NYU Center for Human Rights and Global Justice
NYU Center for Human Rights and Global Justice
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Poor Enough for the Algorithm? Exploring Jordan’s Poverty Targeting System
On November 28, 2023, the Digital Welfare State and Human Rights Project hosted the sixteenth episode in the Transformer States conversation series on Digital Government and Human Rights.
Victoria Adelmant and Katelyn Cioffi interviewed Hiba Zayadin, a senior researcher in the Middle East and North Africa division at Human Rights Watch (HRW) @HumanrightswatchAR about a report published by HRW @HumanRightsWatch on the Jordanian government’s use of an algorithmic system to rank applicants for a welfare program based on their poverty level, using data like electricity usage and car ownership.
zhlédnutí: 797

Video

FORGE 2023 | More Than Human Rights: Two Futures for Rights & Governance | César Rodríguez-Garavito
zhlédnutí 140Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Looking Back to Look Forward | César Rodríguez-Garavito
zhlédnutí 192Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | 75 Years On: The Pathway to Solutions Through Human Rights | Comments by Philip Alston
zhlédnutí 61Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Language, expertise & trust in the Making of the Oceans Treaty | Siva Thambisetty
zhlédnutí 79Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | International Justice in a Challenging World | Judge Hilary Charlesworth
zhlédnutí 95Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Unmasked Seaweed King | Kevin A. Ormsby
zhlédnutí 22Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments for chang...
FORGE 2023 | Evidence for Hope | Kathryn Sikkink
zhlédnutí 157Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Renewing Democracy & Pushing Back Against Authoritarians | Ivan Krastev
zhlédnutí 544Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Reinventing Democracy from the Bottom Up | Ricken Patel
zhlédnutí 322Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Extracts from The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives by Lola Shoneyin | Maimouna Jallow
zhlédnutí 91Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | For the Living | Ayisha Siddiqa
zhlédnutí 169Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | Indigenous Wisdom for an Ailing Planet | Patricia Gualinga
zhlédnutí 159Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
FORGE 2023 | The Inner Life of the Future | Jonathan Rowson
zhlédnutí 937Před 3 měsíci
FORGE 2023 On November 2-5 2023, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU Law convened its first annual Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE) Conference. This global gathering of scholars, practitioners, artists, scientists, lawyers, policy makers, among others, differed from panel-based conventional conferences by creating spaces to actively share ideas and develop experiments f...
Mycelial Methods for Action: Applying Knowledge of Fungi to Confront Ecological Emergencies
zhlédnutí 151Před 4 měsíci
Fungi, which comprise their own kingdom of life, are ecosystem engineers that play fundamental roles in Earth’s life systems, including the climate system. Most live as branching, fusing networks of tubular cells known as mycelium. These symbiotic networks comprise an ancient life-support system that easily qualifies as one of the wonders of the living world. Yet environmental and climate polic...
The Rise of Climate Litigation: A Conversation with UN Special Rapporteur Ian Fry
zhlédnutí 100Před 5 měsíci
The Rise of Climate Litigation: A Conversation with UN Special Rapporteur Ian Fry
Held v. Montana: A Turning Point for Youth-Led Climate Litigation
zhlédnutí 157Před 7 měsíci
Held v. Montana: A Turning Point for Youth-Led Climate Litigation
RightsCon 2023- Digital Government Is Not “Presence-less”
zhlédnutí 43Před 8 měsíci
RightsCon 2023- Digital Government Is Not “Presence-less”
Carbon Markets & Rights: Indigenous Peoples' Perspectives on Approval of ART TREES Credits in Guyana
zhlédnutí 150Před 8 měsíci
Carbon Markets & Rights: Indigenous Peoples' Perspectives on Approval of ART TREES Credits in Guyana
Universal Rights Group & NYU Law - Right to a Healthy Environment
zhlédnutí 57Před 10 měsíci
Universal Rights Group & NYU Law - Right to a Healthy Environment
Contesting the Foundations of Digital Public Infrastructure
zhlédnutí 103Před 10 měsíci
Contesting the Foundations of Digital Public Infrastructure
Regulating Artificial Intelligence: The Brazilian Approach
zhlédnutí 234Před 11 měsíci
Regulating Artificial Intelligence: The Brazilian Approach
The Climate Rule of Law: Advancements in Climate Law from the Hawai’i Electric Light Company Case
zhlédnutí 69Před rokem
The Climate Rule of Law: Advancements in Climate Law from the Hawai’i Electric Light Company Case
What's Next for the ICJ AO?
zhlédnutí 52Před rokem
What's Next for the ICJ AO?
A "Paris Moment" for Biodiversity? Biodiversity and Climate Action After the Montreal Agreement
zhlédnutí 101Před rokem
A "Paris Moment" for Biodiversity? Biodiversity and Climate Action After the Montreal Agreement
So much about your sustainability, my people are dying
zhlédnutí 45KPřed rokem
So much about your sustainability, my people are dying
Litigating the Climate Emergency: What's Next? - Youth Session
zhlédnutí 49Před rokem
Litigating the Climate Emergency: What's Next? - Youth Session
The Climate Emergency Before the UN Human Rights Committee: Torres Strait Islanders Petition
zhlédnutí 145Před rokem
The Climate Emergency Before the UN Human Rights Committee: Torres Strait Islanders Petition
The Curse of Cashlessness: Digital Exclusion in Sweden's Cash-Free Society
zhlédnutí 185Před rokem
The Curse of Cashlessness: Digital Exclusion in Sweden's Cash-Free Society
Litigating the Climate Emergency: What's Next? - Practitioners' Session
zhlédnutí 124Před rokem
Litigating the Climate Emergency: What's Next? - Practitioners' Session

