More than ever, technology is shaping, and being shaped by, public policy. This has an enormous impact, particularly for marginalized communities. The artificial intelligence and computer algorithms increasingly driving government and industry decisions—from the allocation of social services to hiring—are reflecting and reinforcing social biases towards women, people of color, and disabled people, among others. Global climate change is having a disproportionately negative impact on low- and middle-income countries, and on historically disadvantaged communities of color in the United States. Communities are increasingly concerned they are not benefiting from government research funding, and that the regulation of emerging technologies is inadequate.
The interconnectedness of technology, policy, and equality raises crucial questions for scientists, technologists, and leaders in public policy, civil society, and industry. How can technology be built, implemented, and governed more equitably? How can the concerns of marginalized communities be integrated better into technology and related policies? How should community knowledge and concerns be integrated with technical expertise and scientific evidence in the development of public policies?
This course aims to help learners understand how inequity and injustice can become embedded in technology, science, and associated policies, and how this can be addressed.
Combining real-world cases with scholarly insights, this course introduces learners to these challenges and offers tools for navigating them. You will learn about:
- The landscape of technology policymaking
- How technology, and related policies both reflect and reinforce social values, biases and politics
- The power and limitations of technology in solving social problems
- New ways to think about “experts” and “publics”
- The politics of innovation policy
The course is designed for people from diverse professional, advocacy, and academic backgrounds. No scientific, technical, or policy background is necessary.
In this week first week of the course on How do values Shape Technology?, you'll be learning about social values, political priorities, and how the impacts of values, biases and assumptions shape design. You can expect a few graded quizzes and discussion prompts.
Introduction to Equity and Justice in Technology Policy•13 minutes
How do Values Shape Technology?•22 minutes
13 readings•Total 251 minutes
Welcome & Meet your Instructor•5 minutes
Course Syllabus•10 minutes
Course Pre-Survey•5 minutes
Tips for Reading Academic Articles•10 minutes
Do Artifacts Have Politics?•50 minutes
Assessing the social impact of direct-to-consumer genetic testing: Understanding sociotechnical architectures•35 minutes
Science in Abortion Politics and the Failure of One Laptop Per Child ft. Morgan Ames•40 minutes
The Ethics of Invention•35 minutes
Algorithmic Colonization of Africa•25 minutes
The UN is holding a summit on building a sustainable future for food and ag. Why are so many people upset about it?•10 minutes
Explainer: what is surveillance capitalism and how does it shape our economy?•10 minutes
What is Surveillance Capitalism?•6 minutes
Surveillance capitalism in the age of Covid-19•10 minutes
3 assignments•Total 30 minutes
Social Values Quiz •10 minutes
Political Priorities Quiz•10 minutes
Impacts of Values, Biases and Assumptions Quiz •10 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 50 minutes
Introduce Yourself•5 minutes
Week 1 Writing Assignment•45 minutes
Technology and Equity
Module 2•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this week on Technology and Equity, you'll be learning about traditional goals and values, hiding bias and inequities in language, and hidden assumptions and embedded inequalities in technology design and development. You can also expect two graded quizzes and a discussion prompt throughout the week.
Marginalized Aadhaar: How the World’s Largest Digital Identification Programme Led to the Exclusion of Marginalized Communities•44 minutes
How a Popular Medical Device Encodes Racial Bias•23 minutes
Oximeters Used to Be Designed for Equity. What Happened?•10 minutes
Facial Recognition, Algorithmic Inequality, and a Racial Reckoning ft. Virginia Eubanks•45 minutes
An algorithm that screens for child neglect raises concerns•25 minutes
San Francisco Rations Housing by Scoring Homeless People’s Trauma. By Design, Most Fail to Qualify.•20 minutes
Why it’s so damn hard to make AI fair and unbiased?•20 minutes
South Africa’s private surveillance machine is fueling a digital apartheid•25 minutes
Luxury Surveillance•15 minutes
When an Algorithm Gets It Wrong•20 minutes
Optional: Big Tech Entrenches US Power with Michael Kwet•0 minutes
2 assignments•Total 25 minutes
Hiding Bias and Inequities in Language Quiz •10 minutes
Hidden Assumptions and Embedded Inequalities in Technology Design and Development Quiz •15 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 30 minutes
How have different values, biases and assumptions shaped technology?•20 minutes
Week 2 Reflection •10 minutes
Technology Policy and Equity
Module 3•10 hours to complete
Module details
In this week on Technology Policy and Equity, you'll learn about how social values and political priorities shape policy, institutions and patents, science and technology policy and equity, and hiding bias and inequalities in technology regulation. You can expect one graded quiz, three ungraded quizzes and a discussion prompt in this week.
