Dr Kate Miltner
BA (Columbia), MSc (LSE), MA (USC Annenberg), PhD (USC Annenberg)
Information School
Lecturer in Data, AI & Society
Full contact details
Information School
Room C224
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
91探花
S10 2AH
- Profile
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I joined the Information School as a Lecturer in Data, AI, and Society in 2022. Prior to that, I was a Marie Sk艂odowska-Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellow at The University of Edinburgh. I received my PhD in Communication in 2019 from the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California. Before becoming an academic, I worked in the creative and tech industries across the US and UK; some of the places I have worked include Microsoft, Twitter, Saatchi & Saatchi, and The Engine Group.
My research explores issues of power and inequality in digital systems, institutions, and cultures. It examines how, and in what forms ,power circulates through digital ecosystems, how structural inequalities are (re)produced within and across digital contexts, and how power and inequality shape what happens鈥攁nd for whom鈥攊n digital spaces.
My work has appeared in the peer-reviewed journals New Media & Society, Science, Technology and Human Values, Social Media + Society, International Journal of Communication, First Monday, Feminist Media Studies, and Mobile Media and Communication. My research and expertise have been featured in global media including Wired, Slate, The Atlantic, The Guardian, Financial Times, Al Jazeera, and the BBC. I have also received Best Paper awards from the International Communication Association and National Communication Association.University responsibilities
- Deputy Ethics Coordinator
- Research interests
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My current research focuses on the discourse and business of 鈥渓earning to code鈥 and interrogates the widespread claim that digital skills offer a gateway to equity for under-represented groups in an increasingly digital economy. My EU-funded project is the first major study of coding & skills bootcamps in the United Kingdom and investigates the relationship between their values, norms, and practices and the (re)production of inequalities.
In addition to my work on digital skills, industry, and economy, I have been researching digital cultures for over a decade. My work in this area has a particular focus on the politics of inclusion and exclusion within digital cultures, especially concerning issues of gender and race. My published work in this area has covered topics including internet memes, influencer communities, networked misogyny, and social media nostalgia.
My research also explores the politics of how digital platforms & formats are developed and used. In this work, I explore how seemingly 鈥榯rivial鈥 digital objects reflect significant power dynamics. I have researched the cultural significance of selfies and the animated GIF file format, as well as racialized representation in emoji. My current work on platformed solidarity (with Dr Tim Highfield) explores how digital platforms and brands participate in 鈥渨oke capitalism鈥 by changing their affordances in response to current events.I am interested in supervising PhDs on topics that take a critical approach to sociotechnical issues and topics, including (but not limited to):
- Politics of Digital Technologies
- Inequality and the digital
- Digital identities and online communities
- Technical industries and cultures
- Sociotechnical practices and assemblages
I am primarily a qualitative researcher and am experienced in a variety of methods, including ethnography, interviews, discourse analysis, visual methods, digital archival methods, the walkthrough method, platform biographies, and other critical digital methods.
- Publications
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Journal articles
- . Information & Culture, 57(3), 255-282.
- . New Media & Society, 24(7), 1657-1676.
- . Internet Histories, 6(1-2), 48-67.
- . New Media and Society, 24(10), 2291-2310.
- . New Media and Society, 23(3), 515-534.
- . Science, Technology, & Human Values, 44(1), 161-176.
- . Social Media + Society, 3(3), 205630511772522-205630511772522.
- . Feminist Media Studies, 16(1), 171-174.
- . Social Media + Society, 1(2), 205630511560399-205630511560399.
- The selfie of the year of the selfie: Reflections on a media scandal. International Journal of Communication, 9(1), 1701-1715.
- . Mobile Media & Communication, 2(2), 134-153.
- Critiquing big data: Politics, ethics, epistemology. International Journal of Communication, 8(1), 1663-1672.
- . First Monday, 19(8).
- Critiquing Big Data: Politics, Ethics, Epistemology Special Section Introduction. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 8, 1663-1672.
- 鈥淎.I. is holding a mirror to our society鈥 Lensa and the Discourse of Visual Generative AI. Journal of Digital Social Research.
- . Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies.
- . First Monday.
Chapters
- Rupaul鈥檚 drag race keyboard: Affect and resistance through visual communication, Appified: Culture in the Age of Apps (pp. 289-298).
- , The SAGE Handbook of Social Media (pp. 412-428). SAGE Publications Ltd
Working papers
- Teaching activities
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Module Co-ordinator for:
- INF109 - Digital Media and Society
I also teach on:
- INF214 - Using Data for responsible Decision Making
- INF6024 - Researching Social Media
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Member, Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR)
- Member, International Communication Association Media Industry Studies Interest Group;
- Member, UKRI Early Career Researchers Forum