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cover of episode Mirca Madianou, "Technocolonialism: When Technology for Good is Harmful" (Polity, 2024)

Mirca Madianou, "Technocolonialism: When Technology for Good is Harmful" (Polity, 2024)

2025/2/1
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Miranda Melcher
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Mirca Madianou
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Miranda Melcher: 我认为当今的人道主义援助项目已经深度嵌入了各种技术,这其中既包括像人工智能这样备受关注的技术,也包括生物识别技术等我们不太注意的技术。鉴于灾难日益频繁,调查技术对人道主义援助的影响变得尤为重要,我们需要深入了解这些技术应用对受援者和援助工作者的实际意义。 Mirca Madianou: 我的研究主要关注在全球南方背景下,传播技术、基础设施和人工智能所带来的社会影响,特别是在移民和人道主义紧急情况方面。过去十年,我一直在研究人道主义行动中数字平台和人工智能的使用。我的新书汇集了过去十年参与的两个主要项目,并将研究结果综合成新的理论,详细阐述了技术殖民主义的概念,以及数字创新、数据和人工智能实践如何加剧权力不对称,并在全球北方和全球南方之间产生新的结构性暴力和不平等。

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With over 300 million people in need of humanitarian assistance, and with emergencies and climate disasters becoming more common, AI and big data are being championed as forces for good and as solutions to the complex challenges of the aid sector.

Technocolonialism: When Technology for Good is Harmful (Polity, 2024) argues, however, that digital innovation engenders new forms of violence and entrenches power asymmetries between the global South and North. Dr. Madianou develops a new concept, technocolonialism, to capture how the convergence of digital developments with humanitarian structures, state power and market forces reinvigorates and reshapes colonial legacies. The concept of technocolonialism shifts the attention to the constitutive role that digital infrastructures, data and AI play in accentuating inequities between aid providers and people in need.

Drawing on ten years of research on the uses of digital technologies in humanitarian operations, Dr. Mirca Madianou examines a range of practices: from the normalization of biometric technologies and the datafication of humanitarian operations to experimentation in refugee camps, which are treated as laboratories for technological pilots. In so doing, the book opens new ground in the fields of humanitarianism and critical AI studies, and in the debates in postcolonial studies, by highlighting the fundamental role of digital technologies in reworking colonial genealogies.

This interview was conducted by Dr. Miranda Melcher whose* new book*)* focuses on post-conflict military integration, understanding treaty negotiation and implementation in civil war contexts, with qualitative analysis of the Angolan and Mozambican civil wars.*

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