How State Funding Built Silicon Valley with Margaret O’Mara•58 minutes
Innovation Policy, Structural Inequality, and COVID-19•15 minutes
Private Patents, Public Health•88 minutes
Overpatented, Overpriced•27 minutes
The Practices of Objectivity in Regulatory Science•30 minutes
Why does the state allow environmental inequalities to persist?•20 minutes
Saving Science, The New Atlantis•110 minutes
The Return of Biological Race? Regulating Race and Genetics Through Administrative Agency Race Impact Assessments•146 minutes
Optional: Racism is baked into patent systems•0 minutes
4 assignments•Total 40 minutes
Social Values and Political Priorities Shape Policy Quiz •15 minutes
Institutions and Patents Quiz•5 minutes
Science and Technology Policy and Equity Quiz•5 minutes
Hiding Bias and Inequities in Technology Regulation Quiz•15 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 30 minutes
Week 3 Reflection•30 minutes
Rethinking Expertise
Module 4•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this week on Rethinking Expertise, you'll be learning about expertise and public mistrust, and expanding expertise. In addition to two graded quizzes, you will get the chance to apply what you're learning in your first short peer reviewed assignment.
Valuing Non-Traditional Expertise in Technology Policy•15 minutes
6 readings•Total 230 minutes
Misunderstood misunderstanding: social identities and public uptake of science•57 minutes
ACT-UP: A History of HIV/AIDS Activism•50 minutes
How and Why Patients Made Long Covid•18 minutes
‘We Do Not Want Fake Energy’: The Social Shaping of a Solar Micro-grid in Rural India•37 minutes
A global observatory for gene editing•13 minutes
Integrating Public Deliberation into Engineering Systems: Participatory Technology Assessment of NASA's Asteroid Redirect Mission•55 minutes
2 assignments•Total 25 minutes
Rethinking Expertise Quiz•10 minutes
Expertise, Mistrust and Expanding Expertise Quiz•15 minutes
1 peer review•Total 30 minutes
Week 4 Assignment•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Experiential Expertise Discussion•10 minutes
Rethinking Design
Module 5•6 hours to complete
Module details
In this week on Rethinking Design, you'll be learning about community based design and a framework for responsible innovation. In addition to a graded quiz and two discussion prompts, you'll continue applying what you're learning in another short peer reviewed assignment at the end of the week.
Rethinking Design for Equity and Justice•18 minutes
9 readings•Total 265 minutes
What is Design for Social Justice?•75 minutes
Rethinking Success and Failure in Community-Oriented Engineering•5 minutes
Designing Accessible Fashion for People with Disabilities•10 minutes
Assessing Watershed Scarcity and Watershed Development in Maharashtra, India: A Case Study of the Baliraja Memorial Dam•55 minutes
Rooted in Recognition: Indigenous Environmental Justice and the Genetically Engineered Chestnut Tree•43 minutes
NASEM Fostering Responsible Computing Research--Foundations and Practices•22 minutes
Developing a Framework for Responsible Innovation•55 minutes
[Optional] Case Study: China•0 minutes
[Optional] Power to the People? Opportunities and Challenges for Participatory AI•0 minutes
1 assignment•Total 15 minutes
Community Based Design Quiz•15 minutes
1 peer review•Total 60 minutes
Week 5 Assignment Peer Review•60 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 20 minutes
Rethinking Design Discussion•10 minutes
Framework for Responsible Innovation Reflection•10 minutes
Rethinking Policy and Governance
Module 6•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this final week of the course on Rethinking Policy and Governance, you'll learn about rethinking technology policy for equity, democratic engagement, and change in governance of technology. After completing a graded quiz and a discussion prompt, this week and the course will conclude with a final peer reviewed assignment.
The mission of the University of Michigan is to serve the people of Michigan and the world through preeminence in creating, communicating, preserving and applying knowledge, art, and academic values, and in developing leaders and citizens who will challenge the present and enrich the future.
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Reviewed on Aug 16, 2024
Engaging and relevant topics on concerns surrounding the use of technology
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