Welcome back to a brand-new season of Technically Human! We’re thrilled to be back with new episodes of the show. We are kicking off the new season, and the new year, with an episode featuring one of my favorite thinkers, Dr. Deborah Stone, to talk about what it means to count—that is to say, what it means to measure, and what it means to matter.
Dr. Deborah Stone is currently a Lecturer in Public Policy in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at MIT. She is also an Honorary Professor of Political Science at Aarhus University in Denmark, where she occasionally teaches as a visiting professor. She has taught at Duke University in the Institute of Policy Sciences (1974-77); MIT Department of Political Science (1977-86); Brandeis University Heller School, where she held the David R. Pokross Chair of Law and Social Policy (1986-99); and Dartmouth College Government Department, where she was Research Professor of Government (1999-2014). She has taught as a visitor at Yale, Tulane, University of Bremen, Germany, and National Chung Cheng University in Taiwan. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan and holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from MIT.
Stone is the author of Policy Paradox: The Art of Political Decision-Making, which has been published in multiple editions (W.W. Norton), translated into five languages, and won the Aaron Wildavsky Award from the American Political Science Association for its enduring contribution to policy studies. She has also authored three other books: The Samaritan’s Dilemma (Nation Books, 2008), The Disabled State (Temple University Press 1984), and The Limits of Professional Power (University of Chicago Press, 1980). She serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Health Politics, and Policy and Law (of which she was a founder); Women, Politics and Public Policy, and Critical Policy Studies. In addition to numerous articles in academic journals and book chapters, she writes for general audiences. She was the founding senior editor of The American Prospect and her articles have appeared there as well as in in Nation, New Republic, Boston Review, Civilization, Natural History, and Natural New England.
Stone has held fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, Harvard Law School, German Marshall Fund, Open Society Institute and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. She was a Phi Beta Kappa Society Visiting Scholar in 2005-2006, and a Senior Fellow at Demos from 2008-2012. She has served as a consultant to the Social Security Administration, the Institute of Medicine, the Office of Technology Assessment, and the Human Genome Project. Stone is also the recipient of numerous professional awards, including, the 2013 Charles M. McCoy Career Achievement Award for a progressive political scientist who has had a long successful career as a writer, teacher, and activist (American Political Science Association).
The "Changing Minds" Series: Episode 3 with Minds CEO Bill Ottman
The "Changing Minds" Series: Episode 2 with Daryl Davis
The "Changing Minds" Series: Episode 1 with Daryl Davis
Protecting Our Tech: Dr. Bruce DeBruhl breaks down cybersecurity and what that means for the world, the country, and you
The American Dream Goes Digital: The myths and technologies that bind us with Dr. Julie Albright
How Tech is Changing Democracy Around the Globe: Mohamed Abubakr on democratic revolutions, here and abroad
Tech Stands Up: Brad Taylor builds the new technological revolution
Active Imagination: Malka Older talks humanitarianism, science fiction, and the future of democracy
Block Power: Marcus Miller on mobilizing Black voters, the 2020 Election and grassroots organizing in the age of tech
Server Technology: Ret.Col Robert Gordon III on tech and service
The Impact of Impact: Ethical and socially responsible tech investing
Technically Legal: Professor Jeff Ward explores the relationship between law and tech
Of the people, by the people, for the people: Public Interest Technology with Hana Schank
The Ethics of the Algorithm: Digital innovation and humanistic computation with Dr. Todd Presner
The Way Way Back Machine: A Dive into the Archive with Dr. Jason Lustig
PODCAST TAKEOVER SERIES: Episode 3
PODCAST TAKEOVER SERIES: Episode 2
PODCAST TAKEOVER SERIES: Episode 1
Tech Stands Up: Talking tech leadership with Dex Hunter-Torricke
Biotechnically Human: George Estreich on disability, biotechnology, and how technologies are defining who counts as "human"
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