initiative based in India that builds datasets for training and evaluating online safety systems. Adopting a feminist orientation, they produce safety datasets by collaborating with those most impacted by online harms, inviting them to contribute and annotate data on online harms. Drawing on insights from two dataset projects developed in this orientation, I highlight how this approach reorients data work as a site for repair and redress by enabling a wider scope for contributions beyond discrete tasks and recognising contributors as experts. This recognition then surfaces limits and tensions in advancing just reward for data work, and contributors’ role in governing the datasets they help produce. Thinking with this case, I will share insights into the open challenges in translating alternative, feminist visions for data/AI into actual practice as well as my methodological reflections as an ethnographer, in developing this research collaboratively.
Speaker biography
Srravya Chandhiramowuli is a Post Doctoral Research Fellow and Thematic Lead on Data Work in the Planetary AI project, at the University of Edinburgh. Her research closely follows the on-ground practices of dataset production for AI, bringing particular attention to systemic challenges and frictions in data work and AI supply chains. Building on scholarship in Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and Science and Technology Studies (STS), Srravya’s research seeks to contribute towards just and equitable futures in technology.
Attend Online
Speaker
Srravya Chandhiramowuli
Post Doctoral Research Fellow and Thematic Lead , Data Work in the Planetary AI project, the University of Edinburgh
Srravya's research closely follows the on-ground practices of dataset production for AI, bringing particular attention to systemic challenges and frictions in data work and AI supply chains.