Interdisciplinary Ethics Research Group
What we do
Our main areas of specialisms are:-
- AI and Data Ethics
- Health and Health Technology
- Security and Security Technology
- Critical Infrastructure
- Sustainability and Democracy
We have a substantial track record of applied interdisciplinary research and have participated in many research projects funded by Horizon Europe, UKRI and others.
We collaborate with...
- policymakers
- researchers
- technology developers
- practitioners
- health professionals
- security professionals
What we do...
Advise on issues around ethics, social perception and stakeholder engagement, across a range of research and policy areas.
Use analytic, moral and political philosophy, and social science research methods, to provide answers to cutting edge social, technological and ethical challenges.
As well as providing deliverables for projects, we're also part of advisory boards that cover research and data ethics.
We offer bespoke training for anyone wanting to expand their knowledge and skills around ethics and social science methods.
AI and Big Data
Data collection obtained from devices and services such as email, internet searches, online shopping, social media, and CCTV can deliver great benefits, but also raise a number of ethical concerns.
- Consent and autonomy- Consent is authorised by a set of ‘terms and conditions’ that the individual may not have fully read or understood.
- Privacy and surveillance- Data fusion techniques have the potential to re-identify the people connected with anonymous data.
- Data protection- Large data-sets can be hard to manage, which makes them attractive targets for hackers.
- Reliability, false positives, and bias- Big data analysis has the potential to unjustly disadvantage individuals.
- Intelligibility of algorithms- Ethical differences between matching and predictive algorithms.
- AI types: predictive vs generative and their respective risks, e.g. "hallucination".
- Automatic decision-making: the need for a human in the loop.
Current Projects
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AdSOLVE
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GEMS
- KT4D
- SUNRISE
Past Projects
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Datalakes
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Governing AI and Biotech Risk
- PathLAKE
- PRISMA
Health and Health Technology
Topics in this area include:
- the ethical management of pandemics and pandemic risks
- the conduct of vaccination programmes, especially where these meet public resistance; quarantining protocols
- public health surveillance, including possibly intrusive surveillance of behaviour with public health risks (e.g. AIDs, obesity)
- bioterrorism
- ethics of government co-ordinated emergency-response (e.g. flood, fire earthquake) where this has public health aspects
- the ethics of medical transparency.
Current Projects
- Indigenous Peoples Observatory Network
- KEEPCARING
- Pre-Emptr
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Understanding and Responding to Complex Climate-Health Emergencies
Past Projects
- Health Risks in Urban Slums
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Moral Obligation, Epistemology and Public Health: The Case of Vaccine Hesitancy
- PathLAKE
- Supporting Just Response and Recovery to COVID-19 in Informal Urban Settlements
- The COVID Observatories: Monitoring the interaction of pandemics, climate risks, and food systems
Security and Security Technology
We help identify ethical issues associated with security and security technology including:-
- surveillance
- detection technologies
- biometrics in the fields of counter-terrorism
- airport and border security
- preventive and predictive policing
We also provide ethical advice and consultancy on these issues. We work with human rights lawyers, technology developers and assessors, and police on a range of multidisciplinary applied projects.
Current Projects
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GEMS
- KOBAN (advisory)
Past Projects
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AIO
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Climate Change and Urban Violence
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DETECTER
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Ethics and Rights in a Security Context
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Fastpass
- Frontex
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FOCUS
- HECTOS
-
IDENTITY
-
INDECT
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Mass Marketing Fraud
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Media4Sec
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MiRTLE
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PAVE
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PERICLES
- PRACTICE
- SIIP
- SURVEILLE
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UnderWARE
Sustainability and Resilience
This work area spans a wide range of sub-topics. Some of these are brought together by emergency response, including the response to climate change. Critical infrastructure is usually involved in emergency response: the electricity grid, transport networks, broadband, the road network, public health systems and hospitals – all are involved in resilience in the developed world. In the developing world, the challenge of resilience is compounded by weaker economies, less effective infrastructure and sometimes accentuated effects of climate change.
