Hello World
Newspeak House is an independent residential college founded in 2015 to study, nurture and inspire emerging communities of practice across civil society and the public sector in the UK.
Events
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As part of our research we offer our spaces for civic communities of practice to convene. Since opening in 2015 we have hosted thousands of events, including lectures, meetups, hackathons, conferences, unconferences, workshops, roundtables, screenings, fundraisers, launches, and exhibitions.
Subscribe to our calendar via iCal or gCal
If you’d like to host an event in our space, you can hire it outright, or if you’re convening a civic community of practice do get in touch ([email protected]) to see if it could fit into our programme.
What's On
- Wednesdays • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Lounge Ration Club
- Fri 17 OCT 2025 • 6:30pm – 10:00pm • Newspeak Hall International Game Developers Association (IGDA) London Launch
- Sat 18 OCT 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Newspeak Hall Jam Session
- Mon 20 OCT 2025 • 7:00pm – 9:00pm • Newspeak Hall Terror in Georgia: Europe’s Forgotten Frontline
- Mon 20 OCT 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Drawing Room Campaign Lab Hack Night
- Tue 21 OCT 2025 • 6:30pm – 10:00pm • Newspeak Hall AI vs IP: Whose Vibe is it Anyway?
- Wed 22 OCT 2025 • 10:00am – 9:00pm • Newspeak Hall Democracy Co-working & Drinks
- Wed 22 OCT 2025 • 4:00pm – 5:00pm • Classroom / Virtual Knowledge Production Seminar: Personal Knowledge Management Systems
- Thu 23 OCT 2025 • 6:30pm – 8:00pm • Classroom Evidence & Impact: Intro to Applied Statistics for Evaluation
- Sun 26 OCT 2025 • 3:00pm – 4:30pm • Classroom Open Web Data: The Open Data Landscape
- Sun 26 OCT 2025 • 4:30pm – 6:30pm • Classroom How to structure a tech project in 2025
- Mon 27 OCT 2025 • 6:00pm – 9:00pm • Classroom + Drawing Room Code Club
- Tue 28 OCT 2025 • 6:00pm – 9:00pm • Classroom AI Salon: Beyond human-centred AI
- Sat 01 NOV 2025 • 10:00am – 8:00pm • Classroom Mod Jam #02 - ToxiCity
- Sun 02 NOV 2025 • 2:00pm – 8:00pm • Newspeak Hall Flourish: Human-AI Playbooks Unconference
- Mon 03 NOV 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Drawing Room Campaign Lab Hack Night
- Tue 04 NOV 2025 • 6:30pm – 8:00pm • Classroom Digital Protocols: Protocols of Social Networks
- Sun 09 NOV 2025 • 1:00pm – 10:00pm • Newspeak Hall Wiser Futures
- Tue 11 NOV 2025 • 6:30pm – 8:00pm • Classroom Evidence & Impact: Evaluation Case Study
- Sat 15 NOV 2025 • 10:30am – 10:00pm • Newspeak Hall Chat Hackers: Prototype Showcase + Hackday
- Mon 17 NOV 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Drawing Room Campaign Lab Hack Night
- Mon 01 DEC 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Drawing Room Campaign Lab Hack Night
- Fri 05 DEC 2025 • 5:00pm – 10:00pm • Throughout Newspeak House 10th Anniversary & Fundraiser: a decade of Political Technology
- Mon 15 DEC 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Drawing Room Campaign Lab Hack Night
- Mon 29 DEC 2025 • 7:00pm – 10:00pm • Drawing Room Campaign Lab Hack Night
Event Details
Edward Saperia
Each week the college hosts a community dinner called Ration Club. It's open to anyone who'd like to find out more about the college and its work. To find out more or if you'd like to attend, please register.
Register ↗The launch of the London chapter of the International Game Developers Association (IGDA), the world’s largest nonprofit membership organisation serving all individuals who create games. An evening of thought-provoking talks, panels and networking targeted at those who work, or are seeking to work in the games industry.
Register ↗Bring your instrument, your voice, or just come to listen and vibe with us. If you haven’t had much chance to play in a while this jam is for you - dust off your instrument and rediscover the joy of making music together in a friendly, no-pressure environment.
Register ↗It is a challenging moment for democracy worldwide, and Georgia stands out as one of the most prominent battlegrounds between autocratic and democratic forces. Once hailed as a champion of European integration, the country now faces a grim reality: an increasingly authoritarian Georgian Dream regime rigging elections, silencing dissent, and normalizing the existence of over a hundred political prisoners in jails.
