Could technology help end human suffering – or make it worse?
Anne-Marie Slaughter says that the technology refugees rely on to escape suffering could be used against them.
Certificate (Hons), European Cultural Studies, Princeton; 1982, Mphil, Int'l Relations, Oxford; 1985, degree (Hons), Law, Harvard; 1992, Dphil, Int'l Relations, Oxford. Formerly: Director, Graduate and Int'l Legal Studies, Harvard Law School; Founder and Faculty Director, Harvard Colloquium on Int'l Affairs; 1990-94, Professor of Law and Int'l Relations, Univ. of Chicago Law School; J Sinclair Armstrong Professor of Int'l, Foreign and Comparative Law, Harvard University; 2002-10, Dean, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University; 2009-11, Director of Policy Planning, US Dept. of State. Currently, President and CEO, New America. Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor Emerita of Politics and International Affairs, Princeton University. Author: A New World Order (2004); The Idea that Is America (2007); Unfinished Business: Women, Men, Work, Family (2015); The Chessboard and the Web: Strategies of Connection in a Networked World (2017) and over 100 articles.
Anne-Marie Slaughter says that the technology refugees rely on to escape suffering could be used against them.
Making room for care in the workplace means assuming that all workers are or will be caregivers at some point in their working lives