Komentáře

  • @opalinapriebe627
    @opalinapriebe627 Před rokem

    Very elegant💎💎💎. Fast results only = 'promo sm'!!!

  • @YenkammaNe
    @YenkammaNe Před rokem

    Suraj Yengde is free to marry Rich Arab sheikh's daughter

  • @YenkammaNe
    @YenkammaNe Před rokem

    Isabel Wilkerson.. better go to Somalia and live there permanently. Isabel Wilkerson not happy with USA, Europe, India....she can maybe live in Afghanistan Pakistan Bangladesh Syria....any of those OIC nations

  • @angelinasouren
    @angelinasouren Před rokem

    By the way, Olivier De Schutter wants to make povertyism just as unlawful as other forms of discrimination. As neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett points out that childhood poverty affects children's brain development and restricts their later opportunities, perhaps (extensive) poverty itself should be labeled negligence on the part of governments and create a legal basis for holding governments to account in this area.

  • @angelinasouren
    @angelinasouren Před rokem

    Holy cow. I was not yet aware of the role that these algorithms played and I find myself pretty shocked by this. I am Dutch, I've previously lived in the US, but left Amsterdam again at about the time when these developments started, about 20 years ago. This time, I went to England, where I suddenly was a migrant and thus gained some insight into what life must be like in the Netherlands for for example people from Morocco and Turkey. I can't tell you how much it hurts and how much it limits you to be discriminated against and dismissed on the basis of nationality alone (and other forms of otherisation), so I started writing a book in Dutch about this, actually sparked among other things by what I had read about this Dutch scandal. To give you an idea of how that works out in real life for me as a Dutch person, I was seething for several days when Liz Truss quit so soon after she took office and it looked like Boris De Pfeffel Johnson might return, the man who basically said that EU citizens in the UK should not expect to feel at home in the UK and that it was a scandal that many of them did. Home Secretary Priti Patel labeled all of us "low-wage low skill cheap labor" and swore that our numbers would be reduced (which sounds pretty ominous). We've had so much of this anti-migrant rhetoric here from government politicians and the idea that we all came to the UK to claim benefits was already alive and kicking about 20 years ago, never mind that it was not even possible for us to claim benefits here until we had been here a number of years and never mind that we (that is, EU citizens) contributed 20 billion more to the UK than what we got in terms of benefits we asked for whereas the British population was a net drain on the government. When Sunak became PM, I was so oddly relieved that I realized that this affects me even more than I was already aware of. Sunak's a Conservative and I vote Green Party, sure, but we haven't heard any lowly anti-foreigner or anti-migrant rhetoric from him to my knowledge (even though he apparently was a proponent of Brexit) and he's a hard worker, not a party animal who has made a hobby out of mocking others. That said, I'm very concerned about the fact that he has chosen Suella Braverman as Home Secretary, she who dreams of shipping asylum seekers to Rwanda. (Many of us here write to the airlines etc hired in this scheme and more and more airlines are deciding to drop out of the Rwanda scheme, so it's not as if Braverman represents the opinion of most English people and she certainly does not echo the opinion of most Brits.) Since I moved to England, I've often held up my home country as an example of an egalitarian country, even though, like I just wrote, I was certainly aware of discrimination against foreigners there and have encountered it (such as a neighbor telling me that we now had a King from Morocco or something along those lines right after I moved back from the US, making me wonder for a moment if I had somehow missed some vital news). But this, how these algorithms worked in the Netherlands, it shocks me and I have trouble digesting this. It will take me a while to process this and place it into its proper framework. Because this is something I would expect from a government led by folks like Thierry Baudet and Geert Wilders (although Rita Verdonk made a lot of ugly noise too at the time and I was so pleased when she left). How on earth was this possible? How on earth did this slip by "under the radar", indeed? (I wrote the above at 13:35 and still need to watch the remainder of the video.)

  • @patricksnyder3582
    @patricksnyder3582 Před rokem

    0 likes ouch

  • @cartoons981
    @cartoons981 Před rokem

    not just big oil big commercial farms, that pollute air . water, AIR with poisonous chemicals, perfumes, colognes detergents, that most people breathe and goes into water farms , factories, that release poisonous gasses into air where is becomes impossible to breathe. and someone knows all this .but still trying to satisfy never ending want's of consuming humans . ''BIG OIL '' OWN courts and so called judges what ever that is

  • @Exodus26.13Pi
    @Exodus26.13Pi Před rokem

    Just over 50% in NYC and just under 40% nationally Black pregnancies terminated in America. The Negro Project

  • @TomM60
    @TomM60 Před 2 lety

    Here is the reason why gas prices are so high. Oil companies are sitting on top of areas loaded with oil but don't drill for it thanks to nitwits in the top ranks that are not for company profits but for hugging trees and this conspiracy theory that burning of gas and oil is hurting the world we live in. Even if all the oil companies quit drilling and extracting oil out of the ground the next time a few major volcanoes erupts that will be the end of clean air for years to come just as it happened before in the history of this planet.

  • @carolynbrightfield8911

    So, none of these recipients are responsible for children. Good to know. As someone who went hungry many times as I and my siblings watched my parents smoke and drink. Dad enjoyed the occasional flutter on the horses, good to know. But, then, Dad had a job, so he was spending his own hard-earned.

  • @l4n1skyy
    @l4n1skyy Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the wonderful speech!

  • @gr8tgee
    @gr8tgee Před 2 lety

    She clearly works for the system, she very well educated and articulate, she there to lower your guard whilst the government goes about the business of the ultimate Orwellian societal control.

