The Global Lab
Inequality, Technology, and the Experimental Movement
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14 327 Ft
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Estimated delivery time: Expected time of arrival: end of January 2026.
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 14 July 2022
- ISBN 9780198870272
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages224 pages
- Size 240x160x18 mm
- Weight 470 g
- Language English 278
Categories
Short description:
The Global Lab examines how new technologies affect people across the world, opening up new opportunities but also exacerbating inequalities in society.
MoreLong description:
The Global Lab tells the story of a group of organizations and corporations using low-income countries as a laboratory. It reveals experiments with untested technologies, biometric humanitarian solutions, and radical methodologies for social change. The book maps out the political, institutional, and ethical coordinates of emergent transnational practices of experimentation, asking where and how this movement works, while unfolding the human, philosophical, and political consequences of its ideas and interventions.
The book takes the reader through Silicon Valley, Africa, and Asia to understand the tangible and transformative implications of contemporary human experimentation. It follows a set of main protagonists, from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to experimental economists known as the randomistas, to humanitarian organizations and pharmaceutical companies. These actors form a movement inspired by the logic of Silicon Valley about the need for fast-paced radical change and societal disruption, technological innovation as progress, and the privatization and commercialization of the human mind and body. Ultimately, the book examines the inequality of experimentation that is found in the erection of walls between us and them, and the imagined universal and often unquestioned value of scientific and technological progress.
Table of Contents:
Preface
The Global Lab
Humanitarian Machine Dreams
The Randomistas
The Gates Effect
Experimental Bodies
The Silicon Valley Way
Experimental Futures