Jacob Rigi
Main content
Cultural and Political Economies of Knowledge In the Era of Digital Technology
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My research explores the impacts of digital technologies on the following arenas:
- The transformation of forces and Infrastructures of Production:ÌýTwo transformations are central: 1 ) digital automation (DA), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Intelligence (AI),Ìý Digital Data Basis, and Cloud computing, Robots and 3D printing; and 2)Ìý the impacts of ICT on R &D and its infrastructure and organization, and the resultant specializations, the new uneven division of labour [knowledge versus labour intensive], globalization of value chain and networked factory.Ìý This section examines the following hypothesis: the viability of theÌý automation of the overwhelming parts ofÌý material production makesÌý knowledge and land-nature- the main productive forces of our era.Ìý
- TheÌý modification of the capitalist relations of production:ÌýThe enclosure of knowledge and land -nature-Ìý through intellectual an landedÌý property, the concomitant regimes of rent based on the uneven division of labour, and their contributions to the financialization of the world economy are the main topics.
- Changes in production of culture andÌý public sphere-media:ÌýThe decentred and communal contributions of networks of various actors from prosumers to highly paid professionalsÌý to the production of culture, ideas and news is the main topic.
- Changes in the forms of social organisationÌý of firm, state and social movements:ÌýBiopolitics versus discipline, and horizontal forms of organization versus vertical ones are the main problematics of this section.
- Openings for a transitionÌý to a non-capitalist civilization:ÌýOpenings for the transformation of knowledge, culture, land, strategic infrastructures and services to commons and the social and ecological urgency of communing of strategic forces of production are the main topics of this section.
Jakob Rigi is an associated researcher with the Frontlines of Value project. He holds a PhD from the department of Anthropology and Sociology, SOAS, University of London. He has taught at Cornell University and Central European University and been a fellow at NYU, Edinburgh University, Manchester University and SOAS.Ìý His research interests in addition to digital technology include social transformation in the former Soviet territories, China, and the Middle east; and, the current forms of sovereignty and historical transformation.ÌýÌýÌý
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18.02.2019