  • @kalgandikota7075
    @kalgandikota7075 Před 2 lety

    One way to get over this caste discrimination and age-old self-imploding customs in South Asia is by active participation of lower castes and atheists in media, politics, government and businesses without the fear of getting killed. The oppressed staying in villages by working traditional jobs and demanding equal rights is just futile. How can one expect Governments filled with upper castes and their nepotistic foreign educated families to know about the problems of oppressed? Also if the NGOs in villages are not able to uplift lower castes and only engaged in religious conversions what's the benefit? Therefore there must be NGO programs to help Tribals, Dalits and other lower castes to find work in cities. You see Gujaratis have Hostels for Patels, Brahmins, Baniyas, Jains, Pharsis etc. in major cities for those working or studying at universities. Similarly there must be hostels for lower castes also who are working or studying at universities either for fee or free. That will help the marginalized communities to get closer to seats of political and business power to influence Government decisions. Another best way is to increase the number of multi-disciplinary universities in sciences, technologies, business and politics in South Asia. People are not born leaders, they are made. With best post-graduate education, the leaders will have ability to read documents, control impulses and make decisions rationally, be logical in their speaking etc. You see, Dr. BR Ambedkar was highly educated. Dr. Suraj Yengde is also highly educated. There are more names like that but for the size of India, the number of thinkers has to be on par with other nations. As those leaders die, there must be a new generation of leaders better than previous generations in communities. Then those educated will have ability to help others but also understand the importance of standard-of-living over fighting foolishly over religion, tribe, sect, caste, last-name, pin-code, race, region, language etc. After graduating, the alumni may strive to actively raise the standards of other universities that need them most. The pluralist intellectuals may come up with an online ranking for all universities based on diversity and its tolerance. With such ranking, the aspiring students may opt for those more diverse universities where they can study without distractions or discriminations of any kind thus becoming the light of their own communities, states and the nation. The ultimate aim of graduates and post-graduates from marginalized communities cannot be only finding Government Employment. This problem arose due to the license-raj capitalism under the garb of socialism. Not able to find Government employment cannot be end of a graduate's success in life. We must all ask which is better, unemployed-uneducated youth or unemployed-educated youth in India? As many in a nation as possible must be educated in graduate and post-graduate degrees to improve their loyalty to that particular country. Unemployed post-graduates are least worry to a country and majority may ultimately strive to be entrepreneurs, join civil services like IAS or IPS or armed forces, start NGOs, become politicians, go to foreign countries etc. ensuring India will also develop on par with China at least if not USA. A sovereign Democracy works only when a critical mass of the population of a nation is well versed in national, international politics and economics. With as much education as possible including higher education, India's future can be improved. People are not born leaders, they are made. With best post-graduate education, the leaders will have ability to read documents, control impulses and make decisions rationally, be logical in their speaking etc. For the population size of India, the number of thinkers has to be on par with other nations. Then those educated will have ability to help others also understand the importance of standard-of-living over fighting foolishly over religion, tribe, sect, race, language, region etc. Without a critical mass of educated intellectuals throughout India, there won't be much democracy in India how much ever one may try. Look, what’s happening to Myanmar & Afghanistan next door. CZcams video discussions are fine for the sake of chronological evidence of brain-storming sessions. However, one must also implement tangible ideas for the betterment of marginalized communities like Dalits, Adivasis, LGBT, marginalized OBCs and even the low-level labor stuck building railroads, airports and highways. In other words, voicing problems to make everyone aware is only like setting direction for an ideological journey. However one must also think about what all