Book Launch! Digital Work in the Planetary Market
17 May 2022
We are pleased to announce the publication of Digital Work in the Planetary Market, a new book analysing the geographies of digital work.
17 May 2022
We are pleased to announce the publication of Digital Work in the Planetary Market, a new book analysing the geographies of digital work.
12 May 2022
The UK funding bodies have published the results of the UK’s most recent national research assessment exercise, the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021.
7 April 2022
Dr Otto Kässi and Professor Vili Lehdonvirta’s new study examines how digital skill certificates are affecting the labour market and impacting jobseekers and employers.
14:00 -17:00, St Anthony's College, Oxford
With Chico Camargo, Dr Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos, Márcia Tiburi, Jean Wyllys, and Victor FragaSeminar with Jean Wyllys, Marcia Tiburi, Victor Fraga, hosted by Andreza Aruska de Souza Santos and Chico Camargo. The Week of Fake News is a one-off large cross-sector initiative encompassing cinema, music, academic debate and fine arts.
Find out more about the research of academics who have recently joined the OII
Associate Professor in AI and Society
Ekaterina Hertog is an Associate Professor of AI and Society at Oxford Internet Institute and Institute for Ethics in AI. She studies how the rising digitalisation is reshaping private lives across the world.
Postdoctoral Researcher
Lulu Shi is a sociologist working on projects investigating the intersection between society and technology. Her research interests include digital sociology, sociology of education, work and employment.
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Theodora is a digital anthropologist and ESRC DTP Postdoctoral Fellow. For her DPhil she conducted ethnography at a "digital detox" retreat in California. Her research explores technology and mental health as situated in cultural context.
By Andreas Jungherr and Ralph Schroeder
Digital technologies have changed the public arena, but there is little scholarly consensus about how they have done so. This book rethinks the workings and dysfunctions of the contemporary public arena, and considers ways to improve it.
This project interrogates the impact of AI on cultural heritages and the presentation of these futures through public-facing exhibition spaces. It will interrogate the agency of AI within exhibit contexts, exploring its role in creativity.
The aim of this interactive gallery installation and accompanying workshop is to foster a dialogue with creative professionals on the role of algorithms in design. The installation considers how algorithmic bias may influence creativity in ideation.
The Oxford COVID-19 Project aims to increase our understanding of COVID-19 and elaborate possible strategies to reduce the impact on the society through the combined power of Statistical, Mathematical Modelling and Machine Learning techniques.
By Anne Ploin, Rebecca Eynon, Isis Hjorth, and Michael A. Osborne
There has been much talk about the potential of AI, but could it really transform the creative arts?
Business Insider, 15 May 2022
Elon Musk wants to put Donald Trump back on Twitter. What are the implications if he does?
International Business Times, 24 April 2022
When Jak found online marketplace Etsy, it seemed like the perfect match: a tech platform for small traders to sell handmade items that promised to be a creative outlet and bring tidy profits.
The Washington Post, 19 April 2022
As governments and social media companies have moved to suppress Russia’s state media and the disinformation it spreads about the war in Ukraine, the Kremlin’s diplomats are stepping up to do the dirty work.