Digital good in progress - Helen Kennedy and Ros Williams
Helen Kennedy and Ros Williams give a talk - 'Reflections on the challenges of asking normative questions about the digital society we want'
Date and time
Location
Online
About this event
- Event lasts 1 hour
Webinar series - Digital good in progress
Reflections on the challenges of asking normative questions about the digital society we want
New date: 11:00 - 12:00 Thursday 1 May, online
The ESRC Digital Good Network asks what a good digital society looks like and how we get there. We take as our starting point the substantial critiques of contemporary digital deployments offered by social scientists, humanities scholars, and digital rights advocates and activists. We acknowledge the rich empirical evidence of problems raised by, for example, social media platforms, biometric surveillance tools, and generative AI. In surveying these critiques, the contours of the digital society we don't want become clear. However, whilst mapping these contours is vital, it is only a start. The Digital Good Network takes the next analytic step, inspired by a vein of scholarship that challenges us to imagine more desirable futures (eg Benjamin 2024). In other words, we pivot from the question 'what digital society don't we want?' to 'what kind of digital society do we want, and how do we get there?'.
Over the past two years, we have funded research, trained researchers, and connected with stakeholders, in pursuit of answering these questions. At this juncture in our network's life, in this presentation, we reflect on some of the challenges that arise when asking normative questions like ours. We focus on what we see as aligned concepts - hope, promise, imagination - on good societies past, future and present, and on questions of language, noting that the term ‘good’ is highly contested.
We reflect on the convening power of the core terms we use, on their use as heuristics, and on category errors - or whether journeying towards a better digital society is more important than challenging whether it is possible.
About the speakers
Helen Kennedy FBA FAcSS is Professor of Digital Society at the University of Sheffield and Director of the ESRC Digital Good Network. Her research focuses on how new digital technologies are experienced by non-expert folk as part of their everyday lives, how they come into being, the contexts in which they are made and shaped, how and whether they can promote equity, what good digital societies looks like and why the concept of ‘the digital good’ is so contested. She has secured over £9m in research funding, including for the current ESRC Digital Good Network and Public Voices in AI . Most of her research involves collaborating with non-academic stakeholders in order to enact positive social change.
Ros Williams is Senior Lecturer in Digital Media and Society at the University of Sheffield. Their research engages with science and technology studies, the sociologies of race and ethnicity, and of health and illness. Ros is particularly interested in how ideas of racialised difference circulate in different technological and biomedical contexts, and with what effects particularly for racially minoritised people. They are an editor of the journal Sociology of Health and Illness, and Associate Director of the ESRC Digital Good Network, a research network asking what a good digital society is, and how we get there.
Organised by
An ESRC-funded, £4 million research network building a community focused on how digital technologies can work for people, society and the economy.