As we approach the end of 2024, the team at the Cline Center wants to extend our greatest thanks to our employees, graduate research assistants, and student employees for putting in their all as always. It’s been a busy year, and we are proud of the work our team has accomplished. Here are some highlights: ✨ We collaborated with Braver Angels and College Debates & Discourse Alliance for our annual Cline Symposium, which was a unique first where we pursued a more interactive format for students to build dialogue skills ✨ Our director Scott Althaus co-authored a book that uses Cline Center data to explain modern electoral college strategies ✨ Ekin Alpay, Alesha Lewis, and Myung Jung Kim were our Schroeder Summer Fellows, with each of them utilizing Cline Center data to pursue their unique research projects ✨ Professors JungHwan Yang and Yun Huang were announced as our 2024-2025 David F. Linowes Faculty Fellows, and we are excited to continue to support them in their work This was a phenomenal year for advancing social research, and we are looking forward for what 2025 has in store. To read more about what we've been working on, check out our newsletter here https://lnkd.in/g4v9fQgp Happy New Years from all of us at the Cline Center! 🥳
Cline Center for Advanced Social Research
Research Services
Champaign, Illinois 342 followers
Transforming information into knowledge that advances human flourishing.
About us
The Cline Center for Advanced Social Research in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign equips and empowers social scientists, humanists, and decision-makers with tools to address key challenges that threaten human flourishing—climate change, civil unrest, inequality, and injustice, to name a few—by applying advanced computational techniques to extract structured insights out of millions of news stories from around the world. Since 2004, the Cline Center has been connecting data science and engineering experts with researchers in the social sciences and humanities to improve lives around the world. Key to this effort is the Cline Center’s network of faculty and research affiliates hailing from universities across five continents, including on-campus affiliates from more than a dozen departments in six colleges at the University of Illinois. By creating structured data out of unstructured news text and building software to analyze data at extreme scales, the Cline Center aims to foster transformative research with potential to improve societies around the globe. The Cline Center also supports a wide range of teaching and outreach activities, from fellowship programs for faculty and graduate students to undergraduate internships, public lectures and topical symposia. These activities have positioned the Cline Center within our campus’s data science ecosystem as a data provider supporting a wide range of Illinois research on unstructured data analytics, a bridge-builder connecting the engineering campus with researchers in the social sciences and humanities, and as a translational site for connecting research expertise on campus to both private and public-sector partners with capacity to advance human flourishing around the world.
- Website
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https://clinecenter.illinois.edu/
External link for Cline Center for Advanced Social Research
- Industry
- Research Services
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- Champaign, Illinois
- Type
- Nonprofit
- Founded
- 2004
- Specialties
- News Analytics, Collaborative Research, Conflict Processes, Event Data, Data Science, and Natural Language Processing
Locations
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Primary
2001 S. First St.
Champaign, Illinois 61820, US
Employees at Cline Center for Advanced Social Research
Updates
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The Cline Center wishes the best of luck to all University of Illinois students on final exams, projects, and papers! Remember to take breaks, stay organized, and keep a positive mindset as you tackle your exams and projects. To all the student employees at the Cline Center, thank you for balancing your academic responsibilities with your invaluable contributions to our work. You’ve got this! Here’s to finishing the semester strong and looking ahead to a well-deserved winter break ❄️
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Data transparency is crucial when it comes to understanding the impact of policing on communities. That's why the Cline Center created the SPOTLITE registry—a comprehensive database that tracks police uses of lethal force across the United States. This innovative tool provides crucial data on use of force incidents, starting with 2014 to 2021, enabling communities, researchers, and policymakers to explore patterns and understand the broader context behind these events. With this data, we can start answering critical questions: Are reforms creating lasting changes in policing, or are they only temporary? By providing accurate, comprehensive data, we aim to identify reforms that reduce unnecessary uses of force and rebuild trust between communities and law enforcement. Learn more about how the SPOTLITE Project plans to shape the future of public safety. Learn more about SPOTLITE here:
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At the Cline Center, our commitment to producing quality data is guided by our core values: collaboration, innovation, transparency, excellence, and difference-making. By working across disciplines and using cutting-edge tools, we strive to produce insights that not only meet the highest standards but also make a meaningful impact on societal well-being. Quality data isn’t just about numbers—it’s about driving change and fostering understanding.
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As we close out Student Appreciation Week, we are reminded that our students’ work is essential to our missions here at the Cline Center. Their hard work in data analysis, research, and beyond is at the heart of the Cline Center’s success, and we are proud to be a part of each student’s professional journey. While we are at the end of Student Appreciation Week, know that you are always appreciated for the work you contribute to the advancement of social research!
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This week, we celebrate student employees for Student Appreciation Week! Much of our work would not be possible if not done in collaboration with University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign undergraduate and graduate students. From data analysis to research support, they are essential in advancing the Cline Center’s missions and goals. We are grateful to work with a group of diligent and creative Illinois students, and look forward to their future impacts on social research. Thank you students for all that you do!
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STUDENT SPOTLIGHT: Meet Andrea Gerald Andrea is studying Political Science and has been with the Cline Center since October 2023. She currently works as an analyst for the Center’s SPOTLITE Project, and her tasks include reading hundreds of articles and extracting information from them to create concise summaries of instances of police lethal force. She is also responsible for picking out key information from articles that contribute to the data in SPOTLITE. Andrea says, "I am honored that my work contributes to research projects with an impact that reaches beyond Champaign. The Cline Center provides undergraduates with the unique opportunity to engage in meaningful work that has the potential to benefit society.”
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The modern era of presidential campaigns is shaped by the campaigns that came before. In “Battleground: Electoral College Strategies, Execution, and Impact in the Modern Era”, Cline Center data is utilized to analyze and understand electoral college strategies. If you want to better understand why presidential campaigns work the way they do, you can find the book by Scott Althaus and co-authors here:
Battleground: Electoral College Strategies, Execution, and Impact in the Modern Era
amazon.com
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The Illinois News Bureau published a 'Behind the Scenes' article about this year's Cline Symposium. You can find their article here: https://buff.ly/3AncH3b Thank you to Cline Symposium organizers Scott Althaus, Jay Jennings, Ajay Singh, Ph.D., and Sheila Roberts, and special thanks to Braver Angels facilitators Matthew Hausman and Charles Stone and College Debates & Discourse Alliance's Doug Sprei for making this years Symposium such a success.
Appealing to our ‘better angels’ with the Braver Angels
news.illinois.edu
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We had an impressive group of students participate in this year’s Cline Symposium discussing how to work across political divides. Between debates on social media’s role in moderating content and workshops on how to talk across lines of political difference, we are excited for students to take the skills they developed into their future endeavors. Special thanks to Doug Sprei and Braver Angels for creating and moderating a thorough debate experience for the students. We look forward to future symposiums where we can continue to collaborate with students to create space for important conversations.