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ÓrbitaLIS n.18: Rafael Capurro

"Devemos ver quais desejos e esperanças se põem nesses objetos [digitais], por quem, como são transmitidos dentro do contexto cultural de uma nação como, por exemplo, na América Latina; o que estamos esperando, quais são os medos e as oportunidades que estes objetos nos estão dando e que pensamos que nos vão dar?" ... "O conceito de brecha digital é histórico, se vai transformando: o que significa brecha digital há dez anos?" ... "Temos de superar a brecha entre o análogo e o digital." Questões como a inserção de tecnologias em espaços de pobreza, o capital cultural necessário, brechas de gênero, aprendizagem ao longo da vida e a construção de redes não só de informação, mas de conhecimento, e possíveis caminhos para superar as brechas são temas na entrevista: "Brecha digital: nuevos espacios de exclusión", realizada pela jornalista cubana Yoani Sanchez (Deutsche Welle, Berlin) com participação de Rafael Capurro e María Teresa Lugo, Coordinadora de Proyectos TIC y Educación do Instituto Internacional de Planeamiento de la Educación de la UNESCO.

Fonte: Deutsche Welle (DW) (18.06.2017)

"Autonomous zombies are not an option", entrevista de Rafael Capurro para a Flottenmanagement, discute a questão da responsabilidade e a necessidade de estabelecer uma terminologia comum nos diálogos sobre ética e carros autônomos.

Fonte: 2025AD (28.06.2017)

"On Information, and Digital Ethics: thoughts from International Society for Information Studies 2017 Summit", relatório de Lyn Robinson sobre as discussões do painel de Digital Ethics mediado por Rafael Capurro e Jared Bielby na IS4SI 2017, em Gotenburg.

Fonte: thelynxiblog (19.06.2017)

Acesse a página web de Rafael Capurro em português. Nela você encontra informação sobre a formação acadêmica, atuação profissional, projetos, grupos de pesquisa, associações e até sobre a história da família (Capurro, Castells). Publicações e conferências em português, dentre outras, também estão disponíveis gratuitamente.

 

3rd call for papers: Ethics and Social Welfare http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/resw20 CALL FOR FAPERS Special Issue on Technology-driven unemployment: dilemmas for ethics and social welfare Guest editors: Antonio Marturano (University of Rome, Tor Vergata, Italy) Jana Vizmuller-Zocco (York University, Canada) Rationale: The loss of jobs due to technological innovations is starting to reach crisis proportions as many scholars and popular press warn. There are indeed many voices which decry the unemployment situation exasperated by the replacement of humans by machines, and apparently no job is likely to be immune. The World Technology Network forecasts that “Accelerating technological unemployment will likely be one of the most challenging societal issues in the 21st Century”. Although the scholarly work published on the topic focuses mainly on the technical, technological, and market side, assessments which consider the ethical and social welfare implications of technological unemployment are still to be addressed in detail. Topics to be explored from theoretical as well as practical perspectives include, but are not restricted to, the following: * The role of governmental institutions in technological unemployment * Jobless future: is unconditional basic/universal income the answer? * Social, political, and economic approaches to welfare in a jobless future * New ethical dimensions of work originating from the technological unemployment crisis * Political and social inequality created by a jobless future * Strategic plans for skills, education, re-deployment for the technologically jobless * The political control of technological unemployment * Welfare, leadership and jobless future * Technological displacement vs technological innovation from the perspective of social welfare * Historical visions on the ethical impacts of workload reduction * Creating new values for a jobless future * Political values in welfare and technological disruption in the job market * Work as human value * Conflicting values in a jobless world (for ex., the refugees crisis in the EU) * Religious values and technological unemployment Brief for contributors: In line with the editorial aims of the journal, this call for papers focuses specifically on the relationship between ethics, welfare, and values implicated in the policies and political strategies on the one hand and technologically-driven unemployment on the other. The editors welcome academic papers which are interdisciplinary in character. Contributions may combine wider ethical and theoretical questions concerning technology-driven unemployment with practical considerations leading to social policies and professional practices (especially the existing and future policies of local/national governments and international institutions, such as EU, UN, WTO to cope with the problems of technological joblessness). The special issue, as with other issues of the journal, welcomes material in a variety of formats, including high quality peer-reviewed academic papers, reflections, debates and commentaries on policy and practice, book reviews and review articles. Academic papers should be between 4-7,000 words long, and practice papers should be between 750-2,500 words long. Please consult the style rules laid-out on the journal’s website: http://www.tandfonline.com/resw. All academic papers will be double-blind peer- reviewed in the normal way. Practice papers will be considered for publication by the editors. Procedure and timelines: 1) Completed first drafts of papers are due by the 23rd of July 2017 and must be submitted to https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/resw. Highliting: Technological Unemployment 2) Authors informed of reviewers feedback by 3rd December 2017 3) Second revised version of the manuscripts must be submitted by 4th February 2018 4) Final decision on manuscripts: 1st May 2018 5) Final (revised) versions must be submitted by the 18th of June 2018. 6) Final confirmation of paper acceptance by the 30th September 2018. 7) Papers published in the first issue of Volume 13, 2019.

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