Current Projects
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Indigenous Peoples Observatory Network
- Inserting Ethics in Adaption and Resilience Policy
- SUNRISE
Past Projects
- IDIRA
- New Approaches to Equitable Resilience
- Remedying Injustice in Indigenous Climate Adaption Planning
- Technological Risks in Development
- Why We Disagree about Resilience
Democracy
We examine the values that ground democracy and consider what sort of innovations would improve democratic functioning. We have particular expertise in the following areas:-
- Democracy and Artificial Intelligence
- Digital Democracy
- Participatory Democracy
- Deliberative Democracy
- Emotions and motivation in Democracy
- Democracy in the context of Climate Change
Current Projects
- KT4D
Past Projects
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Challenging Inequalities
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Climate Change and Urban Violence
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Governing AI and Biotech Risks
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The Politics of Papua Project
ACCOMPANY
A project on care robots for the elderly.
EASEL
Developed a teaching robot for children.
FROG
A project on robots guiding children through a museum or gallery.
Six Values Re-writing Laws of Healthcare Robotics
Professor Tom SorellLink opens in a new window spoke with Robotics Business Review about these six values and how roboticists can incorporate them into their designs.
Assistive Technology
We examine ethical issues arising in connection with the use of devices or systems that enable an individual to perform a task that they would otherwise have difficulty with or be unable to do.
Such devices include simple home adaptations and mobility aids, as well as more hi-tech gadgets used in ‘telecare’ and ‘telehealth’, such as monitors and sensors that incorporate alerts to a third party.
Ethical issues typically examined include:
- The potential of AT to further isolate vulnerable people by reducing human interaction
- Risks to autonomy or privacy from the monitoring of people – particularly those with cognitive impairments
Climate Ethics
We address ethical and social questions about climate change at the interface of science, policy, and technology. Areas of expertise include:
- Just Transitions
- Climate adaptation
- Ethics and green technologies
- New European Bauhaus
- Climate change and Democracy
- Climate change and Indigenous Peoples
- Climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa
Inserting Ethics into Adaptation and Resilience Policy
The project is a collaboration with the University of Cape Town and with Cape Town city’s climate adaptation department to look at how issues of ethics and justice can be incorporated into responses to climate-related risks and city policymaking more generally. Cape Town has already come perilously close to a city-wide drought and regularly suffers from flooding: the project seeks to ensure that the most vulnerable communities such as informal settlements are incorporated in an ethical manner into city-level protection plans. By doing so, it aims to model a pathway to inserting ethics into adaptation and resilience policy that can be utilised in other settings.
Please click on the links below to find out about our past projects in Climate Ethics.
Indigenous Peoples are believed to be at particularly high risk from COVID, exacerbated by climate risks and socio-economic stresses. There is emerging evidence that national responses to the pandemic are compounding the vulnerability of Indigenous Peoples, exacerbated by little—if any—understanding on the unique pathways through which COVID will affect them. This project addresses this knowledge and policy gap by documenting, monitoring, and examining how COVID is interacting with multiple stresses to affect the food systems of Indigenous Peoples globally, and by examining issues of ethics and justice associated with policy responses. The project works with 20 Indigenous peoples in 13 countries.
Food insecurity poses a major risk to human lives and well-being in the Global South, especially in the face of climate change. In this project, we investigate how technologies that have been introduced as solutions to food insecurity have contributed to the creation of new risks, and ask how such technologies should might be governed ethically to reduce these risks. We focus on the loss of biodiversity as a result of the introduction of GMO crops, and the rise of antimicrobial resistance as a result of the overuse of antibiotics to combat communicable diseases in crops and livestock.
A variety of behavioural and structural factors impact individuals’ ability to think and act in resilient ways. Based on field research in Kenya, the first aim of this project is to shed new light on key psychological factors that drive resilience, and determine whether this information can facilitate predictive modelling of resilient behaviour. The second aim of the project is to understand the ethical implications of individual differences in resilient behaviour. For example, are there reasons to direct particular attention and resources to those who, by virtue of psychological characteristics, do not easily adopt resilient behaviours?
The two challenges of urban violence and of climate change adaptation for urban development in the Global South have been of increasing concern to the humanitarian, security, and development communities. But these two challenges have so far been treated in parallel, without a strong analytic basis for understanding the interlinkages between the two, and implications for policy interventions in both fields. The aim of the project is to develop new understanding about the interactions between urban violence and climate change risks in urban areas of the Global South. Climate and development policy in areas of urban violence raises a number of difficult ethical questions about legitimacy and authority, and about the ethics of working with ‘gangs’, which are at the core of the project.