In this talk, we’ll briefly discuss Georgia’s path to its current repressive state under the regime and place it in a broader regional context, drawing comparisons with Moldova, Serbia, and other countries in the region. We’ll also explore political-psychological perspectives to unpack the tactics, challenges, and victories of Georgia’s protest movement.
The talk will be led by Davit Jintcharadze, a fellowship candidate at Newspeak House, founding member of the new Freedom Square political party, and founder of Freedom Fund, Georgia’s only active resistance fund operating amid the government’s latest wave of repression. Before entering politics, his research focused on the psychological factors shaping voter behavior.
Don’t worry—this won’t be a two-hour lecture. There will be time to chat and connect afterward over a complimentary glass of Georgian wine. Attendance is free, with optional donations welcome.
Register ↗Campaign Lab is a community of politically-minded progressive data scientists, researchers and activists who are working together to build new election tools and change the way we analyse and understand political election campaigning.
Join us for our bi-weekly Campaign Lab Hack Night - a regular session to work on your tech side projects to help the progressive left campaign more effectively. You can either bring your own project or help out on one of our ongoing ones.
Snacks and drinks are provided, all you need is to bring yourself and a laptop. You can also participate remotely via zoom link.
All technologists, activists, organisers and campaigners are welcome. We also welcome any new people who are interested in politics, technology and evidence based campaign innovation on the left.
Register ↗While economies stand to gain a lot from the next big thing in tech, many in creative sectors seem inadequately compensated when their work is used to train models.
Regulation takes time, big tech is powerful, and ‘superintellience’ is an attention hog. So…
- Is the incoming economic impact far bigger, and IP is just a sidebar from the main event?
- Where are governments and tech companies in this right now?
- What does a future look like where AI is trained ethically?
This is an unconference (open discussion event) where you can bring up your interests, concerns, and knowledge around the present and future impact of generative AI on IP law and the creative industries.
We’ll open with speakers (TBA), and food will be provided during the break. Please arrive at 18:30 for a 19:00 start.
Register ↗Spend a day working alongside other organisations working on UK democratic reform, followed by an evening of Democracy Drinks.
Since March 2022 we’ve organised democracy co-working days to help bring together individuals and organisations within the UK democracy space - with more than 50 organisations joining us across our previous events, including Democracy Classroom, Civic Power Fund, Fair Vote UK, Nesta, Sortition Foundation, I Have A Voice, Radix Big Tent, Public Interest News Foundation, Unlock Democracy, Zero Hour and so many more!
So if you’re working on a democracy project or organisation, or just keen to meet people that do, come along and join us for a coworking day, democracy drinks, or both, this October.
Feel free to drop in at any part of the coworking day, for all of it or just part of it - the more the merrier. We’ll be putting on tea & coffee, snacks and refreshments.
We’ll be running the Coworking event from 10am til 5pm, and then we’ll start the evening social from 6.45pm onwards.
Democracy Network are a network of people and organisations working on issues of power, democracy and voice throughout the UK. We aim to connect and work with others to build a stronger democracy fit for the 21st century. We do this through connecting people and supporting collaboration, increasing knowledge, skills and resources, and coordinating influencing strategies and action. Join the network here.
If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to drop us an email at [email protected]
Register ↗This session is part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House, open to faculty and fellowship candidates only.
How do you deal with knowledge management? How do you know things?
What type of data do you need to track, access, search, store, process, output? Papers, citations, bookmarks, books, movies to watch? How does your system support you in your endeavours (or fight you?)?
Is it even worth organising knowledge when information is a search away, or can be reconstructed by AI? What purposes might a knowledge management system serve in this context?’
Where does your knowledge go? In which outputs? Can people excited by your work find you and subscribe to you?
Register ↗This session is part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House, open to faculty and fellowship candidates only.
Robust evaluation depends on understanding uncertainty, and statistics provides the language for doing so. Even simple questions — has this intervention made a difference, or is what we see just chance? — require clear reasoning about probability and sampling.
This session introduces those foundations, showing how statistical thinking helps distinguish real impact from noise, and how small errors in design or interpretation can lead to big mistakes.
