Alison Powell

Web Name: Alison Powell

WebSite: http://www.alisonpowell.ca

ID:318603

Keywords:

Alison,Powell

Description:


Updates

Leave a reply

It’s such a privilege to have a digital identity archived for such a long time, but inevitably life intervenes. This site needs an update and I have been otherwise distracted.

In particular, the research pages no longer reflect where I’m at, and so as a placeholder while I sort this out, here’s a list of what I’ve recently written and what I’m interested in right now. Once I have a new site I’ll start posting current research again….and probably some poems too.

ME AT WORK:

Associate Professor, Department of Media and Communications London School of Economics and Political Sciences

Director: JUST AI Network: http://www.just-ai.net

THINGS I WROTE RECENTLY:

A Book!! Undoing Optimization: Civic Action in Smart Cities. New Haven: Yale University Press.An Article!! Explanations as Governance? Investigating practices of explanation in algorithmic system design. European Journal of Communication doi: https://doi.org/10.1177/02673231211028376Some blogs!! Prototyping Ethical Futures. JUST AI Network on Data and AI Ethics https://www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/blog/prototyping-ethical-futures-data-ai/Networking With Care: Mapping ‘Justice’ https://www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/blog/networking-care-mapping-justice/Urban Life and Civic Action in ‘Smart’ Cities. LSE Media and Communication Blog. https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/medialse/2021/06/07/urban-life-and-civic-action-in-smart-cities/

WHAT I’M INTERESTED IN NOW:

Community-based research. Ethics and participation in technology development. Digital citizenships. Data and AI ethics; cultural and policy implications of data and AI. Queer and feminist theory. Research creation, design methods and participatory methods in research and public engagement.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

May

Leave a reply

If you were looking for some dark optimism
From a walk among the tower blocks, in the gloaming
What would you miss, in the long low seduction of the light
Waning pink behind the clouds, behind the towers?

The river moves; the air’s scent of flowers
Floats past as I hang on the concrete
(was it always so thick with lichen?)
And weep.

The corner store is closed, shutters down.
No milk or old onions, no sweets.
I saw an ambulance there last week.

By the Thames a couple arm in arm
Springtime romance blooming, their masks fitted tight.
He jokes about throwing himself in the river
“But” she says, “you’ll be at work”.

In the yellow evening I want to hope
Passing through the square with the bunting
The open pub (landlord in gloves)
And the jolly blonde families in deck chairs
2 metres apart, on their front lawns,
The stylish young arrayed with plastic cups
Celebrating victory 75 years ago.

The dead are still dead.
And the living, us
Are waiting.

This is the easy part.
Songs on the air in the flower scented evening
Barbecue and take-out beer.
Next week, tomorrow, the beer must be served
The trash taken out
The children taught.

And how?
To be alive is
To
Be alive, until
The spring is spring without you.

(In memory of Barbara Powell, November 1950-May 2002)
This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

Machines Explain Things To Me

Leave a reply

We’re deep in the mire of a pandemic, and what’s the promise to let us out? A contract with Palantir to process health data and a serious level of investment in AI systems that are meant to move materials between hospitals. An app whose data about your proximity to your neighbour will be processed to find and notify your contacts. Once again, decision-making machines are positioned as helpers.

How deep does it go, our fascination with machines? With numbers, data, the magic of calculation? And now that this fascination is both legitimate and embedded in the designs of social institutions, what are the consequences? This post summarizes the beginnings of my ongoing work on the politics of explanations, reflecting on how information asymmetries are often sustained by the provision of explanations by some for the benefit of others.

Historian of science Lorraine Daston’s work identifies that it might be deeply embedded indeed. She writes “the cults of communicability and impartiality – again, with or without accuracy – also have an almost unbroken history in the sciences as well as in public life from the seventeenth century to the present . . . even when the truth of the matter was not to be had, numbers could be invented, dispersed to correspondents at home and abroad, and, above all, mentally shared: you and I may disagree about the accuracy and the implications of a set of numbers, but we understand the same thing by them” (1995, p. 9).

