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== [[2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference (September 1, 2022)]] ==
== [[2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference (September 1, 2022)]] ==
The 2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference, our inaugural mini-conference, took place virtually on '''September 1, 2022'''. It featured five panels with 17 presenters. More than 200 individuals registered to attend our event. The program for the mini-conference can be found here.   
The 2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference, our inaugural mini-conference, took place virtually on '''September 1, 2022'''. It featured five panels with 17 presenters. More than 200 individuals registered to attend our event. The [[2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference (September 1, 2022)|program for the mini-conference]] can be found here.   


[[File:Politics-of-Emerging-Tech-MiniConference-2022.png|center|thumb|800x800px|Group photo/screenshot from our 2022 virtual Mini-Conference]]  
[[File:Politics-of-Emerging-Tech-MiniConference-2022.png|center|thumb|800x800px|Group photo/screenshot from our 2022 virtual Mini-Conference]]  

Revision as of 02:03, 2 September 2022

Welcome to the Politics of Emerging Technologies online research community!

We are a growing online research community! We define emerging technologies broadly to include any technology that involves radical novelty, relatively fast growth, prominent impact, and uncertainty and ambiguity. Some examples of research topics include (but are not limited to) digital surveillance in public and private spheres; cybersecurity and international relations; the ethics and governance of artificial intelligence; automation and the future of work; the governance and regulation of social media platforms; military and civilian uses of emerging technologies; privacy law and policy; biosecurity and the prevention of future pandemics; digital media and the spread of misinformation. We welcome theoretical and empirical works from a variety of political science/public policy subfields and methodological approaches.

2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference (September 1, 2022)

The 2022 Politics of Emerging Technologies Mini-Conference, our inaugural mini-conference, took place virtually on September 1, 2022. It featured five panels with 17 presenters. More than 200 individuals registered to attend our event. The program for the mini-conference can be found here.

Group photo/screenshot from our 2022 virtual Mini-Conference

Email list

We have set up a low-traffic email list for announcements. Once you subscribe to the email list, you can send and receive information about job opportunities, funding opportunities, upcoming workshops, conferences, and events, and other information. Announcement emails will be moderated.

Sign up here to join the email list:

https://gaggle.email/join/politics-emerging-tech@gaggle.email


Image in the logo: Philipp Schmitt / Better Images of AI / Neural network diagram / CC-BY 4.0

A laptopogram on a plain background with very simplistic black-outlined blocks stretching across the centre, almost end to end. The blocks are linked, but not solidly, often leaving small gaps between the objects suggesting they could still shift around and recombine.