Susan Brison Named Inaugural Director of the Wright Center

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The philosophy professor sees ethics as an essential part of technological innovation.

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Susan Brison
Philosophy professor Susan Brison leads the Susan and James Wright Center for the Study of Computation and Just Communities (Photo by Rob Strong 鈥04)
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, the Susan and James Wright Professor of Computation and Just Communities, has been appointed the inaugural director of the .

Named in honor of  and , the Wright Center advances equitable and democratic societies through the study of computational techniques and innovations. It was made possible by a $15.5 million gift from Sally and William H. Neukom 鈥64, former chair of the Board of Trustees.

As the Wright Center鈥檚 inaugural director, Brison is also the first holder of the Susan and James Wright Professorship of Computation and Just Communities.

鈥淚鈥檓 grateful to Sally and Bill Neukom for making the Wright Center and professorship possible,鈥 Brison says. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 deeply honored to hold a professorship named after two people so many of us love and admire, Jim and Susan Wright.鈥

鈥淧rofessor Susan Brison brings rare and rich knowledge of 天美麻豆 to the directorship of the Wright Center,鈥 Susan DeBevoise Wright says. 鈥淔or nearly four decades, Professor Brison has been deeply engaged as a scholar and as a prized teacher to generations of students as well as serving in significant administrative roles. I speak for Jim in saying to his former treasured colleague, 鈥楾hank you, Susan.鈥欌

A feminist philosopher specializing in free speech theory, Brison works at the intersection of philosophy, law, and politics. She joined the  in 1985 and also teaches in the . Among her many scholarly works, Brison co-edited , a volume of essays that examines how the new technologies and global reach of the Internet are changing the theory and practice of free speech.

Brison is also the author of , which traces her recovery from a violent assault alongside a philosophical exploration of trauma. A dedicated public philosopher, she has contributed articles about sexual violence to outlets including and the .

鈥淲ith her influential scholarship and teaching at the intersection of free speech and technology, Susan Brison is the ideal leader to advance the Wright Center鈥檚 vital work fostering equitable societies in the digital age,鈥 says Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences .

The Wright Center focuses on a broad range of topics, many of which highlight the double-edged sword of computational advances in public life. This encompasses issues related to democratic values and human rights that span the arts, humanities, social sciences, and sciences. Areas of interest include discrimination and algorithmic bias, the protection of free speech in a time of widespread misinformation, and the dangers鈥攁nd artistic possibilities鈥攐f text and image creation and manipulation.

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The Wright Center convened a scholarly workshop in October on 鈥渢he personal and the computational.鈥 (Photo courtesy of The Wright Center) 

Brison has long championed ethics as an essential component of technological innovation. She designed a new course on ethics and information technology and taught it in the summer of 2022 and, again, this fall term. This course, two public lecture series, and two faculty workshops Brison co-organized are part of her ongoing effort to ensure that as new technology is being created, ethics and social justice are central to the process.

鈥淥ur era of 鈥榤ove fast and break things,鈥 as coined by Mark Zuckerberg, focuses on technical advances, with ethics as an afterthought,鈥 Brison says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 talk enough about who is getting broken. I鈥檓 concerned about technology鈥檚 power to inflict harm.鈥

As part of the Wright Center鈥檚 inaugural lecture series this fall, distinguished author and Princeton professor  gave a talk on  that illuminated relationships between technological innovation, inequity, and discrimination.

On October 23, , a professor at George Washington University Law School and internationally recognized expert on the intersection of civil rights, free speech, and technology, gave a talk entitled  Franks discussed how the tech industry has accelerated harassment, privacy violations, health misinformation, conspiracy theories, and terrorist propaganda in the name of free speech.

鈥淩uha Benjamin and Mary Anne Franks are brilliant scholars and fierce advocates for justice for all in the digital age, and I was delighted to bring them to 天美麻豆,鈥 Brison says.

With Neukom postdoctoral fellow , Brison convened scholars from around the world last month for a Wright Center for Computation and Just Communities workshop on The Personal and the Computational.

Participants explored how pervasive digital technologies interact with key aspects of our personal lives鈥斺渙ur sense of self, our identities, our epistemic situation, our speech environment, and our individual and collective agency,鈥 Brison explains.

Scholarly papers probed topics such as digital personalization and human agency, algorithmic amplification and the right to reach, and value alignment and trust in AI tools.

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