91
edits
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Collaborating Scientists | {{Collaborating Scientists | ||
|name= | |name=Charles M. Ess | ||
|image= | |image= | ||
|period=write the years of service | |period=write the years of service | ||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
|achievements=write the notable achievements of the b.m. | |achievements=write the notable achievements of the b.m. | ||
}} | }} | ||
== | |||
'''Charles M. Ess''' was one of the co-authors of the [[The Onlife Manifesto]], which was drafted on behalf of the [[Digital Futures Task Force]] of DG Connect of the European Commission in 2012. She was one of the members of the [[The Onlife Initiative]], in which [[Yiannis Laouris]] of [[Future Worlds Center]] was also a member. | |||
==Short Bio== | |||
'''Charles M. Ess''' is Professor in Media Studies, Department of Media and Com- munication, University of Oslo. Ess has received awards for excellence in both teaching and scholarship; he has also held several guest professorships in Europe and Scandinavia - most recently as Professor MSO (med særlige opgaver), Media Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark (2009-2012). Ess has published extensively in Information and Computing Ethics (e.g., Digital Media Ethics, 2nd edition, PolityPress, 2013) and in Internet Studies (e.g., [with William Dutton, OII], Special Issue: The Rise of Internet Studies, new media and society 15 (5), 2013). He emphasizes cross-cultural approaches, including virtue ethics and its applications to questions of being human in an (analogue-)digital age – e.g., a recent Webinar for The (E.C.) Digital Futures Task Force and DG CNECT on norms and values for media in the digital age. | '''Charles M. Ess''' is Professor in Media Studies, Department of Media and Com- munication, University of Oslo. Ess has received awards for excellence in both teaching and scholarship; he has also held several guest professorships in Europe and Scandinavia - most recently as Professor MSO (med særlige opgaver), Media Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark (2009-2012). Ess has published extensively in Information and Computing Ethics (e.g., Digital Media Ethics, 2nd edition, PolityPress, 2013) and in Internet Studies (e.g., [with William Dutton, OII], Special Issue: The Rise of Internet Studies, new media and society 15 (5), 2013). He emphasizes cross-cultural approaches, including virtue ethics and its applications to questions of being human in an (analogue-)digital age – e.g., a recent Webinar for The (E.C.) Digital Futures Task Force and DG CNECT on norms and values for media in the digital age. | ||
edits