- Probability from first principles
- Understanding samples and how they generalise
- Applying statistical reasoning to real-world questions
Andreas Varotsis is a data scientist and AI engineer who works to improve operational delivery and services across government using technology, data, and evidence. He’s spent the previous decade in various roles in central government and front-line delivery, including the Metropolitan Police Service, the data-science team of 10 Downing Street, and the Incubator for AI.
He works to support a range of cross-government communities, including Evidence House, which works to improve the use of data and IT in government, and the Society of Evidence Based Policing, which champions research to enhance policing practices and reduce crime.
Register ↗This session is part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House, open to faculty and fellowship candidates only.
Many possible pieces of technology require data about some aspect of the world in order to function. There are a number of powerful open dataset that can form the basis of a wide range of tools.
We will survey a range of different large online data sources, examining what kinds of questions we might be able to answer, as well as getting to the practical stage of being able to extract usable data from these repositories
The rest of the session will be devoted to thinking through a worked example of how we would go about using these data sources to answer the question “What are politically active organisations in the UK saying to their members?”
Register ↗This session is part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House. It is primarily for faculty and fellowship candidates to start with, but if you don’t meet those criteria and are particularly interested do get in touch!
“Agile is dead. Long live Agile.”
Development keeps getting faster, and parts of it are getting increasingly commodified. The existing project management and planning methodologies are struggling to keep up.
How would you structure a project, whether a personal one that you’re working on or one you’re working with a team on, to maximise your chances of success? Is it realistic to build a new feature every day? What does this change about how we do development?
We will work through an example of vertical slicing, and look at some tool choices for planning.
Register ↗Part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House, open to faculty, fellows, and fellowship candidates.
A space to make computer things with other people. Beginners, dabblers, and pros are all welcome. Explore, tinker, and share what you’re learning.
Whether no-code, low-code, vibe-code, or trad-code — whatever you’re into, bring it along.
Drawing room: Co-working and peer learning, work on your own projects, pick up ideas from others, or try out one of the many resources and suggestions floating around.
Classroom: Workshops tbc - let Ed know if you want to run one.
Register ↗Moving away from human-centred AI - what can we unravel in a world where humans, machines and other beings bring their unique features towards a flourishing society?
Just us for an intimate AI Salon gathering to explore the opportunities and challenges posed by asking
- What kinds of intelligence might unfold when we move away from current anthropocentric design systems?
- How might humans interact with them and bring forth new emerging intelligence?
- Why the need to move beyond current methods in AI design, alignment and governance?
Whilst we want to ensure current AI systems are safe, ethical and trustworthy, with appropriate guardrails in place, we miss the opportunity to reflect on what makes us truly human and where machines can fill in the gaps and bring forth new types of intelligence, such as emerging intelligence at the junction between humans, machines and other sentient beings.
Some of the questions we will address and reflect on:
- Where have current AI alignment methods failed us and what opportunities can we unravel if we go beyond human-aligned evaluation methods?
- How can we use AI systems to reflect on human ethics and in effect, use these as human simulations?
- What kind of novel AI architectures and models could we unfold if we look at non-human intelligence, and can we build an ecosystem whereby the sum of the parts is larger than the whole? Are there neglected biological intelligent behaviours that we can learn from?
- What makes us uniquely human and where can we augment machines to fill in the gaps to enable a thriving ecosystem where all sentient beings, natural or artificial, can bring forth their uniqueness and unleash their full potential?
We invite thinkers, researchers, designers, ethicists, creatives and anyone with an interest in how we shape AI systems to join the discussion.
Please see below some papers and resources to give you a flavour of the topics we will discuss:
- Moving Away From Anthropocentrism (PhiAI)
- After Alignment (Antikythera)
- Diverse Intelligences (Templeton World Charity Foundation, Inc.)
- What is Intelligence? (Antikythera)
This is an in-person event. To facilitate smooth and cohesive conversations, please arrive between 6-6:30pm for a prompt discussion start at 6:30pm.
The AI Salon is a global community founded in San Francisco focused on intimate, small-sized group discussions on the sociological, economic, cultural, and philosophical impacts and meaning of AI developments. We host small group discussions, all of which you can find on our calendar. You can find summaries of our previous conversations on our substack.
This event is done in collaboration with PhiAI, an online magazine at the intersection of technology and the humanities, run as a writer’s collective.
Please be advised: Unfortunately, space is very limited at these events and we can not always accept everyone we would like to. We base acceptances based on levels of interest and passion demonstrated in registration question answers. If you are not accepted to this event, please try and come to another!
