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SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-11-17/
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SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-11-10/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTAMP:20260506T054107
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000172-1667469600-1667473200@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-11-03/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000171-1666864800-1666868400@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-10-27/
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UID:10000170-1666260000-1666263600@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-10-20/
CATEGORIES:Events
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SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-10-13/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000168-1665050400-1665054000@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-10-06/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000167-1664445600-1664449200@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-09-29/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220922T100000
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DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000166-1663840800-1663844400@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-09-22/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000165-1663236000-1663239600@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-09-15/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220908T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220908T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000164-1662631200-1662634800@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-09-08/
CATEGORIES:Events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220901T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220901T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000163-1662026400-1662030000@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-09-01/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220825T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220825T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000162-1661421600-1661425200@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-08-25/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220818T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220818T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000161-1660816800-1660820400@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-08-18/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220811T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220811T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000160-1660212000-1660215600@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-08-11/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220804T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220804T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000159-1659607200-1659610800@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-08-04/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220728T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220728T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000158-1659002400-1659006000@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-07-28/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220721T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220721T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000157-1658397600-1658401200@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-07-21/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220714T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220714T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000156-1657792800-1657796400@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-07-14/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220707T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220707T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000155-1657188000-1657191600@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-07-07/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220630T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220630T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000154-1656583200-1656586800@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-06-30/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220623T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220623T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000153-1655978400-1655982000@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-06-23/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220616T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220616T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000152-1655373600-1655377200@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-06-16/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220609T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220609T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000151-1654768800-1654772400@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-06-09/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220602T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220602T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000150-1654164000-1654167600@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-06-02/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220526T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220526T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000149-1653559200-1653562800@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-05-26/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220519T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220519T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000148-1652954400-1652958000@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-05-19/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220512T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220512T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000147-1652349600-1652353200@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-05-12/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220505T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220505T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000146-1651744800-1651748400@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-05-05/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220428T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220428T110000
DTSTAMP:20260506T054108
CREATED:20201120T134623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201120T190836Z
UID:10000145-1651140000-1651143600@archive.sigchi.org
SUMMARY:Public Lecture Series: Critical Perspectives on Technology
DESCRIPTION:Technologies invade our everyday lives\, take part in constructing our identity\, classify (often violently) bodies\, and\, pushed by recent regulations on social distancing\, play an expanding role in connecting families and friends.  The effects of this rapid increase of technological dependency\, though\, further exacerbate existing inequalities\, introduce new ones\, but also lead to previously less apparent pockets of freedom. \nIn a series of biweekly talks\, the project “Exceptional Norms”\, part of the HCI Group of the Faculty of Informatics at TU Wien\, invites interested audiences to participate in critically engaging with recent scholarship on technology assessment. Our speakers are trailblazing scholars and internationally renowned experts from a range of (inter)disciplinary standpoints in conversation with Austrian researchers as hosts. \nPlease register for this free lecture series (held on Zoom) here. \nRecordings of selected previous lectures are available on youtube. \nUpcoming \nNovember 26th\, 2020 – 4pm (CET\, Vienna) – Angelika Strohmayer (Northumbria University\, UK) \nJustice\, but for whom? – Notes on Designing with Marginalised and Criminalised Populations \nRSVP: \nhttps://forms.gle/NGH6bhU4w3uGV8ki9
URL:https://archive.sigchi.org/event/public-lecture-series-critical-perspectives-on-technology/2022-04-28/
CATEGORIES:Events
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR