Automation and the Value of Work: The effects of digital automation on job displacement in western Pennsylvania
Chen, Ricky, Chun, Jiyeon, Lin, Shannon and Liu, Emily (2021) Automation and the Value of Work: The effects of digital automation on job displacement in western Pennsylvania. In: Proceedings of Relating Systems Thinking and Design (RSD10) 2021 Symposium, 2-6 Nov 2021, Delft, The Netherlands.
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Abstract
This map synthesizes the wicked problem of automation and its systemic effects on society’s values of work. Automation is second-hand with human nature; people have always been innovating and creating tools or methods that simplify necessary tasks to make time for enjoyable ones. Rounds of mass-scale industrialization accompany redistributions of jobs; automation displaces some jobs, while creating others. However, this is not always balanced, especially with the pace of digital automation. The ability and qualifications for new jobs also play a role in revealing the disparities of this wicked problem – systematically tied to history’s industrial education values, capitalism, and racism. Automation’s inverse relationship with the value of work is a wicked problem, in part because it is caused by and plays a role in the systems of other wicked problems.
These relationships with other wicked problems are highlighted through simplified feedback loops, categorized as root causes. The map also includes a summary of the history of automation, as looking into history is a first step towards finding solutions to wicked problems.
This research revealed that automation itself can not be stalled; rather it is up to evolving policies, systems, and values to provide for those adversely affected.
Reading digital automation on job displacement in west-PA
As with any system, the actions of a few (technology and policymakers) affect the lives of many, perpetrated by personal values sustained through generations of the system. Systemic change targets policy, yet policy change depends on system-wide shifts in value.
The “motherboard” graphic showcases 3D scale: the vertical axis’ building height represents the level of power, while the horizontal plane indicates the size of its respective population. Within the horizontal plane is a variety of connected subcategories.
Please read the leftwards text for historical and contextual understanding, then use the key to navigate through the map’s complex flow of cause and effects.
| Item Type: | Conference/Workshop Item (Poster) |
|---|---|
| Divisions: | Faculty of Design |
| Date Deposited: | 22 Jun 2022 18:08 |
| Last Modified: | 22 Jun 2022 18:16 |
| URI: | https://openresearch.ocadu.ca/id/eprint/3889 |
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