Multi-scale Ethics: Why we need to involve citizens in technological developments at different scales.
Melanie Smallman, Associate Professor, Science and Technology Studies, UCL London.
20. April, 15:30, Zirkus des Wissens
In May 2018, a group of citizens took to the streets to protest against the first instance of AI being used within the UK’s National Health Service (NHS). In her keynote, Melanie will reflect on current approaches to AI Ethics and ask how they can have missed the very issues that are driving citizens to the streets to protest against these technologies. In particular, she will argue that to develop technologies responsibly requires us to think about the implications of advanced technologies on communities, institutions and societies, as well as on individuals – and that the most effective way of doing that is to involve citizens in imagining and developing these technologies from the start.
Melanie Smallman is Associate Professor in Science and Technology Studies at UCL, Co-Director of the UCL Hub for Responsible Research and Innovation and a Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute. Melanie's research focuses on how responsibility and ethics is understood and enacted in research and technology development, and how these issues affect public perceptions and social acceptance of technologies. Specifically, she is interested in the role of technologies in increasing inequality and how these wider social impacts can be taken account of within ethical frameworks. Previously, Melanie ran science policy and communication consultancy Think-Lab and spent eight years as an adviser within the UK Government. She is a former Fellow in Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School for Government and has a PhD in Science and Technology Studies from UCL.
-
Please sign up for the keynote in advance here.
Link to Register , öffnet eine externe URL
If you are taking part in the 2023 Austrian Citizen Science Conference, advance registration is not required.