Real utopias: what do we do with digital technologies? - Second edition
The Universidad Abierta de Recoleta, in conjunction with the organization MIJENTE, presents the course Real utopias: what do we do with digital technologies? – Second edition, the last of the four courses that make up the International Diploma in Data, Surveillance and Democracy – Second edition.
Mijente is a non-profit organization originally from Chicago, United States, established as the political home for Latino and Chicano people who seek racial, economic, gender and climate justice.
The final course of this Diploma encompasses the political context of emerging technologies and their various applications. Technology is moving quicker than the rate at which governments are contending with key policy questions. Meanwhile big tech claims to promise utopia through new ways of engaging with data, the internet, and our (digital) bodies.
Corporations allege their products will be able to solve a myriad of issues from curing diseases and rolling back inequalities to making information available at record speed and more. Monitoring issues across artificial intelligence, biometrics, and Web 3.0 we will discuss the ongoing impact of these technologies and how we can continue to organize in our current moment.
You will analyze cases and initiatives oriented to the use of digital technologies for a decommoditized world order.
Academics, social organizers and people interested in surveillance. Minimum age: 15 years.
Since these courses are carried out remotely and asynchronously, there is no maximum number of places for them; however, blackout dates have been set to sign up for each one.
The course will be co-certified by the Universidad Abierta of Recoleta and MIJENTE, as long as the approval requirements are met.
This course has no cost of any kind for the participants.
Registration process
From Tuesday, April 9 to Thursday, October 17, 2024 until 17:00 (Santiago of Chile time).
Minimum capacity
100 participants
Course start date
Thursday, October 17, 2024 until 17:00 (Santiago of Chile time).
Course duration
5 weeks
Estimated dedication time per week
6 hours
Language
English
Platform
UAR Digital
Approval requirements
To obtain the certificate of approval, you must submit the final project in week 5.
Teachers and experts
Ph.D. in Computer Science from Wesleyan University; M.Sc. in Mathematical Logic from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, and B.Sc. in Mathematics from Universidad de Chile. He is a full professor at the University of Chile in the Department of Computer Science and a senior researcher at the Millennium Institute on Foundations of Data. He works on the study of data foundations. He also researches the history of science and technology in Chile.
Director of Research at the Distributed AI Research Institute (DAIR). A sociologist by training, her work centers on the data used in new computational technologies, and the ways in which these data exacerbate racial, gender, and class inequality. She also works in the area of social movements, focusing on the dynamics of anti-racist campus protest in the US and Canada. She holds a BS in Computer Science and Mathematics and a BA in Sociology from Purdue University, and an MS and a PhD in Sociology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
He has a degree in Social Sciences from the State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), a master’s degree in Social Sciences from PPCIS/UERJ and a PhD in Political Science from IESP/UERJ. At CESeC, he participates in research related to youth issues, management and policing models, analysis of crime rates, media and violence. He currently coordinates the Network of Security Observatories and O Paóptico.
Degree in Social Communication (Pontificia Universidad Católica Valparaíso, Chile) and Master in Gender and Cultural Studies (Universidad de Chile). She has more than 13 years of professional experience in the field of technologies and human rights, and in recent years, she has been especially immersed in how technologies (in an epistemological and material dimension) relate to the environment and the climate crisis.
Executive Director of MediaJustice, a national racial justice organization that promotes the rights of people of color to media and technology.
M.A. in Urban Geography from McGill University and writes on technology issues for such outlets as NBC News, CBC News, Jacobin, Tribune, One Zero and the Disconnect newsletter. He also hosts the award-winning podcast Tech Won’t Save Us, where he critically reflects on technology, and has written the book Road to Nowhere: What Silicon Valley Gets Wrong about the Future of Transportation.
MIJENTE academic coordination
Mijente campaign organizer. She leads the #NoTechforICE campaign. Previously, she worked at PODER in Mexico, organizing the Sonora River basin committees against water pollution by the mining industry. She was the main organizer of the Labours Congress for the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice (2007-2014). In Louisiana, she helped establish a political base of undocumented day laborers and families dedicated to building worker power, promoting racial justice, and organizing against deportation in post-Katrina New Orleans.
Based in Chicago, IL, Cinthya Rodríguez is a national organizer for the NoTechForICE campaign and Mijente, a political home and national organizing center for Chicano and Latino people. Previously, she served as the Organising Director of the United Workers Center where she organized low-wage immigrant workers on the southeast side and the southern suburbs of Chicago. Additionally, she has organized locally around ethnic studies and served as a community educator and interfaith organizer.
Universidad Abierta of Recoleta academic coordination
Graduated in Audiovisual Communication, Audiovisual Communicator with a specialty in screenplay for film and television, and Diploma in Transmedia from the University of Arts, Sciences and Communication. Diploma in Film Script from the University of Chile. Current academic coordinator at the Universidad Abierta of Recoleta.