[PAST EVENT] Public Lecture "Quantitative Approaches to Social Justice" by Chad Topaz (Williams College)

September 24, 2021
3pm - 4pm
Location
Zoom, (view the Zoom presentation in ISC 1221)
Access & Features
  • Open to the public

Abstract: Civil rights leader, educator, and investigative journalist Ida B. Wells said that "the way to right wrongs is to shine the light of truth upon them." This talk will demonstrate how quantitative and computational approaches can shine a light on social injustices and help build solutions to remedy them. We will present quantitative social justice projects on topics ranging from diversity in art museums to equity in criminal sentencing to affirmative action, health care access, and other fields. The tools engaged include crowdsourcing, data cleaning, clustering, hypothesis testing, statistical modeling, Markov chains, data visualization, and much more. I hope that this talk leaves you informed about the breadth of social justice applications that one can tackle using mathematical and data science tools in careful collaboration with other scholars and activists.


Jointly by the Computational & Applied Mathematics & Statistics Program, the Mathematics Department, and the Data Science Program at William & Mary


*This lecture is intended for undergraduates, graduates, faculty, and interested community members.

Contact

Sarah Day