During November 2012 I delivered the W.E.B. Du Bois Lectures at Harvard University’s W.E.B. Du Bois Institute.
The Lectures, presented in three parts over three consecutive days, carried the overall title of, Exclusion and Inequality in Digital Societies: Theories, Evidence, and Strategy.
Thanks to the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, video is available below from the first two of the three Lectures. A power outage on campus and in surrounding Cambridge prevented filming of the third.
11/27/12 @4pm: “What the Transition to a Digital Society Means for Those at the Bottom”
11/28/12 @4pm: “Policy Responses to Digital Inequality: Beyond Economics”
- The third Lecture, held 11/29/12 @4pm, was titled, “Structure, Agency, and Culture in Digital Societies: Struggles at Home and Abroad.”
- For more information about the free-of-charge Lectures and the annual Lectures series, visit: W.E.B. Du Bois Institute.
- Here is a link to select media coverage of the Lectures.
- Read Lecture Notes: What Would Du Bois Say About The Information Revolution?