In these days of disinformation, deep fakes, and governments who structure their decision-making to render it less easy to scrutinize, it seems worth revisiting Daston’s discussions of how and why numbers and expertise are positioned, valorized and legitimated in this way. Daston calls these processes moral economies – the webs of values that function in relation to each other to build up certain legitimate ways of thinking. Philosopher Charles Taylor and my colleague Robin Mansell use a similar notion of social imaginaries to describe the competing but coherent ways that groups imagine and create expectations (including about the ‘natural way’ to build technologies and social systems).

In my own work, I use the term moral orders to evoke the way that these webs of values and practices build up and gain legitimacy, and especially how they are sustained by being described in moral or ethical terms.

As the hot white heat of AI Ethics has irradiated all of the technology space for the past two years, it’s possible to see the debates about ‘tech for good’ and ‘ethical AI’ as evidence of these kinds of moral justification. What’s especially interesting is how these justifications, once they move out into the world, can become so obviously part of the status quo that they become embedded into the design of technologies.

Transparency, or a lack therof, has come to be seen as one of the main risks of a shift towards reliance on machines in automated decision making. We call for ‘design for fairness’ or ‘auditability’ or ‘transparent design’ as if adhering to certain design principles would produce better outcomes. But if it’s possible to see the biased quality of an automated system, it may not actually be possible to avoid using the system, or to otherwise respond to its failings. Transparency has been much discussed as a necessary, if not sufficient condition to enhance public understanding of how automated systems intervene in people’s access to information, capacity to exercise voice within democratic processes.

Here in the UK (as elsewhere) policy advocates struggle to align existing principles of accountability with the new dynamics of algorithmic or automated decision-making (ADM). In relation to public sector decision making, third-sector organization NESTA has recommended that

“every algorithm used by a public sector organisation should be accompanied by a description of its function, objectives and intended impact.  He also called for  every algorithm  to  have an identical sand-box version for auditors to test the impact of different input conditions.” 

In a debate on this topic in the UK house of Lords in February 2020, the shadow Spokesperson (Digital, Culture, Media and Sport),   Lord Griffiths of Burry Port (Lab)  said ” We must have the general principles of what we want to do to regulate this area available to us, but be ready to act immediately—as and when circumstances require it—instead of taking cumbersome pieces of legislation through all stages in both Houses. ”  

He asked whether theInformation Commissioner’s Office wasreally the only regulator thatcan handle this multiplicity of tasks, including online harms and theADM.

Perhaps a greater risk than a lack of transparency is a problem in relation to explainability. Designing a system so that it’s decision-making process can be explained has now become viewed as an important goal within some of the fields of computer science and analytic philosophy. The expanding field of Fairness, Accountability and Transparency in machine learning (and the associated FaCCT conference) show how much attention is paid to creating ways to structure principles of transparency, bias reduction or well-specified aspects of fairness into computer systems.

These principled, structured interventions go some way to addressing specific forms of bias and transparency. However there is much that they can’t address – including the aspects of automated systems that cannot be effectively explained, including forms of machine learning where the associations made between different elements are dynamic , modulating and based on mathematical abstractions and principles that are not amenable to straightforward causal explanations. This means that ‘explanation’ as commonly understood, cannot apply to all of the aspects of certain types of automated systems. This is one of the challenges in building ‘explainable AI’ and one reason why I have argued that questions about data governance need to be part of the discussion; rather than focusing only on explanation and narrow interpretations of transparency.

Furthermore, the existing research on explanations overlooks an important element of explanation and explainability: the way that revealing or obscuring information operates to direct explanatory power to some actors rather than others. Are designers of machine learning systems the beneficiaries of explanations advocated by researchers who thought they were advocating for public understanding of technology?

This is one among several important questions to consider when looking at the politics of explanation. Others might concern what’s normatively valuable about explanation, the the ways that the history and culture of machine learning systems illuminate values.

Daston’s view of the history of science identifis that what counts as a fact depends on which historical moment you find yourself in. In the current moment, when scientifically verified facts are framed as debatable in part as a means of undermining their influence, and when not only quantifiable but machine-processed information is held as decisive (even when it is not), what can be made of our fascination with AI?

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

Sacrifice Poem (who is at work?)

Leave a reply

When I twisted my ankle
During the permitted morning run
On Westminster Bridge
(the sound of the tide rushing out with no boats)
I delicately walked past
The hospital where the prime minister
Lies
(don’t say dying).

