The 29th Southern African Historical Society conference is underway @go2uj under the theme "History at the Precipice: Continuity, Change and Crises in Southern Africa". Join us over the course of the next three days to listen to new and exciting research on the region. #SAHS2024
Reminder: the 29 Feb deadline for abstract submissions for the 2024 @SAHistSoc Biennial Conference, hosted by the UJ History Department is fast approaching . Submit abstracts here: https://t.co/uAy6F8V8Po
The SAHS Exco and the UJ History Department are delighted to present the Call for Papers for the 29th Biennial Conference.
‘History at the Precipice: Continuity, Change and Crises in Southern Africa' 26-28 June 2024, Johannesburg
Marwala: was a member of 4IR gov commission: South African investment in social capital (literacy, skills) and AI in general needs urgent attention and incentivisation if deindustrialisation slide is to be reversed.
Marwala: Africa's problem is one of lag; leapfrog opportunities undeniable, rather than a worry. Democratisation of machine learning tech has happened, data asymmetry is the only problem.
Marwala: AI fundamentally about maximising resource acquisition (the 'modernisation of productive resources' in Marx's sense), as with other historic technologies.
Ballim: notes similarities between machine learning & alchemy/divination; perils of 'algorithmization of society', surveillance, now extended to African phenotypes. Key question: who holds the levers of power and what are the biases of these models of machine learning?
Breckenridge: dangers are real - privacy worries, but also a leapfrog fetish, where African states embrace AI rather than building paperwork skills at heart of effective government; risk that the poor will be completely locked out of opportunities (including taking on debt)
Breckenridge: The role of finance in driving AI systems is key, but not all bad: controversially providing many Africans with unprecedented access to credit, having previously been heavily circumscribed under colonialism
Breckenridge: The problem of the history of the extraversion of science on African continent understandably behind the ongoing anxiety about Africa's place in 4IR. #4IR#UJ