Biodiversity is being lost at mass-extinction rates, agricultural systems are under strain and pollution of the air and sea has become an increasingly pressing threat to human health. Coupled with climate change, rising inequality and entrenched poverty, these interconnected sustainability issues are triggering social instability and conflict. Yet incremental approaches to pursuing sustainability are insufficient for delivering change at the speed and scale necessary. The aim of this project was to investigate the role and agency of purpose ecosystems in contributing to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and Earth System Governance. The project brought together researchers in Earth System Governance, equity, purpose ecosystems, sustainability and climate change. It developed a long term collaborative hub for future research and engagement based at the University of Warwick and the University of Monash.
The concept of resilience is increasingly used in urban planning and disaster risk reduction. While resilience may appear consensual to some, disagreements exist regarding what urban resilience should look like. Some approaches to resilience focus on infrastructure and materials, whereas other approaches are more inclusive of social and environmental concerns. WhyDAR identified different ways in which urban resilience is understood while investigating the role of science, technology, ethics and expertise in the making of resilience strategies in the Global South. It examined key ethical questions arising from disagreement about conceptions to resilience, and asked what an equitable approach to resilience would look like in the face of this disagreement. (Warwick lead Prof. Keith Hyams).
Indigenous communities are especially vulnerable to risks associated with climate change, yet their voices are often marginalised in climate adaptation planning. This project investigated ethics and equity aspects of the relationship between indigenous communities, climate change, and adaptation policies, bringing together both philosophical and social scientific research. It asked how adaptation policies that integrate indigenous voices into climate adaptation planning can work to reduce the unequal and inequitable distribution of climate impacts on indigenous populations. The project worked closely with collaborators at Makerere University and the Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change research network, and included fieldwork with Batwa Indigenous communities in South West Uganda. (Warwick lead Prof. Keith Hyams)..
Read our policy report 'Remedying Injustice in Indigenous Climate Adaptation Planning'Link opens in a new window
Many urban populations in the Global South live in slums with poor access to sanitation and clean drinking water. Changes to the local and global climate threaten to exacerbate these health risks; flooding increases exposure to infectious diseases, while droughts threaten food supplies. To help these challenges, this project developed a new framework for integrating different knowledges in the context of climate-related health risks in slums. We combined philosophical analysis of the concept of expertise, empirical research in Zambia on traditional ecological knowledge, and medical knowledge of urban slum health.
Ethics in Global Development
Ethics in Climate and Development is a research programme within the
Interdisciplinary Ethics Research Group
in the University of Warwick's Department of Politics and International Studies.
Our Research Projects
Please click on the links below to find out more about our projects.
The table below gives an overview of our current and past projects.
Please find out more about our current projects by click on the links below.
AdSoLve
Addressing Socio-technical Limitations of LLMs for Medical and Social Computing is an RAI UK, RCUK funded project. It addresses the socio-technical limitations of LLMs that challenge their responsible and trustworthy use, particularly in the context of medical and legal use cases.
Future Democracy investigates how democracy can be shaped to address the challenges posed by technological development and climate change. In particular, it asks what sort of democratic innovations can address short-termism in democracy, foster responsiveness to local needs, and foster international cooperation. Various forms of citizens assemblies and future-oriented institutions are considered, along with technological enhancements to democratic arrangements.
Games as a Multi-layered Security threat
GEMS (Games as a Multi-layered Security threat) is an interdisciplinary, mixed-methods and cross-sectoral project bringing together academic researchers, AI specialists, policy experts and a range of police authorities from across Europe. The project aims to understand the contribution of the video-gaming ecosystem to the process of radicalisation, and to propose measures to prevent the radicalization process.