Police at the gates
Panic on the faces of people rushing in
ID cards held aloft, to face the day.

In front, a rainbow floral display
Perpetual plastic flowers
Reads I [heart] NHS

A worker gives it a glance, rushing.
Does she think, like me
That this effusion seems too close
To a funeral display?

Behind, three ambulances
Are lined up
In the emergency bay.

Across the road, a dozen cameras
A dozen operators
Anchors in suits
Producers on the phone

Wait.
Later their broadcasts speak
Of war and “fighting spirits”
Of bravery and sacrifice.

Down below, in the playground
Of the hospital daycare
A woman runs with a stroller
Mask on her face
Through the doors
With the child
On her way to work.

Who battles:
Who sacrifices?

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

Skipping Poem

Leave a reply

Every day,rope in hand, I

Open thedoor.

Firstthing, the soft smell of flowers

And newgreening.

Secondthing, the birds

Cooing,calling, tussling,

Floating,blasting like torpedoes

Overtreetops, above the flats.

Thirdthing, breathe in

Cool in themorning, and no sound

But swishof rope and slap of feet.

Step stepstep

Stop.

At eightthirty

The manfrom Number Seven comes

Newspaper underhis arm and

Fog of cigarettesmoke over

Slopingshoulders

In anancient oiled jacket

Every day:

“Goodmorning”

“Gettingfit?”

“Trying!”

“Good morning,y’all right?”

“As well ascan be”

“Goodmorning”

“You’remaking progress, girl”

“Good morning”

“Well – we haveto stop meeting this way”

Every day,I hold out hope that

I’ll seehim tomorrow walking

Sharethirty seconds of Cockney greetings,

Keep himalive.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

Egg Poem

Leave a reply

“No eggs, you can get them at Lidl but onlytwo”

Says the butcher,handing over bags of chops and mince.

He wonderswhy I’m not buying more.

No eggs inthe supermarket

Someoneheard there were eggs at M&S

At Blackfriars,someone’s mum in Lincolnshire had eggs.

We alwayshave eggs.

Eggs in a Tupperware,blanketed in paper towel

Set on thewall on the patio.
Eggs in a box with a decoration drawn by a young friend

Pushed overthe road in a doll’s carriage.

“There wereno eggs”, my friend says, then

“Eggs frommy mum

Eggs offeredwhen I walked down the street”

Eggs at thewholesalers: we can buy them as a group.

Eggdiscussions in mobile chat groups

Along withstories of coping in a tiny flat

Being worriedabout health, work, pay, the future.

Laughing.

Standing inthe backyard with applause bouncing off the tower block, watching Venus hangingin the air, clapping and yelling for people who can’t hear because they areinside tending the sick, sheltering the dying.

There are noeggs, they say.

We alwayshave eggs.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

Quarantine Poem

Leave a reply
  “Your meeting attendees are waiting!”Maybe, everyone has been waitingfor my time and toil to be deliveredon time and seamlessly through video chat.No need to heat the office or water the plants I brought backstuffed into a bag on the side of my bicycle. The letter from the school is printed in Comic Sanswhich easier to read if you have a disability:“A large amount of the learning will need to be carried out online so will therefore obviously need to be supervised by an adult at all times.” And then,“Your meeting attendees are waiting!”“Call for papers”“Call for research grants on issues related to the current crisis”“URGENT”“Join our live stream”“Remote event!” I am not a brain on a stick;I am a body in a house.The bodyhouse for a child who is here, hot in the sunWanting something, wanting nothingWanting to leave, wanting to be held tighter.Tighter, against the fear, the knowledgethat a sunny day was never going to promise a day of adventurethat a trip outside the house was illicitthat your friends couldn’t be trusted, only images on the screen. Fall into my arms.Hold me.Will it ever end?
This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

In the Time of Corona 3: Silence

Leave a reply

The foxes are yelling. The neighbours let out the bath water at the same time as me. But no cars. No planes. The lockdown is coming; the schools are closed now (but my daughter decided this morning that she couldn’t go to school. I could not have forced her, not with the safety of everyone else at school in mind) and soon we will be required by law to stay at home.

