Technologies of Human Rights Representation:
Analyzes the effects of new technologies on human rights, with a particular focus on how representations of technology affect our ability to understand and control it
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Albany
State University of New York Press
2022
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Schriftenreihe: | SUNY Series, Studies in Human Rights Series
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | DE-2070s |
Zusammenfassung: | Analyzes the effects of new technologies on human rights, with a particular focus on how representations of technology affect our ability to understand and control it |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (244 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781438487113 |
Internformat
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter One Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights -- Introduction -- Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Perpetuation of Inequality -- Work, Poverty, and the Labor Market -- Public Services and Algorithms -- Civil and Political Rights -- Privacy and AI -- International Humanitarian Law (IHL) and Autonomous Weapons Systems (AWS) -- Conclusion: The Need for Strong Global and National Regulatory Frameworks -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Two Machine-learning Technologies and Human Rights in Criminal Justice Contexts -- Introduction -- An Overview of the Human Rights Issues with AI in Criminal Justice -- The Importance of Human Rights Law Frameworks in Regulating Machine-Learning Tech -- Case Study One-Tensions Arising from a Lack of Regulation on an Issue of Justice -- Case Study Two-Facial Recognition Technology in Criminal Justice -- Case Study Three-Self-Regulation in Evolving Algorithmic Governance Practices -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- Works Cited -- Chapter Three Quantifying and Visualizing Human Rights: The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Critiques of Quantification -- Quantification in Practice -- The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Why Limit the Number of Text Sources? -- Data Visualization: Smaller-Population Societies Have Better Human Rights Practices -- Why Do Small States Respect Human Rights? -- Discussion -- Works Cited -- Chapter Four Forensic Science or Junk Science? How the Justice System Violates Human Rights When Science Is Misused or Misunderstood -- Right to a Fair Trial -- The Scientific Method as Basic Scientific and Technological Bedrock -- Case Studies -- Bitemarks -- Bitemarks as Pattern Evidence -- Bitemarks, Error, and Bias -- How the Continued Use of Bitemark Analysis Violates Human Rights | |
505 | 8 | |a Third Molar and Age Estimation/Determination -- Growth and Development Basics -- Forensic Odontology and Legal Age Threshold Determination -- Population Comparison and Environmental Stressors -- Probability that a Person has Reached Legal Age -- Human Rights Violated by Current Practices Surrounding Age Determination from the Third Molar -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Five Hiding in Plain Site: Using Online Open-Source Information to Investigate Sexual Violence and Gender-Based Crimes -- Introduction -- The Relative Invisibility of SGBV Online -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Doesn't Exist -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists but is "Invisible" -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists But is Used Against or Otherwise Harms Survivors -- Overcoming the Invisibility Challenges -- Diversify Potential Uses of Open-Source Information -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Six Legal Tragedies: Accounting for Civilian Casualties of Airstrikes in US Military Investigation Reports -- Situating Airstrikes, Reports, and Civilian Casualties -- Investigating Civilian Deaths -- Finding Facts -- Unseen Civilians -- Civilian Misidentification -- Judging Violence -- Causes and Recommendations -- Containing and Mitigating Violence -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Seven Contested Memories: The Intimate Public and Technologies of Affect in Memorializing Holocaust Trauma -- Technologies and the Intimate Public of Holocaust Memory -- Trauma and Memory: A Public Feeling -- Archiving Human Rights Abuse -- Negotiating Corporeality, Memory, and Affect -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Eight Grieving, Breathing, Keeping Time: Rights, Sequences, and Sonnetic "Enfleshment" -- Reading, Grieving, Living -- Measuring Time, Settling the Score -- Poetic Rights Instruments -- Notes | |
505 | 8 | |a Works Cited -- Chapter Nine The Right to Securitization -- Works Cited -- Contributors -- Index | |
520 | |a Analyzes the effects of new technologies on human rights, with a particular focus on how representations of technology affect our ability to understand and control it | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Moore, Alexandra S. |
