Dr. Luis Felipe R. Murillo
Dr. Luis Felipe R. Murillo is assistant professor in anthropology at University of Notre Dame. His work examines practices of collaboration in moral economies of computing. Across several research projects within and beyond the Global North, Dr. Murillo's work investigates how social movements and science and technology experts design and implement open technologies as responses to pressing social, political, and environmental issues.
Related Actors by Justice Area
Solana Larsen
Solana Larsen is the editor of Mozilla's podcast "IRL: Online Life is Real Life" as well as the Internet Health Report. Both are multiyear projects of Mozilla's Insights team that combine research and storytelling to explore what it means for the internet to be healthy. Her current work is focused on artificial intelligence in the context of global social and digital rights issues.
Community Health and Collective Security Human Rights ActorCathy O'Neil
Cathy O'Neil has written extensively about problems with using AI in a criminal justice context, as with bail-setting algorithms used by the City of Philadelphia. Her book, "Weapons of Math Destruction," is an early and widely-cited source on these issues. O'Neil is CEO of O'Neil Risk Consulting & Algorithmic Auditing (ORCAA).
Community Health and Collective Security Human RightsRelated Actors by Service Area
Dr. Luis Felipe R. Murillo
Dr. Luis Felipe R. Murillo is assistant professor in anthropology at University of Notre Dame. His work examines practices of collaboration in moral economies of computing. Across several research projects within and beyond the Global North, Dr. Murillo's work investigates how social movements and science and technology experts design and implement open technologies as responses to pressing social, political, and environmental issues.
Americas ActorData for Black Lives
Data for Black Lives (D4BL) is "a movement of activists, organizers, and mathematicians committed to the mission of using data science to create concrete and measurable change in the lives of Black people." Amongst its many projects, the nonprofit led efforts to pressure states to release COVID data broken out by race to better illustrate its impacts, and it maintains a list of that states wouldn't track.
Americas