[Air-L] Digital Investigations Lab – Launch Event at King's College London – 24 March

Zeena Feldman zeena.feldman at kcl.ac.uk
Tue Mar 10 00:34:18 PDT 2026


Dear friends and colleagues,

To launch KCL's new Digital Investigations Lab, we are delighted to host a panel of journalists, academic researchers, and designers to reflect on their distinctive approaches to conducting and facilitating investigations. We will discuss techniques for analysing smartphone apps and platform monopolies (Dr Ashwin Matthew and Thais Lobo); the current challenges and possibilities in working with open sources on social media (Sarah Cammarata); and the critical role that design practice plays in facilitating inquiry and visualising a story (Rectangle’s Lizzie Malcolm and Daniel Powers).

When: Tuesday, 24 March at 18:30. A drinks reception will follow.
Where: King's College London, Waterloo Campus, Franklin-Wilkins Building, room FWB 1.11 (map<https://www.kcl.ac.uk/visit/franklin-wilkins-building>)
Free registration: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/kingscollegelondoncentrefordigitalculture/2088788
More info: https://www.kcl.ac.uk/events/digital-investigations-lab-launch-event

About the event

This session marks the first in a series of events and initiates a new interdisciplinary research lab within the Centre for Digital Culture at King’s. The Digital Investigations Lab seeks to examine understandings of expertise, methods, and sources at a moment where the roles they play in investigative work are shifting and unstable. In doing so, it creates a forum for co-learning and critical reflection, linking digital researchers across King’s with a wider community of practitioners in London and further afield.

The Digital Investigations Lab has been initiated as part of Assembling Certainty, an AHRC Catalyst-funded project led by Dr David Young (King's College London) in collaboration with Dr Josh Bowsher (University of Sussex) and Airwars. The launch event is also supported by the Centre for Digital Culture’s seed fund.


About the speakers

Thais Lobo is project manager at DIGISILK, where she leads the engagement with practitioners for developing Janus. At King's, she has contributed to engaged research to study digital platforms, cultures, and infrastructures, combining digital methods and qualitative analysis. Her research is informed by a previous career in journalism.

Dr Ashwin Mathew is an ethnographer of Internet infrastructure, studying the technologies and technical communities involved in the operation of the global Internet. He is interested in how the Internet is built and maintained in everyday practice; and how the cultures of the Internet’s technical communities circulate and are re-articulated across Global South and Global North in the process of operating the Internet. He is currently Senior Lecturer in Global Digital Cultures in the Department of Digital Humanities at King's College London.

Sarah Cammarata is an OSINT practitioner and investigator specialising in financial crime and digital investigations. She has worked as a corporate intelligence analyst, leading complex, cross-border investigations into white collar crime. She trains journalists, researchers and students in open source and social media intelligence techniques through the Centre for Investigative Journalism, and is a regular public speaker on OSINT methods. She began her career as a journalist in Washington, DC, reporting for POLITICO and Stars and Stripes on defence, Congress and the US military, and holds an MA in War Studies from King’s College London.

Rectangle is a design and software development studio founded by Daniel Powers and Lizzie Malcolm in 2017. Their work is focused on building tools to structure stores of information and interfaces to access them. They collaborate with journalists, publishers, human rights organisations, cultural organisations, artists, and academics on research-led projects, digital archives, and publishing systems. These projects involve structuring material from scraped datasets, recordings, research documents, and organisational archives for access, analysis, and interpretation.

Dr David Young is a Lecturer in Digital Media and Culture in the Department of Digital Humanities. His research focuses on software politics and digital war, investigative aesthetics, and Cold War histories of computational media. He is currently leading the AHRC Catalyst-funded research project "Assembling Certainty", which examines how accounts of war are produced using “open sources” in visual investigations and critically explores the implications of machine learning in civilian casualty recording.



Best wishes,
Zeena


Dr Zeena Feldman (she/her)
Reader in Digital Culture
Director, Queer at King’s Research Centre<https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/queeratkings>
Co-Director, Centre for Digital Culture<https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/cdc>

King’s College London
Department of Digital Humanities<https://www.kcl.ac.uk/ddh/about/about>
The Strand, Chesham Building, 0.03
London WC2R 2LS

zeena.feldman at kcl.ac.uk<mailto:zeena.feldman at kcl.ac.uk>
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/people/dr-zeena-feldman


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