author_facet | Moore, Alexandra S. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Moore, Alexandra S. |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV049876046 |
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contents | Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter One Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights -- Introduction -- Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Perpetuation of Inequality -- Work, Poverty, and the Labor Market -- Public Services and Algorithms -- Civil and Political Rights -- Privacy and AI -- International Humanitarian Law (IHL) and Autonomous Weapons Systems (AWS) -- Conclusion: The Need for Strong Global and National Regulatory Frameworks -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Two Machine-learning Technologies and Human Rights in Criminal Justice Contexts -- Introduction -- An Overview of the Human Rights Issues with AI in Criminal Justice -- The Importance of Human Rights Law Frameworks in Regulating Machine-Learning Tech -- Case Study One-Tensions Arising from a Lack of Regulation on an Issue of Justice -- Case Study Two-Facial Recognition Technology in Criminal Justice -- Case Study Three-Self-Regulation in Evolving Algorithmic Governance Practices -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- Works Cited -- Chapter Three Quantifying and Visualizing Human Rights: The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Critiques of Quantification -- Quantification in Practice -- The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Why Limit the Number of Text Sources? -- Data Visualization: Smaller-Population Societies Have Better Human Rights Practices -- Why Do Small States Respect Human Rights? -- Discussion -- Works Cited -- Chapter Four Forensic Science or Junk Science? How the Justice System Violates Human Rights When Science Is Misused or Misunderstood -- Right to a Fair Trial -- The Scientific Method as Basic Scientific and Technological Bedrock -- Case Studies -- Bitemarks -- Bitemarks as Pattern Evidence -- Bitemarks, Error, and Bias -- How the Continued Use of Bitemark Analysis Violates Human Rights Third Molar and Age Estimation/Determination -- Growth and Development Basics -- Forensic Odontology and Legal Age Threshold Determination -- Population Comparison and Environmental Stressors -- Probability that a Person has Reached Legal Age -- Human Rights Violated by Current Practices Surrounding Age Determination from the Third Molar -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Five Hiding in Plain Site: Using Online Open-Source Information to Investigate Sexual Violence and Gender-Based Crimes -- Introduction -- The Relative Invisibility of SGBV Online -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Doesn't Exist -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists but is "Invisible" -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists But is Used Against or Otherwise Harms Survivors -- Overcoming the Invisibility Challenges -- Diversify Potential Uses of Open-Source Information -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Six Legal Tragedies: Accounting for Civilian Casualties of Airstrikes in US Military Investigation Reports -- Situating Airstrikes, Reports, and Civilian Casualties -- Investigating Civilian Deaths -- Finding Facts -- Unseen Civilians -- Civilian Misidentification -- Judging Violence -- Causes and Recommendations -- Containing and Mitigating Violence -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Seven Contested Memories: The Intimate Public and Technologies of Affect in Memorializing Holocaust Trauma -- Technologies and the Intimate Public of Holocaust Memory -- Trauma and Memory: A Public Feeling -- Archiving Human Rights Abuse -- Negotiating Corporeality, Memory, and Affect -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Eight Grieving, Breathing, Keeping Time: Rights, Sequences, and Sonnetic "Enfleshment" -- Reading, Grieving, Living -- Measuring Time, Settling the Score -- Poetic Rights Instruments -- Notes Works Cited -- Chapter Nine The Right to Securitization -- Works Cited -- Contributors -- Index |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC6863016 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC6863016 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL6863016 (OCoLC)1293261141 (DE-599)BVBBV049876046 |
dewey-full | 323 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 323 - Civil and political rights |
dewey-raw | 323 |
dewey-search | 323 |
dewey-sort | 3323 |
dewey-tens | 320 - Political science (Politics and government) |
discipline | Politologie |
edition | 1st ed |
format | Electronic eBook |
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genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV049876046 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2025-01-10T19:04:18Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781438487113 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035215496 |
