Could the consequences of automation lead to the growth of communism, as Mark Carney has warned? Mathew Lawrence writes that deep technological change opens up two divergent paths: one where technologies are managed and owned to our collective advancement against one where they deepen inequalities. He draws on IPPR research to outline three strategies that will ensure automation works for the common good
The ECB recently announced that its quantitative easing programme will stop at the end of 2018. Corr...
Within aerospace and defence sectors, organisations are adding value to their core corporate offerin...
The nature of design has always been related to socio-technological forces. In the twentieth century...
Although we are not yet on the cusp of a 'post-human' society, the prospect of automation still pose...
The narrative that automation will lead to mass unemployment and thus people should settle for a bas...
The COVID-19 lockdown has rapidly and radically changed academic life, disrupting the normal pattern...
Enterprise software implementations are subject to high failure rates. Organizations of higher educa...
This article describes the status of development economics within the broader field of the economics...
Management pays a lot of attention to new ideas and cutting-edge technologies, but most of their res...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...
Worktime reductions are often invoked by the anti-capitalist and post-growth literature. And yet, th...
We have been invited to discuss “digital work” and to propose a research agenda for the next decade ...
The limited progress of climate diplomacy is often imputed to the shortcomings of national leaders w...
This project will advance the Autonomous Rendezvous and Docking (AR&D) GNC system by testing it on h...
The recent announcement by the U.S. Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) set out a require...
The ECB recently announced that its quantitative easing programme will stop at the end of 2018. Corr...
Within aerospace and defence sectors, organisations are adding value to their core corporate offerin...
The nature of design has always been related to socio-technological forces. In the twentieth century...
Although we are not yet on the cusp of a 'post-human' society, the prospect of automation still pose...
The narrative that automation will lead to mass unemployment and thus people should settle for a bas...
The COVID-19 lockdown has rapidly and radically changed academic life, disrupting the normal pattern...
Enterprise software implementations are subject to high failure rates. Organizations of higher educa...
This article describes the status of development economics within the broader field of the economics...
Management pays a lot of attention to new ideas and cutting-edge technologies, but most of their res...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...
Worktime reductions are often invoked by the anti-capitalist and post-growth literature. And yet, th...
We have been invited to discuss “digital work” and to propose a research agenda for the next decade ...
The limited progress of climate diplomacy is often imputed to the shortcomings of national leaders w...
This project will advance the Autonomous Rendezvous and Docking (AR&D) GNC system by testing it on h...
The recent announcement by the U.S. Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) set out a require...
The ECB recently announced that its quantitative easing programme will stop at the end of 2018. Corr...
Within aerospace and defence sectors, organisations are adding value to their core corporate offerin...
The nature of design has always been related to socio-technological forces. In the twentieth century...