Project Set-up
As the project was delayed by the COVID19 pandemic, the PI started an extensive literature review and the training of undergraduate students from King’s College London who worked on a series of small projects related to the Digital Silk Road. This activity has been highly successful among students, and so far nine have been trained to be ‘research apprentices,’ working alongside the main team on stand-alone small projects.
Recruitment and desk work
In 2021 and early 2022 the project recruited and onboarded a project manager, a postdoc researcher for China, a researcher for Kazakhstan, a researcher for Myanmar, and a digital methods researcher. The team spent the first few months together in London, working on their ethics protocol, on translating the website content in 3 languages, on an extensive literature review in English, Chinese and Russian, on collecting and analyzing primary sources related to the Digital Silk Road, and on experimenting with digital methods and on what kind of questions they are suitable to answer in conjunction with qualitative and documentary analysis. The team traveled to Kazakhstan to start field work and gather a variety of data in June 2022, and has participated to a number of dissemination events (see below)
Data collection
-document analysis: the team has collected, organized into a database that will be made public in 2023, and started to analyze primary documents related to the Digital Silk Road, mostly in Chinese. Collection of news items and non-academic resources in local languages related to Chinese tech in the three countries is also ongoing.
-fieldwork has began in Kazakhstan in June 2022, with the researcher for the country carrying out interviews and observations, as well as participating to events related to digitization. We have also established local partnerships, and are organizing a public conference/workshop on digitization in Central Asia for the Spring.
-fieldwork has also began in China in October 2022, but there is no significant data collection yet.
-the digital methods researcher has started studying data flows to/from Kazakhstan, and to collaborate with the rest of the team to define research questions that can be answered from both a technical and a social perspective.
Research dissemination
The team has started to participate to academic conferences as well as public events, both as a team (e.g. organizing a panel on “The Digital Silk Road between Internet Sovereignty and Globalization Imperatives” at the 19th Chinese Internet Research Conference, where each team member presented work-in-progress) and as individuals. Project updates are also available on the project’s website,
available in English, Chinese, Russian and Burmese(si apre in una nuova finestra) and on its social media channels,
https://twitter.com/Digisilk_kcl(si apre in una nuova finestra) and
https://www.instagram.com/digisilk_kcl/(si apre in una nuova finestra)Academic publications are expected to begin in 2023.