steps/tasks/vehicles are required for that journey to reach the successive mile-stones on that ideological journey. One must Plan, Organize, Execute and check the progress of that ideology or strategy among the masses. Without proper institutionalization, planning, execution and then quantification of the results, any activism is just another brute-force gathering which may succeed or fail due to random causes nobody ever thought about. For instance, the population of USA is only 33 crores. The population of India is over 139 crore people which is 4 times that of USA. With 4 times the population of USA and sunlight all over the year in most parts of India, the foremost thing is improving the effectiveness of India’s 139 crore people by educating as many of them as possible in tertiary education. According to the 2022 US News report of Best Global Universities Rankings, there are 282 globally ranked universities in USA with a population of just 33 crores and only 93 globally ranked universities in entire India with a population of over 139 crores which is more than 4 times USA. In other words, there is one world ranked university for around 11.5 lakhs people in USA. In India, there is one world ranked university for around 149.5 lakhs people implying that many states of India don’t have a world-ranked university at all provoking the intelligent youth of those states to start thinking whether they should leave the country or migrate to another Indian state. Therefore, increasing the number of universities and their global rankings must be the focus of all intellectuals and NGOs in India now so that India will have choicest man-power to work on not only latest sciences and technologies but also social and political reforms ultimately improving the overall standard of living of all and their families. When the overall standard of living of all communities is improved, then they will have time to discuss, debate, research and become more aware of their voting power inside universities and also outside in communities. Majority of Indians cannot be living like cattle in a cattle-shed and when someone wants to rent a few, the cattle-herders are happy to give them away. Also India cannot be an amusement park of stone-age for the rich travelers from developed countries and their kids. Therefore South Asia’s human resources must also be developed by educating as many as possible at Universities. For those who can’t pursue studies at Universities, there must be vocational colleges teaching them 21st century job skills so they either provide their services or start their own trades. Ever wonder how such small countries like Taiwan, Korea, Japan or Singapore doing such wonders in technologies and India, Nepal, Sri Lanka or Pakistan with their vast populations cannot do the same even with so called literacy and great religions. South Asian Governments only concentrated on basic literacy for so long and have not been paying as much attention to the tertiary studies at Universities of sciences, technologies, engineering, medicine etc. Due to inadequate number of universities with world standards, the number of South Asian startups, innovation and patent filings are way too less compared to East Asia let alone Europe or Nations of European Settlers. According to 2022 US News report of Best Global Universities Rankings, here is how South Asia compares to East Asia with respect to the number of world ranked universities in Sciences, Technologies, Engineering, Mathematics, Medical sciences etc. India(93)+Pakistan(17)+BanglaDesh(1)+Sri Lanka(2)+ Nepal(0)+Bhutan(0)+ Afghanistan(0)=113 China(309)+Japan(111)+S. Korea(58)+Taiwan(33)+Thailand(13)+Vietnam(5)+Singapore(4)=533 Innovation, Patents and startups appear to be directly proportional to the number of universities with world standard education in Sciences, technologies, engineering, mathematics, medical sciences, management etc. Therefore we must all make everyone understand what is meant by A KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS ON GLOBALIZATION. Same amount of metals in kitchen utensils gives less profit than a car or a smartphone. The difference is knowledge used to make a car, a micro-chip or a smartphone or other such high-tech product. The same weight of potatoes gives less profit than same weight of a bag of delicious chips. That’s the power of KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY. My dream is to see every university student in every university all over South Asia, given 247 access to a super-computer nearby so they can research on history, politics(local & international), jurisprudence, journalism, forensics, latest gadgets, medicines, AI, drones, robots, space crafts, global warming, climate change, biodiversity etc.

