[bioundgrd] Social Media and Democracy: "Where Do We Go From Here?" (Wed, 9/12, 430pm, 10-250)

Janice Chang jdchang at mit.edu
Thu Aug 23 11:09:27 EDT 2018


Begin forwarded message:

From: Karen L Gardner <kgardner at mit.edu<mailto:kgardner at mit.edu>>
Subject: Please forward: Social Media and Democracy: "Where Do We Go From Here?" (Wed, 9/12, 430pm, 10-250)
Date: August 22, 2018 at 3:40:15 PM EDT

Dear colleagues,
Will you send the below announcement to your undergraduate and graduate student lists?
Thank you!
Karen
================

Dear MIT Community,

You are cordially invited to the inaugural event of MIT’s new Computational Cultures Initiative, sponsored by the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences.  MIT’s doctoral program in History, Anthropology, and the Program in Science, Technology, and Society (HASTS) presents a panel discussion focused on the social, political, and technological entanglements of social media and democracy.

The event features a moderated panel of four leading scholars specialized in researching and analyzing the infusion of social media platforms in our everyday social and political lives, including an audience Q&A session. Following the lecture, there will be a smaller seminar for graduate students.

MIT HASTS’s Democracy, Citizenship, and Technology Series presents:

Social Media and Democracy
Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Panel Discussion: 4:30pm - 6:30pm
10-250

Graduate Seminar:  7:00pm
4-153

*Pizza will be served for all attendees following the panel discussion at 6:30pm, outside the hall.  Registration is not required but helpful for planning purposes.  Please register your attendance (at no charge): https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mitsocial-media-and-democracy-colloquium-tickets-49218079601

"Democracies face a set of unique and proliferating challenges in the twenty-first century, particularly stemming from the increasing power and presence of digital platforms like social media and related technologies. Such digital platforms are the spaces and places that increasingly provide the dominant means of encountering and exchanging ideas, finding news and information, and for creating social and political communities. Although these platforms can promise to serve a public function, they are nonetheless dominantly owned and operated by the private sphere, leading to a number of legal, ethical, and broadly techno-social problems as evidenced by recent revelations of the relationship between Facebook and the 2016 American presidential elections.

Digital platforms are thus not easily classifiable under familiar categories: are they similar to traditional media (press and TV)? Are they considered a utility company (ISPs), providing essential services for internet users? What promising potentials and subsequent futures might certain iteration of social media platforms offer towards creating and maintaining the public and political spheres that are central to the evolution of twenty-first century democracies? How might these platforms be harnessed generatively, as well critiqued?”


_______________________________
Gus Zahariadis
Assistant to the Director
MIT Program in Science, Technology,
and Society

T: (617) 253-3452
F: (617) 258-8118
http://sts-program.mit.edu/


-------------------------
Karen Gardner
Academic Administrator
MIT Program in Science, Technology, and Society
77 Massachusetts Ave., E51-163f
Cambridge, MA  02139
617-253-9759 (phone)
617-258-8118 (fax)
sts-program.mit.edu<http://sts-program.mit.edu/>
http://web.mit.edu/hasts

pronouns: she, her, hers


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