Register ↗Seize the mechanics of your games, join the Mod Jam movement!
Join us for the second event in the Mod Jam series with Mod Jam #02 - ToxiCity.
The Mod Jam series demonstrates how re-purposing, remixing, expanding and hi-jacking existing games can be channeled for collective expression.
Staying with the legendary Doom (1993) and building upon our experiences from previous sessions, we will explore the alternative narratives that can break through the confines of Doom’s strict yet open game environment. Can Doomguy address contemporary toxicity while operating radioactive waste facilities?
Modding allows us to reclaim agency. It is an act of opening possibilities within an existing system, to change a world using its own rules and constraints - performance applied to gameplay. As a community-led practice to appropriate, tweak, expand and improve the medium, modding can help us free the creative genie from the gaming industry’s bottle.
Outline
- Recap on modding and Doom (we are planning a workshop event dedicated to this prior to this event too)
- Brainstorming
- Jam
- Presentations
Checklist
- No programming skills required as basic modding (assets/textures) is done through file-swapping into packages that we can run through pre-installed software
- Computer (If you don’t have a computer, think about how you could collaborate with the other people. Drawing on paper? Writing? Sound making?, etc.)
- If you can, you can pre-install ZDOOM and Slade in advance.
- You can also install a DOOM level builders such as Ultimate Doom Builder. (For Mac, Eureka seems to work kind of OK)
- You could also get a WAD file such as FREEDOOM but for this, you can wait until the event
- We’re planning to organise a separate workshop event before this. The date is to be announced but you could plan to attend that one too sometime the week before the jam
Please note that we won’t be providing food so feel free to bring your own and there will be plenty of food options nearby.
Register ↗A 6-hour Open Space Technology (OST) unconference. Swap what actually works with AI. Share ideas and worries about the future. Get inspired. (Get terrified, optional.) Bring prompts, patterns, policies, experiences, current research, and hard-won lessons: both the “this could work” and the “this could go wrong.”
Who’s this for? Builders, coaches/educators, founders/civic-tech, policy/alignment folk, curious newcomers.
Why come?
- Practice: Share prompts, workflows, code snippets personal experiences, collaboration tricks you can experiment with.
- Safety: Practical safety/alignment moves (data hygiene, evals, red-teaming, “kill-switch” conditions). More research or mid-long term oriented conversations, positions, exchanges.
- Community: Meet peers who are shipping, worried (productively), or both.
If you want to tell everyone what you’ve learned: come.
If you want to warn everyone we need guardrails (and have ideas): come.
If you want to listen, test, and contribute: come.
What is an unconference? (OST in 60 seconds)
We start together, build the agenda together, then split into parallel sessions.
Principles (short):
- Whoever comes are the right people.
- Whatever happens is the only thing that could have.
- Whenever it starts is the right time.
- When it’s over, it’s over.
Law of Two Feet: If you’re not learning or contributing, move to another session. Guilt-free.
Format (today): Opening circle → marketplace (we propose sessions) → four session blocks → group synthesis → social
Schedule
13:30 Doors open
14:00 Opening circle (purpose, principles, logistics) — 20m
14:20 Marketplace (build the grid) — 20m
14:40 Session Block A — 45m
15:30 Session Block B — 45m
16:20 Break — 20m
16:40 Session Block C — 45m
17:30 Session Block D — 45m
18:20 Closing circle — 30m
18:50–20:00 Social / teardown
We will have up to 7 spaces for sessions at the same time. (Exact times may shift slightly on the day.)
Tracks & seed topics (examples)
- Practice: Share prompts, workflows, code snippets personal experiences, collaboration tricks you can experiment with.
- Safety: Practical safety/alignment moves (data hygiene, evals, red-teaming, “kill-switch” conditions). More research or mid-long term oriented conversations, positions, exchanges.
- Civic/Org: AI for public interest, policy interfaces, procurement, org adoption playbooks.
- Community: Meet peers who are shipping, worried (productively), or both.
Proposing sessions
We will do it at the event, during a beautiful messy moment at the start. You can bring a more polished presentation, demo, topic. You can bring just a question, or something you tried and got curious about. We will propose the topics, describe them, host them, see who comes.
FAQ
- Do I need to be an expert? No. If you’re curious and constructive, you’re in. Experts welcome, egos not required.
- Keynote speakers? No keynotes. If you’re keynote-caliber, host a session or a 5-min lightning.