The silence has come. Eastenders has stopped filming. There is no Eurovision song contest. No plays performed, no orchestras filling halls with people rustling their sweet wrappers in the moment before the downbeat. This withdrawing is painful, and the silence in central London is both thrilling and terrifying. What fills that silence? Opportunistic crime? Internal mourning?

The silence is also the premonition of death. The very fact that London will soon be under lockdown is because the deaths have outpaced the models. The hospitals are full, and the doctors are struggling. I read the Imperial paper too, and I can see myself, my neighbourhood, on that curve.

Southwark has the most (recorded) cases in the country, and it looks from the numbers (as I understand) that the doubling of the case rate is happening within 48 hours. Mathematically speaking that is f**ing terrifying. I hope my math skills are poor and the reality is not that the healthcare system is already dangerously overloaded and about to collapse.

The silence is an oddity in this busy place. It seems almost shocking. I want to write that it bodes ill, because it does. Because being locked down without people, without song, without solidarity is dangerous. However, the silence is also a space for something else to grow. We stay away, stay in, stay quiet as a huge effort to spare those we love. Our neighours, our friends, our people.

And we hope. We hope that out of the silence will emerge a quieter life, an easier life. This is my hope, although so far I feel far from being able to achieve it.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

In the Time of Corona 2: Sustaining

Leave a reply

Today was the first day of teaching online, and between the many online meetings with students and those with research team members here, there, and everywhere I spent the entire day at my desk, facing my small screen!

Into my day, and my house, passed a number of people: a delivery person dropping off a package. The BT engineer who was tasked with fixing my jittery broadband, who alternated between crawling around under my desk and pulling out wires from the cabinet at the corner of the block. My friend, who is a builder and was finishing the tiling and carpentry in my kitchen. Into my house they come, still working (because still needing to be paid, and because the jobs were still on their docket). The engineer asked me at the door, before he came in, whether anyone in the house had the corona virus. No, I said. Well, as far as I know. That I didn’t say. He washed his hands before he left.

My friend finished his work swiftly, drank a cup of tea while I sputtered on Skype and then vanished with a wave. His wife is home, but his work can’t be done remotely. In usual times, he renovates fancy kitchens for clients in Kensington and Chelsea. This week, he’s mostly sorting out the jobs for friends that he usually fits in on evenings and weekends.

Picking up my daughter at school the head teacher is nervous. He is not a nervous man. There has been no information he said, on when they are to close. The school is half empty, with many staff at home, already unable to come to work because of failing immune systems or sick relatives. He’s worried about keeping them safe, about continued access to the right equipment and supplies to keep the school clean.

As my work shifts to being undertaken in different areas of an 11-inch optical screen, these men sustain the physical, digital and social infrastructure of my life. And in the current moment they put themselves at risk to do so. We think of caring work as women’s work, but sustaining infrastructure, caring for the physical environment and the strategic level of the social environment is also care. And right now those carers are at risk.

On the other side of the world, my brother is taking unpaid days off from work, to avoid being on building sites and in busy buildings in his immune-compromised state. Is he too a care worker? In his case, the risk seems too high, for this virus could kill.

Care, risk, sustaining. These acts, these jobs, these responsibilities and relationships seemed so easy to take for granted. Before.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

In the Time of Corona 1

Leave a reply

The sun in the early afternoon is very warm. BBC 3 is playing lieder music and dimly I can hear the toddlers who live next door fussing before their afternoon nap. Outside I see birds and some brazen field mice foraging on the bits I dropped in the garden. It is as if everything were normal. Abnormally normal.

And yet. A stillness hangs in the air. An airplane has just passed by, an ordinary thing here in Central London. And yet. Reading the news has informed me that airlines are massively cutting back their flights, so perhaps this ordinary tearing of the air will become more extraordinary.

The UK’s official government policy has not yet enforced the closures of schools nor workplaces. It is however informing individuals to self-isolate, and this, bit by bit, takes apart the fragile infrastructure of society. As privileged folks like me, with jobs done at a laptop start working at home, stop travelling, the numbers of people circulating around this busy city start to drop.

It would be tempting to think of this time of waiting, this gathering stillness as the defining experience of this time of viral spread.

And yet.