Indigenous Peoples globally face profound threats from climate change, biodiversity loss, and land degradation — threats that are rooted in discrimination, land dispossession, and colonization, and span all of the IPCC’s representative key risks. It is primarily through the nexus with Indigenous food systems that these stresses converge and interact to affect health and well-being. Indigenous knowledges and practices underpin resilience across the food-climate-health nexus, yet they are overlooked and undermined by government policy. New ways of working with Indigenous communities and informing decision making are needed if we are to make sense of and address these interlinked stresses. The Indigenous Peoples Observatory Network (IPON) transforms and rethinks how we understand the food-climate-health nexus from the bottom-up, building on multiple ways of knowing embodied in Indigenous knowledges and science, and in ways that strengthen community resilience to multiple stresses and support actions that benefit Indigenous Peoples. The project works with research, policy and Indigenous partners in Canada, US, India, Uganda, Ghana, South Africa, Germany, Namibia, Australia, and Peru.
The project is a collaboration with the University of Cape Town and with Cape Town city’s climate adaptation department to look at how issues of ethics and justice can be incorporated into responses to climate-related risks and city policymaking more generally. Cape Town has already come perilously close to a city-wide drought and regularly suffers from flooding: the project seeks to ensure that the most vulnerable communities such as informal settlements are incorporated in an ethical manner into city-level protection plans. By doing so, it aims to model a pathway to inserting ethics into adaptation and resilience policy that can be utilised in other settings.
Ethical deliberation in video and toolkitLink opens in a new window
KEEPCARING aims to (re-)build wellbeing and resilience of the healthcare workforce in EU hospitals in the surgical pathway, to promote onboarding as well as staying in the workplace by systematically researching factors and signals of job stress and novel mitigating solutions and by co-creating a multi-faceted non-digital, digital and AI-supported solution package to prevent burnout among (aspirant) healthcare professionals on the individual, team, and organisational level.
AI and big data are fundamentally interwoven into our societies, culture and conceptions of democratic governance and exchange. They pose risks to our democracies at the same time as they have the potential to enhance it. KT4D will explore how these technologies can foster more inclusive civic participation in democracy, and how AI and big data can facilitate new democratic innovations and enrich democratic deliberation within participatory fora. To achieve this, we will develop and validate tools, guidelines and a Digital Democracy Lab demonstrators platform. These results will be validated across three user needs scenarios: 1) building capacity for citizens and citizen-facing Civil Society Organisations; 2) creating regulatory tools and services for Policy and CSOs; and 3) improving awareness of how to design ethical and democratic principles in academic and industrial software development.
Focusses on Community Policing, looking at new capabilities for European policing. 19 partners from Law Enforcement, Research and industry will work together until 2027, test casing the capabilities in pilot areas. IERG supplies an ethics advisor for this project.
Boosting work abilities for people with disabilities
People with disabilities have the potential to engage with advanced technology. However, it is essential to identify the elements that successfully enable individuals with disabilities to interact with technology. With this context, the EU-funded NewWorkTech project enhances the work-related capacities of both individuals with disabilities and the general workforce, focusing on technology-mediated tasks and interactions. It involves empirical research on how people with disabilities (who often lead in technology use) perform functions at work, alongside theoretical innovations related to technology and socio-material assemblages. The project will provide policy recommendations, develop new tech solutions and actively engage people with disabilities, adhering to the principle of ‘nothing about us without us.’
PREEMPTER
SUNRISE (Strategies and Technologies for United and Resilient Critical Infrastructures and Vital Services in Pandemic Stricken Europe) is a major three-year project funded by Horizon Europe.
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the fact that pandemics and similar events are not only a threat to health but also represent a considerable risk to the interdependent critical infrastructures(CIs) upon which societies depend for their well-being.
SUNRISE will facilitate the active collaboration of CIs across Europe to share best practices and jointly tackle future pandemics. This collaboration will result in a new stable working group for CI resilience to pandemics with at least 100 members. With a group of 4 CI authorities, 16 CI operators, 3 other CI stakeholders, 4 experts in social sciences and ethics, 2 experts in epidemiology and climate extremes, and 12 security researchers and software developers.
Complex climate-health emergencies are crises caused by co-occurring and compounding medical, social, political, and environmental risks that overwhelm health systems. Climate change is a major emerging driver of these emergencies, intersecting with diverse regional and global challenges such as biodiversity loss, land degradation, food and nutrition insecurity, and emerging diseases. Indigenous Peoples who make up 5% of the global population have been badly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and are among the most vulnerable to climate change impacts. The overarching aim of this research programme is to document, understand, and monitor the factors affecting the creation, evolution, and impact of complex climate-health emergencies among Indigenous communities in the Global South, examining the interaction between climatic and non-climatic stresses, and co-generating knowledge and capacity to build resilience in health systems and support pilot interventions.