- Can I just listen? Yes, but you’ll get more by proposing, asking, or demoing.
- What should I bring? Curiosity and desire to learn and share. A problem, demo, or story if you want. Laptop optional. Power adapters if you need them.
House rules / Code of Conduct
Be kind. Be specific. Debate ideas, not people. No hype-only demos: show what you do, disclose models, data, limits, and risks. Zero tolerance for harassment. Breaches = removal.
Register ↗Campaign Lab is a community of politically-minded progressive data scientists, researchers and activists who are working together to build new election tools and change the way we analyse and understand political election campaigning.
Join us for our bi-weekly Campaign Lab Hack Night - a regular session to work on your tech side projects to help the progressive left campaign more effectively. You can either bring your own project or help out on one of our ongoing ones.
Snacks and drinks are provided, all you need is to bring yourself and a laptop. You can also participate remotely via zoom link.
All technologists, activists, organisers and campaigners are welcome. We also welcome any new people who are interested in politics, technology and evidence based campaign innovation on the left.
Register ↗This session is part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House, open to faculty and fellowship candidates only.
This is a lecture on the protocols of social networks. We’ll talk about:
- How do digital social networks shape political power today?
- Can decentralised social networks contribute to decentralised political power (eg. democracy)?
- Protocols and tech we’ll talk about:
- Twitter as a protocol
- Mastodon, ActivityPub, the Fediverse
- Bluesky and the AT Protocol
Join us in shaping Wiser Futures!
What is it?
This gathering of communities will explore paths to a planetary society defined by long-term thinking, collective wisdom and interconnectedness.
Purpose
Co-hosted by Second Renaissance London and Long Now London the aim is to bring people together from a range of aligned London-based communities - as well as folks who are new to the scene but want to learn more and take part.
Together, we’ll seek out commonalities, grow networks, cross-pollinate ideas, practice together and build the field.
Structure
The format is strongly participant-led, with the content shaped by you, the participants.
You can host a group session of any kind you choose - just bear in mind that the break-out areas are best suited for groups of around 12 or less.
We encourage particants to add to the timetable in advance using this form. We’ll also have an unconference-style physical board you can add to on the day to propose a session.
Some examples of what you could host:
- an introduction to your project or community, with Q&A
- a facilitated discussion on a topic of interest
- a presentation on a topic of interest with Q&A
- a structured group practice such as guided meditation or authentic relating
Whether you have something you want to share, or just want to learn from and connect with others, you’re very welcome!
Register ↗This session is part of the Introduction to Political Technology course at Newspeak House, open to faculty and fellowship candidates only.
In this session we will examine a political technology project with an existing evaluation, working through how it was designed, what evidence it produced, whether that evidence convincingly demonstrated impact, and what lessons can be drawn for future work.
By dissecting a concrete case, we will draw out lessons on both good practice and common mistakes, and consider how evaluation choices shape the trajectory of projects that seek to create change.
Andreas Varotsis is a data scientist and AI engineer who works to improve operational delivery and services across government using technology, data, and evidence. He’s spent the previous decade in various roles in central government and front-line delivery, including the Metropolitan Police Service, the data-science team of 10 Downing Street, and the Incubator for AI.
He works to support a range of cross-government communities, including Evidence House, which works to improve the use of data and IT in government, and the Society of Evidence Based Policing, which champions research to enhance policing practices and reduce crime.
Register ↗Join us for a showcase and hackday, where we will present the tools we have developed to date, give a workshop on how to build on WhatsApp, and spend the afternoon hacking together on new ideas.
Chat Hackers is a group of technologists dedicated to developing tools that support organisers on WhatsApp, Signal, and other chat apps. We come together to work on solutions that address the coordination challenges of campaigns and community groups. Chat Hackers was established through a partnership between John Evans (spacetu.be), Campaign Lab and Newspeak House.
Register ↗Campaign Lab is a community of politically-minded progressive data scientists, researchers and activists who are working together to build new election tools and change the way we analyse and understand political election campaigning.
Join us for our bi-weekly Campaign Lab Hack Night - a regular session to work on your tech side projects to help the progressive left campaign more effectively. You can either bring your own project or help out on one of our ongoing ones.
Snacks and drinks are provided, all you need is to bring yourself and a laptop. You can also participate remotely via zoom link.
All technologists, activists, organisers and campaigners are welcome. We also welcome any new people who are interested in politics, technology and evidence based campaign innovation on the left.
