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Reimagining Digital Ethics: Navigating the Intersection of Digital Life, Career, and Social Justice

This article explores the importance of new forms of digital ethics in our increasingly digital lives, focusing on the intersection of digital identity, affective capitalistic platforms, and ethical communicative norms. It highlights the need for education in digital ethics and emphasizes equitable access, everyday and collective consequences, digital archives, and constructive civic and community engagement.

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Reimagining Digital Ethics: Navigating the Intersection of Digital Life, Career, and Social Justice

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  1. Digital life, career and social justice: The case for new forms of digital ethics. Dr Rachel Buchanan School of Education University of Newcastle

  2. Digital life? What do I mean by a digital life?

  3. Identity -> Algorithmic Identity

  4. Affective capitalistic platforms

  5. Digital life is dependent on the non-digital

  6. Ethical Communicative Norms

  7. Education for digital ethics • Digital is an extension of the non-digital • Equitable access • Everyday and collective consequences • Digital archive • Constructive civic and community engagement

  8. References @rayedish boyd, d. (2014). it's complicated: the social lives of networked teens. New Haven: Yale University Press. Elias, T., Honda, L., Kimmel, M. & Chong, J. (2016). A mixed methods examination of 21stcentury hiring processes, social networking sites, and implicit bias. TheJournal of Social Media in Society, 5(1), 189-227. Emejulu, A. & McGregor, C. (2016). Towards a radical digital citizenship in digital education, Critical Studies in Education, doi: 10.1080/17508487.2016.1234494 Flores, A. & James, C. (2012). Morality and ethics behind the screen: Young people’s perspectives on digital life. New Media and Society, 15(6), 834-852 Luke, A., Sefton-Green, J., Graham, P., Kellner, D. & Ladwig, J. (2017). Digital ethics, political economy and the curriculum: This changes everything. In K. Mills, A. Stornaiuolo& J. Pandya-Zacher(Eds.), Handbook of Writing, Literacies and Education in Digital Culture (ch. 20). New York: Routledge. O’Neill, O. (2009). Ethics for Communication? European Journal of Philosophy, 17(2), 167-180 Terranova, T. (2000). Free labor: Producing culture for the digital economy. Social Text 63, 18(2), 33- 58

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