Please find out more about our past projects by click on the links below.
Anthropogenic Global Catastrophic Risk: The Challenge of Governance
Investigating the key challenges of governance for Anthropogenic Global Catastrophic Risk (AGCRs)
An anthropogenic global catastrophic risk (AGCR) is a human-induced risk that threatens sustained and widescale loss of life and damage to civilisation across the globe.
Central to the danger posed by future AGCRs is the problem that technological progress and uptake has proceeded much more rapidly than commensurate understanding and implementation of effective governance. The present project aims to address this deficit by investigating the key challenges of governance for AGCRs, and by identifying practical and ethical guidelines within which new governance solutions for specific AGCRs will be advanced. Three case studies are developed: synthetic biology, nanotechnology, and artificial intelligence.
AIO: Assuming Identities Online - description, development and ethical implications
This research aimed to bridge the gap between complex theories of the discursive constructions of online identities, and the computational approaches to analysing online communications.
The objectives were to examine the relationship between linguistic style and online identity performance, build on previous work to improve training in undercover online investigations and to systematically identify the ethical risks of using the above analysis or investigation, arrest and prosecution.
Project timescales: 2014-2016
The project aims to contribute an understanding of inequality as a driver of vulnerability in an international development context.
It is an interdisciplinary collaboration across humanities and social sciences, with participants from India, UK, France and Norway. The project is funded in the UK by the ESRC (EqUIP).
The project seeks to integrate cutting edge philosophical work on the salient ethical dimensions of inequality with social scientific approaches, both quantitative and qualitative, to measuring and addressing inequality. It examines inequality from three different perspectives:-
1. The project addresses how inequality should be defined and measured.
2. The project looks at attitudes to inequality and inequality-reducing policies.
3. The project investigates the experience of inequality and looks at the effects of inequality on livelihoods and policy interventions.
The two challenges of urban violence and of climate change adaptation for urban development in the Global South have been of increasing concern to the humanitarian, security, and development communities. But these two challenges have so far been treated in parallel, without a strong analytic basis for understanding the interlinkages between the two, and implications for policy interventions in both fields. The aim of the project is to develop new understanding about the interactions between urban violence and climate change risks in urban areas of the Global South. Climate and development policy in areas of urban violence raises a number of difficult ethical questions about legitimacy and authority, and about the ethics of working with ‘gangs’, which are at the core of the project.
Visit the Climate Change and Urban Violence WebsiteLink opens in a new window
Data Lakes: Emerging Ethical Issues
This is a pump-priming project, funded under a Call that seeks to prepare the ground for more UK Humanities research in Artificial Intelligence. It builds on the ethics research contributed by IERG to the Innovate-UK funded PathLAKE project in computational pathology. This project concerns the use of large pathology data sets to train and test algorithms cancer diagnostics, prognostics and tumour-grading.
Detecter: Detection Technologies, Terrorism, Ethics and Human Rights
DETECTER identified human rights and other legal and moral standards that detection technologies in counter-terrorism must meet. It surveyed current and foreseeable applications of detection technologies in counter-terrorism and conducted cutting-edge legal and philosophical research into the implications of human rights and ethics for counter-terrorism in general and detection technologies in particular.
DETECTER also successfully pioneered methods of discussing ethics and human rights issues with counter-terrorism professionals using detection technologies, and with technology developers in private meetings. Its research was constantly informed by these stakeholder interactions.
Project timelines: 2008-2011
Ethics and Rights in a Security Context
The primary aim of this integration project was to use cross-cutting ethical themes to connect the seven successful projects in the PaCCS Ethics and Security Call, and to communicate their results to a policy, practitioner, and wider public, audience.
