KDEC 9665 - Emerging Technology, Ethics and Global Governance

Emerging technologies pose critical dilemmas for governance. Advances in gene editing are reshaping debates about genetically modified plants, humans and the future of life itself. Neurotechnologies are enabling cognitive enhancement and the reading mental states, both of high interest to law enforcement and the military. The diffusion of Artificial Intelligence is upending prior notions of what is possible in research, manufacturing, economy and society. Governance approaches at the local, national, and international scales can help us shape a technological future we want, but broad disagreement remains. This seminar explores this terrain using frameworks from law, ethics, governance theory, and the sociology of science and technology. Through group work, discussion and debate, students will sharpen their ability to engage the levers of law, politics, and public policy to address emerging technology policy in a global context.
David WINICKOFF
Séminaire
English
Weekly short written assignments in response to readings.
None.
Spring 2024-2025
Final paper and oral presentation.
Mixture of lecture, discussions, and debates/exercises.
Carlos Ignacio Gutierez, Gary Marchant, Soft law 2.0: Incorporating incentives and implementation mechanisms into the governance of artificial intelligence. OECD AI Blog, 2021. https://oecd.ai/en/wonk/soft-law-2-0
UK Regulatory Horizons Council: the regulation of neurotechnology. 2022.
Ienca and Andorno, Towards new human rights in the age of neuroscience and neurotechnology, Life Sciences, Society and Policy (2017) 13:5
Vaughan Turekian, Peter Gluckman, Science Diplomacy and the Rise of Technopoles, Issues in Science and Technology, Vol. XLI, No. 1, Fall 2024
Shobita Parthasarathy, Jared Katzman Bringing Communities In, Achieving AI for All, Issues in Science and Technology, Vol. XL, No. 4, Summer 2024