  • @yankalu2000
    @yankalu2000 Před 2 lety

    They killed the whole meaning of “trustworthiness”.

  • @elnorton7113
    @elnorton7113 Před 2 lety

    A liar, living on lying about his mother land to please the imperialist

  • @archieus7752
    @archieus7752 Před 2 lety

    “Junk the project”? Lol, what nonsense.

  • @randymurphy
    @randymurphy Před 2 lety

    Excellent presentation. I'd like to introduce the idea of techo-bigotry. This considers all races, genders, and cultures as equally susceptible to discrimination based on some form of technological advantage. Today, one of the most prevalent examples are vaccines, which are a technology in and of themselves, along with their associated vaccine passports a.k.a. "vaxxports" that segregate people regardless of their race, gender, color, culture, religion, into two groups - the pharmaceutically enhanced, and the non-pharmaceutically enhanced. Listen in at 1:16:13 for some related commentary that deals with the colored component. Somewhat ironically, some people typically associated with groups that have been the target of racism in the past, can now gain more civil liberties than those who were considered to be their oppressors, simply by taking a pharmaceutical injection, and we have seen examples where people from such groups are exhibiting considerable discrimination against others whose status is not at their level due to them being not being pharmaceutically enhanced. It's as if now that they suddenly have the power, it's perfectly okay for them to abuse it simply because it's not racially based - and the cycle continues.