Project timescales:2014-2016
Ethics of Border Security
The Study, commissioned by FRONTEX and carried out by the previous home of the IERG team, the Centre for Global Ethics of the University of Birmingham (UK), aims to help the EU border guard community by providing analysis of:
- the ethical standards laid out by EU Border Guard services via an analysis of national Codes of Conduct
- the ethical standards expected at EU level (as expressed in relevant EU legislation and policies) in relation to the numerous sensitive tasks carried out by border guards and
- the ethical challenges posed by some of the current and planned technologies employed by border guard services in the EU as part of their daily tasks
Project timescales: 2010
FASTPASS
The FastPass project proposes to answer complicated and conflicting questions. Funded by the European 7thFramework Programme, FastPass has gathered during 4 years key players of the entire ABC value chain – system and component producers, research institutions, governmental authorities, infrastructure operator, and end-users – to develop a novel, modular, and harmonised solution.
FOCUS: Foresight Security Scenarios
Mapping research to a comprehensive approach to Exogenous EU roles.
IERG provided the project partners with advice on ethical issues arising in the context of their research.
Project timescales: 2013-2014
Tags: Technology, AI/Digital
Advances in emerging technology including artificial intelligence and biotechnology will transform the security and economic landscape. Governing AI and Biotech Risk explores the ethical, political and psychological underpinnings of effective governance that can meet the challenges posed by technological risks.
Health Risks in Urban Slums
Tackling Climate-related Health Risks in Urban Slums: an Interdisciplinary Analysis of the Challenge of Integrating Local and Scientific Knowledges.
Many urban populations in the Global South live in slums with poor access to sanitation and clean drinking water. Changes to the local and global climate threaten to exacerbate these health risks; flooding increases exposure to infectious diseases, while droughts threaten food supplies. Avoiding climate related mortality and morbidity requires input from climate researchers, medical scientists, and local populations alike.
While recent research demonstrates that local stakeholders hold important experiential knowledge about their socioeconomic and environmental circumstances, integrating this knowledge into health-related climate adaptation strategies is not straightforward due to epistemic and socioeconomic inequalities.
Tackling these challenges, this project develops the first systematic, comprehensive, and empirically informed framework for integrating differentiated knowledge in the context of climate-related health risks in slums through philosophical analysis of the concept of expertise, empirical research on traditional ecological knowledge, and medical knowledge of urban slum health.
The team consists of researchers from different disciplines, including political philosophy, geography, and medical sciences. The project is funded by the British Academy (Knowledge Frontiers) and is a collaboration between the University of Warwick (PAIS – lead; medical sciences), the University of Leeds (Priestley International Centre for Climate), and the University of Zambia (Geography and Environmental Sciences). The project integrates philosophical analysis with population health fieldwork in urban slum populations, with a particular focus on Lusaka, Zambia.
HECTOS: Harmonized Evaluation, Certification and Testing of Security Products
HECTOS, a project funded under the EC FP7 security research programme brought together 9 leading organizations from across Europe to study how existing evaluation and certification schemes used in other areas could be used, adapted or developed for products used for physical security of people, property and infrastructure.
Project timescales: 2014-2018
IDENTITY
IDENTITY aims at consolidating the integration of multimedia forensics into forensic science. Multimedia forensics is concerned with the development of scientific methods to extract, analyse and categorize digital evidence derived from multimedia sources, such as imaging devices. For example, developing technologies to identify, categorise and classify the source of images and video, as well as to authenticate and verify the integrity of their content. Since the enabling technologies in multimedia forensics are similar to those used for identification and verification purposes in biometric forensics, the integration of these areas is seamless.
IDIRA: Interoperability of data and procedures in large-scale multinational disaster response actions
IDIRA was a research project funded by the European Commission with a duration of four years, gathering eighteen partners to focus on the interoperability of data and emergency procedures in response to large-scale disasters.
Project timescales: 2011-2015
INDECT: Intelligent information system supporting observation, searching and detection for security of citizens in urban environment.
INDECT developed algorithms and other tools to assist law enforcement and other security agents in the automatic detection of crime and security threats. IERG provided project partners, including technology developers and police, with advice on the ethical issues arising in the context of their work.
Project timescales: 2010-2012
Institute of Risk Management
IERG (Tom SorellLink opens in a new window and Duncan Hine) have contributed teaching material to a distance taught course offered by the Institute of Risk Management on Digital Risk Management.
