smart citizens - ethical assessment & artistic interventions
Post on 12-Apr-2017
173 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
Friday - Grande Festa
Time Topic / Activity
10:00 – 11:00 Recap & intervention techniques
11:00 – 13:00 Preparing public intervention
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch break
14:00 – 16:00 Public intervention
16:00 – 17:00 Final presentations
Resilient Cities Seminar• Arjen Uijterlinde, Dutch Consul-General in Rio de Janeiro, Brasil• Han Peters, Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to Brazil• Claudia Gintersdorfer, Deputy Head of the European Union Delegation in Brasilia.• Pedro Junqueira, CEO, Center of Operations Rio de Janeiro• Frank Kresin, Research Director, Waag Society• Tina Billeter Weymann, Sustainability Consultant• Catarina Selada, Head of Cities Department, INTELI Innovation Centre• Luciana Nery, Deputy Chief Resilience Officer, Center of Operations Rio de Janeiro• Marco Contardi, Strategic Advisor, FGV Projetos• Ricardo Ruiz, Project Coordinator, InCiti Research and Innovation for Cities &
Federal University of Pernambuco• Clarisse Linke, Country Director, Institute for Transportation and Development
Policy Brasil • Mark van der Net, Founder, OSCity• Pieter van Boheemen, Programme Manager, Waag Society• Gabriela Augustini, Founder and Director, Olabi Makerspace• Chloe Dickson, Co-Founder, BeMap• Ronaldo Lemos, Founder and Director, ITS Rio• Fabio Palma, Director, Istituto Europeo di Design• Washington Fajardo, President, Rio World Heritage Institute and Mayors’ Special
Advisor for Urban Issues• Luisa Santiago, Managing Director, Ellen MacArthur Foundation
http://resilientcities.com.br/index.php/programme-info/
• Memory• Structuring• Sharing• Improving the process• Reproducibility• Engaging• Pride / fun
Why document?
Ethical frameworks
•Consequentialism
•Utilitarianism (means-end argument)
•Normative ethics
•Kantian theory (universal law)
•Virtue ethics
Classical Ethics: Ethical Matrix
• Columns: relevant principles• f.e. autonomy, justice, etc
• Rows: relevant stakeholders (max 4)• f.e. parents, neighbours, policy makers, etc
Stakeholders/actors
(human + non-human)
Consequentialistic principles
(arguments that concern the outcomes of an act)
Deontological principles
(arguments that concern the act itself)
https://www.lincoln.ac.uk/home/lifesciences/visitingscholars/professorbenmepham/
Example: Food Industry
Wellbeing Autonomy Justice
People in the industry
Income & working
conditions
Freedom of action Fair trade
Citizens Food safety & quality
Informed choices
Availability & Affordability
Farm Animals Animal welfare Behavioural freedom Intrinsic value
The environment Conservation Biodiversity Sustainability
The Triangle
• Acknowledging our duty to follow (principle(s) X) and our estimation of (the facts Y) it follows that .. is (not) morally allowed.
Based on: Daniels, Norman, "Reflective Equilibrium", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2013 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.) URL: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/reflective-equilibrium/
Share documentation
• pieter@waag.org
• #ResilientRio
• http://slideshare.net/ptmvanboheemen
top related