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physical | 1 Online-Ressource (244 Seiten) |
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publishDate | 2022 |
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publisher | State University of New York Press |
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series2 | SUNY Series, Studies in Human Rights Series |
spelling | Moore, Alexandra S. Verfasser aut Technologies of Human Rights Representation 1st ed Albany State University of New York Press 2022 ©2022 1 Online-Ressource (244 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier SUNY Series, Studies in Human Rights Series Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter One Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights -- Introduction -- Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Perpetuation of Inequality -- Work, Poverty, and the Labor Market -- Public Services and Algorithms -- Civil and Political Rights -- Privacy and AI -- International Humanitarian Law (IHL) and Autonomous Weapons Systems (AWS) -- Conclusion: The Need for Strong Global and National Regulatory Frameworks -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Two Machine-learning Technologies and Human Rights in Criminal Justice Contexts -- Introduction -- An Overview of the Human Rights Issues with AI in Criminal Justice -- The Importance of Human Rights Law Frameworks in Regulating Machine-Learning Tech -- Case Study One-Tensions Arising from a Lack of Regulation on an Issue of Justice -- Case Study Two-Facial Recognition Technology in Criminal Justice -- Case Study Three-Self-Regulation in Evolving Algorithmic Governance Practices -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- Works Cited -- Chapter Three Quantifying and Visualizing Human Rights: The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Critiques of Quantification -- Quantification in Practice -- The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Why Limit the Number of Text Sources? -- Data Visualization: Smaller-Population Societies Have Better Human Rights Practices -- Why Do Small States Respect Human Rights? -- Discussion -- Works Cited -- Chapter Four Forensic Science or Junk Science? How the Justice System Violates Human Rights When Science Is Misused or Misunderstood -- Right to a Fair Trial -- The Scientific Method as Basic Scientific and Technological Bedrock -- Case Studies -- Bitemarks -- Bitemarks as Pattern Evidence -- Bitemarks, Error, and Bias -- How the Continued Use of Bitemark Analysis Violates Human Rights Third Molar and Age Estimation/Determination -- Growth and Development Basics -- Forensic Odontology and Legal Age Threshold Determination -- Population Comparison and Environmental Stressors -- Probability that a Person has Reached Legal Age -- Human Rights Violated by Current Practices Surrounding Age Determination from the Third Molar -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Five Hiding in Plain Site: Using Online Open-Source Information to Investigate Sexual Violence and Gender-Based Crimes -- Introduction -- The Relative Invisibility of SGBV Online -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Doesn't Exist -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists but is "Invisible" -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists But is Used Against or Otherwise Harms Survivors -- Overcoming the Invisibility Challenges -- Diversify Potential Uses of Open-Source Information -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Six Legal Tragedies: Accounting for Civilian Casualties of Airstrikes in US Military Investigation Reports -- Situating Airstrikes, Reports, and Civilian Casualties -- Investigating Civilian Deaths -- Finding Facts -- Unseen Civilians -- Civilian Misidentification -- Judging Violence -- Causes and Recommendations -- Containing and Mitigating Violence -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Seven Contested Memories: The Intimate Public and Technologies of Affect in Memorializing Holocaust Trauma -- Technologies and the Intimate Public of Holocaust Memory -- Trauma and Memory: A Public Feeling -- Archiving Human Rights Abuse -- Negotiating Corporeality, Memory, and Affect -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Eight Grieving, Breathing, Keeping Time: Rights, Sequences, and Sonnetic "Enfleshment" -- Reading, Grieving, Living -- Measuring Time, Settling the Score -- Poetic Rights Instruments -- Notes Works Cited -- Chapter Nine The Right to Securitization -- Works Cited -- Contributors -- Index Analyzes the effects of new technologies on human rights, with a particular focus on how representations of technology affect our ability to understand and control it Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd rswk-swf Neue Technologie (DE-588)4194462-8 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 s Neue Technologie (DE-588)4194462-8 s DE-604 Dawes, James Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Moore, Alexandra S. Technologies of Human Rights Representation Albany : State University of New York Press,c2022 9781438487090 |