  • @zongora123
    @zongora123 Před 2 lety

    0:05 - Introduction 1:57 - Background & aims for the session 3:59 - Explanation of how a human rights perspective adds value to a discussion about Social Credit 6:40 - Introduction to Social Credit and introducing Dr. Chenchen Zhang 8:23 - Explanation of the misconceptions relating to Social Credit and why misconceptions have spread 14:13 - What is Social Credit? 28:37 - What are the common threads across the programs, and how are different notions of trustworthiness understood across different Social Credit programs? 32:30 - What are the fears and realities in relation to human rights and Social Credit? In terms of realities, what is the actual impact of the blacklist for employers found guilty of non-payment of wages of migrant workers? Does the Social Credit system divert attention from the structural causes of wage non-payment? 37:06 - What are the impacts on individuals who are blacklisted on the People’s Court blacklist of judgment defaulters? What harms are caused, and what should we be concerned about? 42:42 - Is there any information about the degree of support among people in China for specific parts of the Social Credit system? Is there, for example, more support for corporate blacklists than individual blacklists? 45:50 - What are the human rights fears relating to scoring schemes in particular, which have received the most attention in the West. How do fears surrounding scoring systems for individuals relate to a fear that the government will not only link public sector databases, but also connect these to corporate databases? 49:44 - To what extent are unequal impacts and experimentation on vulnerable populations a feature of the Social Credit systems? Audience Q&A 55:55 - Noting that there are multiple drivers behind the schemes, some economic/financial and some political/moral, which do you think will triumph at the end of the day, to the extent that there are tensions between them? And to what extent could this system backfire on the government? 57:05 - If information stored in Social Credit systems is false, can citizens demand rectification? Is there a central venue for grievances? What processes or remedies do governmental and commercial scoring systems have in place in case of wrong or erroneous blacklisting? 59:22 - Christiaan’s closing remarks

  • @kymbrown1614
    @kymbrown1614 Před 2 lety

    thank you for this information

  • @amirtaubayev4267
    @amirtaubayev4267 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, Dr.Meron

  • @shawnhammlett4174
    @shawnhammlett4174 Před 3 lety

    Digital ID = Mark of the Beast

  • @shawnhammlett4174
    @shawnhammlett4174 Před 3 lety

    666

  • @Ludvio
    @Ludvio Před 3 lety

    load of crap

  • @nxgrs74
    @nxgrs74 Před 3 lety

    1) By reflecting away 30% of ISR the albedo, which would not exist w/o the atmosphere/GHGs, renders the earth cooler than it would be without that atmosphere like that reflective panel set behind the windshield. Remove the atmosphere/GHGs and the earth would become much like the Moon and Mercury, a barren rock with a 0.1 albedo, 20% more kJ/h, hot^3 on the lit side, cold^3 on the dark. Nikolov, Kramm (U of AK) and UCLA Diviner mission all tacitly agree. 2) the GHG up/down welling, “trapping”/”back” radiating/delaying/intercepting, 100 % efficient, perpetual warming loop requires "extra" energy which according to RGHE theory comes from 3) the terrestrial surface radiating "extra" energy as a LWIR ideal black body which 4) cannot happen because of the non-radiative heat transfer processes of the contiguous atmospheric molecules and as demonstrated by experiment, the gold standard of classical science: principia-scientific.org/debunking-the-greenhouse-gas-theory-with-a-boiling-water-pot/ 1+2+3+4 = 0 Greenhouse Effect + 0 Greenhouse gas warming + 0 man caused climate change.