Mass-marketing fraud
Mass-marketing fraud (MMF) is a type of fraud that exploits mass communication techniques (e.g., email, Instant Messenger, bulk mailing, social networking sites, telemarketing) to con people out of money.
This EPSRC project develops novel techniques to detect and prevent MMF. Through its multi-disciplinary approach and close focus on co-designing the solutions with its range of project partners and testing them in-the-wild during live MMF-detection settings, the project will lead to not only new scientific understanding of the anatomy of MMF but also tools and techniques that can form the basis of practical interventions in tackling such fraud.
Media4SecLink opens in a new window
In today’s social media landscape, Facebook remains one of the most important platforms for businesses. However, it is no longer sufficient to simply create pages and post content. To be successful on Facebook, you need engaging content that appeals to your target audience and encourages participation.
This article presents effective strategies to increase the reach of your content and promote interaction with your followers.
MiRTLE
Radio Physics Solutions Ltd has developed MiRTLE (Millimetre-wave Radar Threat Level Evaluation), the world’s first, high performance, long range (up to 50m), low cost, standoff “concealed threat” detection system for the protection of citizens and critical infrastructure.
MiRTLE is capable of screening large groups of people automatically and autonomously, without operator intervention, in real-time. Our highly innovative system detects PBIEDs, guns (including 3D printed) and knives up to a range of 50m in real-time, with targets in motion, all without privacy concerns. IERG is advising on ethics for this project.
Moral Obligation, Epistemology and Public Health: The Case of Vaccine Hesitancy
This two-year project, funded by the AHRC and the German Research Council (DFG), considers philosophical issues related to the rationality of vaccine opposition and hesitancy, and the question of how science communication should address vaccine hesitancy, especially in the face of campaigns of misinformation.
Tags: Global Development, Sustainability
A variety of behavioural and structural factors impact individuals’ ability to think and act in resilient ways. Based on field research in Kenya, the first aim of this project is to shed new light on key psychological factors that drive resilience, and determine whether this information can facilitate predictive modelling of resilient behaviour. The second aim of the project is to understand the ethical implications of individual differences in resilient behaviour. For example, are there reasons to direct particular attention and resources to those who, by virtue of psychological characteristics, do not easily adopt resilient behaviours?
PathLAKE
UK Research and Innovation is funding a three year £15.7 million project to develop a data lake and AI techniques to speed up the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.
The data lake will consist of information derived from the cancer samples of patients from across the UK.
PathLAKE (Pathology Image data lake for Analytics, Knowledge and Education) is led by University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, collaborating with teaching hospitals and universities at Belfast, Oxford and Nottingham, electronics company Philips and the University of Warwick. The Warwick Computer Science department will take the lead in developing artificial intelligence techniques and the data resource.
Warwick’s Interdisciplinary Ethics Research Group are responsible for research ethics in the PathLAKE project. Professor Tom SorellLink opens in a new window is the lead for the IERG work, with assistance of Dr. John GuelkeLink opens in a new window.
More information can be found in the Warwick University press release hereLink opens in a new window, and a report from the Coventry local Phoenix Today covers the news.
PAVE
Improving communication tools for law enforcement to prevent violent radicalisation.
The EU research project PAVE (Preventing and Addressing Violent Extremism through Community Resilience in the Western Balkans and the MENA) aims to tackle the global issue of radicalisation by examining its root causes and driving factors. Based on a comparative assessment of local communities with features of vulnerability or resilience to violent extremism across seven case study countries, the 13 international partner institutions will develop concrete policy recommendations to inform citizens and stakeholders within and beyond the regions under study.
PERICLESLink opens in a new window
Improving communication tools for law enforcement to prevent violent radicalisation.
PRISMALink opens in a new window
PRISMA has delivered a toolkit for companies that aspire to develop innovative products and services with which genuine societal needs are addressed and a contribution is made to both environmental and economic sustainability. Warwick worked with Warwick Manufacturing Group on 3 pilot projects: in connected vehicles; synthetic biology; and secure data-storage and exchange.