Register ↗Campaign Lab is a community of politically-minded progressive data scientists, researchers and activists who are working together to build new election tools and change the way we analyse and understand political election campaigning.
Join us for our bi-weekly Campaign Lab Hack Night - a regular session to work on your tech side projects to help the progressive left campaign more effectively. You can either bring your own project or help out on one of our ongoing ones.
Snacks and drinks are provided, all you need is to bring yourself and a laptop. You can also participate remotely via zoom link.
All technologists, activists, organisers and campaigners are welcome. We also welcome any new people who are interested in politics, technology and evidence based campaign innovation on the left.
Register ↗To mark our first decade, Newspeak House presents a series of talks and workshops from fellows and faculty across a full weekend conference. Keep up with the latest developments in the field, meet faces new and old, relax on our terrace, enjoy an all day buffet, and socialise late into the evening. Full programme TBA.
17:00-23:00 Friday 5 December
10:00-23:00 Saturday 6 December
10:00-22:00 Sunday 12 December
Newspeak House 10th Anniversary: a decade of Political Technology
The tenth anniversary of Newspeak House marks a decade shaped by profound political and technological change.
Smartphones. Group chats. Attention algorithms. Crowdfunding. Language models. Cryptocurrencies. Collaborative documents. Streaming. Emoji reacts. Privacy laws. The gig economy. Six UK elections. Brexit. Covid. Momentum. Ukraine. Reform. Gaza. Trump (twice). Cambridge Analytica. The birth and collapse of Buzzfeed, Vice, Gawker. Wikidata from zero to a hundred million items.
In that time Newspeak House has hosted thousands of events, launched twenty books, and graduated over a hundred fellows, many now in senior positions across a spectrum of key institutions.
We have supported fledgling movements that are now part of the furniture: impact evaluation, open data, service design, election tech, existential risk, community strategy, campaign innovation, decentralised social media, digital democracy, cognitive security, prediction markets, data journalism, and many more.
Furthermore, Newspeak House has become home for the London College of Political Technology, offering a formal one year programme with a homegrown faculty and original curriculum, with a dedicated classroom and a majority of non-resident students.
To mark our first decade, Newspeak House presents a series of talks and workshops from fellows and faculty across a full weekend conference. Keep up with the latest developments in the field, meet faces new and old, relax on our terrace, enjoy our all day buffet, and socialise late into the evening.
Fundraiser: for the next ten years
If you don’t support your civic institutions, they go away. As well as a conference and celebration, this event is also a fundraiser to secure the future of the college and its role as a community space.
Newspeak House has weathered a series of serious challenges, not least the pandemic and its aftermath. This event is to celebrate overcoming those challenges, becoming one of the very few autonomous and independent third spaces to still be opening its doors. However, these challenges have demolished financial reserves that are difficult to rebuild beyond the college’s normal activities.
It is with this in mind that we have set our prices for this landmark celebration. Your ticket contributes to the ongoing financial health of Newspeak House, as well as scholarships for students in future years. We are extremely grateful for all of your support.
If you’ve enjoyed the programming and facilitation of Newspeak House over the last ten years, now is the time to show your support. If you can’t attend the event, you can still donate or become a member!
Register ↗Campaign Lab is a community of politically-minded progressive data scientists, researchers and activists who are working together to build new election tools and change the way we analyse and understand political election campaigning.
Join us for our bi-weekly Campaign Lab Hack Night - a regular session to work on your tech side projects to help the progressive left campaign more effectively. You can either bring your own project or help out on one of our ongoing ones.
Snacks and drinks are provided, all you need is to bring yourself and a laptop. You can also participate remotely via zoom link.
All technologists, activists, organisers and campaigners are welcome. We also welcome any new people who are interested in politics, technology and evidence based campaign innovation on the left.
Register ↗Campaign Lab is a community of politically-minded progressive data scientists, researchers and activists who are working together to build new election tools and change the way we analyse and understand political election campaigning.
Join us for our bi-weekly Campaign Lab Hack Night - a regular session to work on your tech side projects to help the progressive left campaign more effectively. You can either bring your own project or help out on one of our ongoing ones.
Snacks and drinks are provided, all you need is to bring yourself and a laptop. You can also participate remotely via zoom link.
All technologists, activists, organisers and campaigners are welcome. We also welcome any new people who are interested in politics, technology and evidence based campaign innovation on the left.
Register ↗