Message posted on 10/01/2022

EASST Panel 61, Madrid, July 6-9 "THE POLITICS OF AI-BASED SECURITY - PREDICTING AND IMAGINING THE FUTURE"

                Apologies for cross-posting


Dear all,


Please find below the abstract for our panel at EASST 2022. We very much lo=
ok forward to receiving your submissions by the 1st of February.


With very best wishes,

Jens and Daniel


THE POLITICS OF AI-BASED SECURITY - PREDICTING AND IMAGINING THE FUTURE
Jens H=E4lterlein (Centre for Security and Society, University Freiburg)
Daniel Marciniak (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle (Saal=
e))
Abstract:
Advancements in the AI-subfield of machine learning are already transformin=
g security practices in various contexts, including military operations, po=
licing, intelligence work, private security, and pandemic management. In ma=
ny cases, the use of AI-based security technologies aims at predicting the =
future based on probabilistic calculation. In law enforcement, for instance=
, AI can be used to pinpoint likely places and times of future crimes, terr=
orist attacks, and social unrest or to identify individuals at high risk of=
 becoming a future (re)offender, terrorist, or victim (Benbouzid 2019, Bray=
ne 2021, H=E4lterlein 2021). Moreover, in the course of the Covid-19 pandem=
ic, AI has been increasingly used for epidemiological modelling of how the =
disease spreads along with different scenarios. These technoscientific pred=
ictions render the future knowledgeable in order to act upon it. They are p=
olitical in the sense that they legitimize certain interventions and delegi=
timize others.
While tech companies highlight the merits of equipping security actors with=
 these seemingly
powerful tools and both activists and critical scholars raise awareness for=
 the dangers that their use can bring with regard to data protection and th=
e discrimination of minorities, AI-based security technologies have also be=
come a matter of concern for policy-making. In recent years, many governmen=
ts and supranational organisations have published strategy papers in which =
they present their visions of the future development and application of AI.=
 These different visions articulated by various actors at once describe pos=
sible technoscientific futures and prescribe technoscientific futures that =
ought to be attained or to be avoided. They aim to legitimize investments i=
n and/or the stricter regulations of AI-based security technologies.
In conversation with the conference theme, we invite scholarship that seeks=
 to discuss the practice and politics of technoscientific futures. We welco=
me presentations that address at least one of the following questions:

  *   How are AI-based security technologies used to predict or forecast li=
kely future events? How do they relate to non-AI-based practices of predict=
ion?
  *   How do these technoscientific practices of prediction relate to (pre-=
existing) practices of transforming or governing the future (pre-emption, p=
revention, pre-mediation, contingency planning, risk insurance etc.)?
  *   What are the obstacles of doing research in this field and how can we=
 deal with them?
  *   How are questions of security addressed within the imagination of fut=
ures of AI? Presentations may examine imaginaries at all levels: national g=
overnments, international organisations, NGOs, communities of practice, sci=
entific communities, corporations, social movements and not least science f=
iction.
  *   How do desirable futures relate to criticisms of and resistance to AI=
-based security technologies (lethal autonomous weapon systems, biometric f=
acial recognition, predictive policing, etc.)? What alternatives are imagin=
ed?
  *   What is the impact of the politics of imagining futures of AI on the =
politics of predicting futures with AI?


-----

Daniel Marciniak, PhD


(he/him/his)

Research Fellow

Anthropology of AI in Policing and Justice

https://www.eth.mpg.de/anthropologyAI

https://www.eth.mpg.de/marciniak

Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology

Advokatenweg 36, 06114 Halle (Saale), Germany
            
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