Summary
The “Data is the new oil – a political history of the European computing industry” project investigates the history of the European computing industry from the aftermath of the second world war until the present. The research will be based primarily on companies’ archives, State Archives, and the historical archives of the EU, and will place the evolution of the European computing industry in relation with the development of a European oil industry, the most successful example of developing a strong and globally competitive Europe-made industry against America’s first-comer advantage. By analysing the reasons of the failure to also establish strong European actors in the IT industry, the project will allow to better understand the reasons for the decline in European productivity, as well as what the role of the European Union (EU) can be in promoting the development of national or infra-national strong IT companies, able to compete with the current dominance of US companies alone. Furthermore, the project will consider the problem of the data economy in a historical perspective, analysing access to data as a commodity, in parallel to the problem of access to oil which dominated the geopolitical economy of the 20th century, testing the literature on the history of commodities on access to data. This will allow to cover a gap in the current literature on the history of the European computing industry, which focussed almost exclusively on hardware and software. It will also update the literature from international and media history with a reflection rooted in history on the role of data for current economic development.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101150959 |
Start date: | 01-09-2025 |
End date: | 31-08-2027 |
Total budget - Public funding: | - 188 590,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
The “Data is the new oil – a political history of the European computing industry” project investigates the history of the European computing industry from the aftermath of the second world war until the present. The research will be based primarily on companies’ archives, State Archives, and the historical archives of the EU, and will place the evolution of the European computing industry in relation with the development of a European oil industry, the most successful example of developing a strong and globally competitive Europe-made industry against America’s first-comer advantage. By analysing the reasons of the failure to also establish strong European actors in the IT industry, the project will allow to better understand the reasons for the decline in European productivity, as well as what the role of the European Union (EU) can be in promoting the development of national or infra-national strong IT companies, able to compete with the current dominance of US companies alone. Furthermore, the project will consider the problem of the data economy in a historical perspective, analysing access to data as a commodity, in parallel to the problem of access to oil which dominated the geopolitical economy of the 20th century, testing the literature on the history of commodities on access to data. This will allow to cover a gap in the current literature on the history of the European computing industry, which focussed almost exclusively on hardware and software. It will also update the literature from international and media history with a reflection rooted in history on the role of data for current economic development.Status
SIGNEDCall topic
HORIZON-MSCA-2023-PF-01-01Update Date
22-11-2024
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