Technology Ethics in Action: Critical and Interdisciplinary Perspectives
It addresses the problem of ethical ambiguity and social harms in technology for researchers, developers, and policymakers, but is incremental as it builds on existing critical discourses.
This special issue examines the practical implementation and impacts of 'tech ethics' in digital technology, questioning whose ethics are prioritized and whether ethics is the right framework for addressing social harms, with a focus on real-world discourses and effects.
This special issue interrogates the meaning and impacts of "tech ethics": the embedding of ethics into digital technology research, development, use, and governance. In response to concerns about the social harms associated with digital technologies, many individuals and institutions have articulated the need for a greater emphasis on ethics in digital technology. Yet as more groups embrace the concept of ethics, critical discourses have emerged questioning whose ethics are being centered, whether "ethics" is the appropriate frame for improving technology, and what it means to develop "ethical" technology in practice. This interdisciplinary issue takes up these questions, interrogating the relationships among ethics, technology, and society in action. This special issue engages with the normative and contested notions of ethics itself, how ethics has been integrated with technology across domains, and potential paths forward to support more just and egalitarian technology. Rather than starting from philosophical theories, the authors in this issue orient their articles around the real-world discourses and impacts of tech ethics--i.e., tech ethics in action.