What is happening now is not the story of this crisis. This is not a narrative of this time, but of several other times. In one sense, what is happening now is the preparation for future viral times. Mutual Assistance groups are forming, loosely, gathering together the well-intentioned. The one I’m following seems largely to generate influence in the here and now by informing the well-intentioned about how much work their neighbours are already doing running food banks, community organizations and support networks – as well as linking up individuals who have been isolated and need someone to run to the pharmacy.

In truth though, these mutual aid networks are not for now. They are building capacity for the time when the real narrative of the pandemic begins: the time when many people are infected, and so many are sick that seeing doctors is impossible. When the privilege of being healthy also embeds the responsibility to care for others – and not by adding to a spreadsheet or getting a prescription but by feeding the hungry, washing the feverish, cleaning the floor. Add to this the terrifying realization that many people who are immuno-compromised may not be with us when we emerge on the other side.

The other time of the virus is far longer, encompassing both the recent past and the longer future. This time of the virus includes its origins in animals whose habitats were encroached upon and who became (like people too) enmeshed in a persistent logic of capitalism that has destroyed the regenerative capacities of the earth’s ecosystem, and perhaps the regenerative capacities of people too. I talked a little bit about this in an interview here – but in my hopeful moments I like to entertain the thought that the practice of a quieter, slower pace of work may begin to set the groundwork for the changes of practice that have been necessary for so long – to assuage the climate crisis and to create the capacity for a society capable of regeneration and survival.

There are darker ends to the narrative of course. A country destroyed. A country in mourning for people it failed to save. Individual sadness, anxiety and grief brought on by social separation. Further distress for the people least capable of sustaining it: people living in refugee camps, recent arrivals who don’t feel at home, people struggling to feed their children or who are experiencing violence at home.

And yet.

As the sun slants away and the animals flit in and out of view, I feel the change of times.

This entry was posted in Uncategorized on by Alison.

About this blog

I was once described as "a social theorist and storyteller." Interesting.

Archives

November 2021May 2020April 2020March 2020February 2020May 2019July 2018October 2017September 2017November 2016June 2016May 2016March 2016January 2016November 2015September 2015May 2015November 2014February 2014January 2014November 2013May 2013February 2013January 2013December 2012October 2012September 2012June 2012March 2012February 2012December 2011November 2011October 2011August 2011July 2011June 2011May 2011April 2011February 2011January 2011December 2010November 2010October 2010September 2010August 2010June 2010May 2010April 2010March 2010February 2010December 2009November 2009September 2009June 2009April 2009March 2009February 2009January 2009December 2008November 2008October 2008September 2008July 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007October 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007April 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006November 2005October 2005September 2005August 2005

Categories

academic musingscommunity informaticsOIIother stuffPolicyqualitative researchtechnology (society)the unexamined lifeThesis!UncategorizedWIFI
Proudly powered by WordPress

TAGS:Alison Powell

<<< Thank you for your visit >>>

Websites to related :
Powell Shop

   free shippingon orders over £200 (excl. VAT) get in t

Powell Law Group | Education Law

   HomeOur PracticeGovernment RelationsPublic FinanceAllied ServicesOur PeopleTrainingPodcastsContactNewslettersLawPayGet In TouchYOUR CALLING IS OUR

Wexford Opticians &#8211; Alison

  HomeAbout UsSHOPBookingsEyewearEye CareConsultationEye Care MediaContact UsMenuHomeAbout UsSHOPBookingsEyewearEye CareConsultationEye Care MediaContac

Home - The Joie Retreat with Eri

   MENU CLOSE

Industrial Valve Manufacturer -

  keywords:
description:Powell Valves has been a leading industrial manufacturer, providing high-quality gate, globe, check, bellow-seal and non-return

Alison Wonderland Official Site

  keywords:
description:

Powell River Town Centre Hotel

  keywords:
description:
0

MasterCraft Lake Powell - Full S

  keywords:
description:MasterCraft Lake Powell is Lake Powell's only Full-Service dealership specializing in MasterCraft. Offering Sales, Service, Boat

Lakepowellfishing : Ambassador G

  keywords:
description:
Web Analysis for Lakepowellfishing - lakepowellfishing.com

Lake Powell Resorts, Marinas, Ho

  keywords:
description:Lake Powell vacations are fun for the whole family. Explore the waterways in a houseboat rental or enjoy fishing & camping, wate

ads

Hot Websites