A mini-workshop which may be of interest to anyone working on the ethics of behavioural influence (e.g., nudging), algorithms in the criminal justice system, or discrimination. Please get in touch if you would like to read the papers beforehand (recommended), attend in person (so that we have a sense of numbers for the catered lunch), or receive a Zoom link to join online.
9.45 am:
Welcome tea / coffee
10 am – 11 am:
Professor Tom Douglas & Dr Gabriel De Marco (Oxford), ‘On the relationship between nudge, efficacy, and resistibility’
11 am – Noon:
Professor Lucia Zedner (Oxford), ‘Algorithmic Justice and the Ethics of Prediction’
Noon – 12.45 pm:
Lunch
12.45 pm – 1.45 pm:
Professor Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen (Aarhus), ‘Why the concept of indirect discrimination is a useful legal, but not a useful moral concept’