"Alexa: Am I Racist?” Social Science Meets Smart Tech in the Internet

Thu, Apr 19 2018, 4:40 - 5:40pm
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Hilda C. Landers Library
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Room 321
Intended Audience
Faculty
Staff
Students
General public

In his presentation, “’Alexa: Am I racist?’: Social Science Meets Tech in the Internet Age,” cultural anthropologist and educational technology entrepreneur Michael Baran will explore the intersection of innovative smartphone apps with deep, ethnographic research for social change. As President and CEO of Interactive Diversity Solutions, he consults for businesses, universities and non-profits on issues related to diversity, equity, and inclusion, often incorporating digital tools he creates as part of a blended approach. His digital program “(Don’t) Guess My Race” was recently selected as one of the top 100 most inspiring innovations in education globally by the Finland-based education group hundrED.org.

Dr. Baran’s presentation is part of the Environmental Citizenship Speaker Series, which asks critical, cross-disciplinary questions about stewardship and the public sphere, inviting experts and practitioners to campus to share insights, foster dialogue, and inspire action.

Michael Baran is a cultural anthropologist with more than twenty years of experience conducting ethnographic research for social change on a variety of issues, including race and identity, racial disparities in education, violence against children, healthy housing, environmental health, human services, criminal justice reform, immigration reform, climate change, and early childhood development.

Currently a Principal Researcher at the American Institutes for Research, he manages several research-to-practice projects in which deep ethnographic cultural research is used to inform strategic messaging campaigns, outreach and interventions on a wide range of topics.

This event is free and open to the public

Series co-sponsors: Environmental Studies Program, The Lecture & Fine Arts Committee, the Associate Vice President of Diversity and Inclusion, the Center for the Study of Democracy, and the Departments of Biology, Chemistry & Biochemistry, Psychology, Political Science, Philosophy and Religious Studies

Event Sponsor(s)
Environmental Studies Program, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies
Lecture