spellingShingle | Moore, Alexandra S. Technologies of Human Rights Representation Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter One Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights -- Introduction -- Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Perpetuation of Inequality -- Work, Poverty, and the Labor Market -- Public Services and Algorithms -- Civil and Political Rights -- Privacy and AI -- International Humanitarian Law (IHL) and Autonomous Weapons Systems (AWS) -- Conclusion: The Need for Strong Global and National Regulatory Frameworks -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Two Machine-learning Technologies and Human Rights in Criminal Justice Contexts -- Introduction -- An Overview of the Human Rights Issues with AI in Criminal Justice -- The Importance of Human Rights Law Frameworks in Regulating Machine-Learning Tech -- Case Study One-Tensions Arising from a Lack of Regulation on an Issue of Justice -- Case Study Two-Facial Recognition Technology in Criminal Justice -- Case Study Three-Self-Regulation in Evolving Algorithmic Governance Practices -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- Works Cited -- Chapter Three Quantifying and Visualizing Human Rights: The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Critiques of Quantification -- Quantification in Practice -- The CIRIGHTS Data Project -- Why Limit the Number of Text Sources? -- Data Visualization: Smaller-Population Societies Have Better Human Rights Practices -- Why Do Small States Respect Human Rights? -- Discussion -- Works Cited -- Chapter Four Forensic Science or Junk Science? How the Justice System Violates Human Rights When Science Is Misused or Misunderstood -- Right to a Fair Trial -- The Scientific Method as Basic Scientific and Technological Bedrock -- Case Studies -- Bitemarks -- Bitemarks as Pattern Evidence -- Bitemarks, Error, and Bias -- How the Continued Use of Bitemark Analysis Violates Human Rights Third Molar and Age Estimation/Determination -- Growth and Development Basics -- Forensic Odontology and Legal Age Threshold Determination -- Population Comparison and Environmental Stressors -- Probability that a Person has Reached Legal Age -- Human Rights Violated by Current Practices Surrounding Age Determination from the Third Molar -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Five Hiding in Plain Site: Using Online Open-Source Information to Investigate Sexual Violence and Gender-Based Crimes -- Introduction -- The Relative Invisibility of SGBV Online -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Doesn't Exist -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists but is "Invisible" -- Online Open-Source Evidence of SGBV Exists But is Used Against or Otherwise Harms Survivors -- Overcoming the Invisibility Challenges -- Diversify Potential Uses of Open-Source Information -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Works Cited -- Chapter Six Legal Tragedies: Accounting for Civilian Casualties of Airstrikes in US Military Investigation Reports -- Situating Airstrikes, Reports, and Civilian Casualties -- Investigating Civilian Deaths -- Finding Facts -- Unseen Civilians -- Civilian Misidentification -- Judging Violence -- Causes and Recommendations -- Containing and Mitigating Violence -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Seven Contested Memories: The Intimate Public and Technologies of Affect in Memorializing Holocaust Trauma -- Technologies and the Intimate Public of Holocaust Memory -- Trauma and Memory: A Public Feeling -- Archiving Human Rights Abuse -- Negotiating Corporeality, Memory, and Affect -- Conclusion -- Note -- Works Cited -- Chapter Eight Grieving, Breathing, Keeping Time: Rights, Sequences, and Sonnetic "Enfleshment" -- Reading, Grieving, Living -- Measuring Time, Settling the Score -- Poetic Rights Instruments -- Notes Works Cited -- Chapter Nine The Right to Securitization -- Works Cited -- Contributors -- Index Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd Neue Technologie (DE-588)4194462-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4074725-6 (DE-588)4194462-8 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_auth | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_exact_search | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_full | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_fullStr | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_full_unstemmed | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_short | Technologies of Human Rights Representation |
title_sort | technologies of human rights representation |
topic | Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd Neue Technologie (DE-588)4194462-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Menschenrecht Neue Technologie Aufsatzsammlung |
work_keys_str_mv | AT moorealexandras technologiesofhumanrightsrepresentation AT dawesjames technologiesofhumanrightsrepresentation |