Article ID: CBB408589504

Bearing Account-able Witness to the Ethical Algorithmic System (January 2016)

unapi

Neyland, Daniel (Author)


Science, Technology, and Human Values
Volume: 41
Issue: 1
Pages: 50-76
Publication date: January 2016
Language: English


This paper explores how accountability might make otherwise obscure and inaccessible algorithms available for governance. The potential import and difficulty of accountability is made clear in the compelling narrative reproduced across recent popular and academic reports. Through this narrative we are told that algorithms trap us and control our lives, undermine our privacy, have power and an independent agential impact, at the same time as being inaccessible, reducing our opportunities for critical engagement. The paper suggests that STS sensibilities can provide a basis for scrutinizing the terms of the compelling narrative, disturbing the notion that algorithms have a single, essential characteristic and a predictable power or agency. In place of taking for granted the terms of the compelling narrative, ethnomethodological work on sense-making accounts is drawn together with more conventional approaches to accountability focused on openness and transparency. The paper uses empirical material from a study of the development of an “ethical,” “smart” algorithmic videosurveillance system. The paper introduces the “ethical” algorithmic surveillance system, the approach to accountability developed, and some of the challenges of attempting algorithmic accountability in action. The paper concludes with reflections on future questions of algorithms and accountability.

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Includes Series Articles

Article Malte Ziewitz (January 2016) Governing Algorithms: Myth, Mess, and Methods. Science, Technology, and Human Values (pp. 3-16). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Bak, Hee-Je
Balmer, Brian
Durant, Darrin
Kim, Jongyoung
Müller, Ruth
Selinger, Evan
Journals
Science, Technology, and Human Values
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
Perspectives on Science
Science as Culture
Social Studies of Science
Journal for the History of Knowledge
Publishers
Duke University Press
New York University Press
Oxford University Press
Boitempo
Concepts
Science and technology studies (STS)
Technology and politics
Algorithms
Surveillance
Technological determinism
Ethics
People
Latour, Bruno
Hwang, Woo-suk
Mouffe, Chantal
Time Periods
21st century
19th century
18th century
20th century
Places
United States
Great Britain
Korea
China
United Kingdom
Institutions
Amazon (Firm)
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