Tags: Global Development, Sustainability
Indigenous communities are especially vulnerable to risks associated with climate change, yet their voices are often marginalised in climate adaptation planning. This project investigated ethics and equity aspects of the relationship between indigenous communities, climate change, and adaptation policies, bringing together both philosophical and social scientific research. It asked how adaptation policies that integrate indigenous voices into climate adaptation planning can work to reduce the unequal and inequitable distribution of climate impacts on indigenous populations. The project worked closely with collaborators at Makerere University and the Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change research network, and included fieldwork with Batwa Indigenous communities in South West Uganda.
Read the full project report for "Remedying Injustice"Link opens in a new window
SIIP
Creating technology that identifies anonymous speakers captured in lawfully intercepted calls.
Project timescales: 2014-2018
Tags: Global Development, Health
The project works with the organisation Slum Dwellers International and its Youth Federation members in eight Sub-Saharan African cities (Lagos, Freetown, Nairobi, Lusaka, Harare, Johannesburg, Gqeberha and Cape Town) to understand inequalities and injustices associated with COVID-19 impacts and policy responses in informal urban settlements. The project will facilitate the creation of a series of video-diaries informed by ethical analysis, co-designed and produced with youth groups in the cities, which will provide the foundation for research articles and policy work with local authorities.
SURVEILLE
Surveille - Working with human rights lawyers, technology assessors, and police officers from across Europe, IERG examined the ethical implications of surveillance technologies used against serious crime and terrorism.
Project timescales: 2012-2015
Tags: Global Development, Technology
Food insecurity poses a major risk to human lives and well-being in the Global South, especially in the face of climate change. In this project, we investigate how technologies that have been introduced as solutions to food insecurity have contributed to the creation of new risks, and ask how such technologies should might be governed ethically to reduce these risks. We focus on the loss of biodiversity as a result of the introduction of GMO crops, and the rise of antimicrobial resistance as a result of the overuse of antibiotics to combat communicable diseases in crops and livestock.
Tags: Global Development, Health, Sustainability
Indigenous Peoples are believed to be at particularly high risk from COVID, exacerbated by climate risks and socio-economic stresses. There is emerging evidence that national responses to the pandemic are compounding the vulnerability of Indigenous Peoples, exacerbated by little—if any—understanding on the unique pathways through which COVID will affect them. This project addresses this knowledge and policy gap by documenting, monitoring, and examining how COVID is interacting with multiple stresses to affect the food systems of Indigenous Peoples globally, and by examining issues of ethics and justice associated with policy responses. The project works with 20 Indigenous peoples in 13 countries.
Tags: Global Development
The Politics of Papua Project at the University of Warwick conducts research on Indigenous rights in Papua and provides informed political analysis to policymakers, in order to facilitate a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Papua. We collaborate with researchers around the world, including at the Papuan Cenderawasih University. We have advised UK and international parliamentarians, the Leader of the Labour Party, the FCDO, and the Indonesian Ambassador to the UK. Our research has been cited by several policymakers and politicians, including MPs.
Since 1969, Papua has been part of Indonesia. However, a movement in Papua led by Indigenous Papuans asserts an ongoing right to self-determination. The ongoing conflict in the region, between the Indonesian military and Indigenous Papuans, is estimated to have killed at least a hundred thousand Papuans. Our aim is to provide informed and rigorous academic analysis, in collaboration with Papuan and other researchers, that can help all parties move closer to a peaceful and sustainable resolution of the conflict, and to help build institutions to support development in Papua.
UNDERWARE: UNDERstanding West African culture to pRevent cybercrimEs
Working with colleagues in WMG, the overall objective of UNDERWARE was to gain a greater understanding of West African culture in order to:
- Scientifically evaluate current methods employed to prevent and deter cybercrime that emanates from West Africa
- Develop and test new methods to prevent and deter cybercrime (that emanates from this region)
Project timescales:2016-2017
Tags: Global Development, Sustainability
The concept of resilience is increasingly used in urban planning and disaster risk reduction. While resilience may appear consensual to some, disagreements exist regarding wh\ at urban resilience should look like. Some approaches to resilience focus on infrastructure and materials, whereas other approaches are more inclusive of social and environmental concerns. WhyDAR identified different ways in which urban resilience is understood while investigating the role of science, technology, ethics and expertise in the making of resilience strategies in the Global South. It examined key ethical questions arising from disagreement about conceptions to resilience, and asked what an equitable approach to resilience would look like in the face of this disagreement.