From CU Boulder Today: Researchers (including Sandra Ristovska, assistant professor of media studies), share their expertise, examining four areas in which the U.S. hasāāand hasnātāāchanged this past year, and what it could mean for the future of social and political movements, education, policing and justice in America.
With the award of a $108,000 Mellon/American Council of Learned Societies Scholars and Society Fellowship, Assistant Professor Sandra Ristovska is undertaking the first rigorous publicly engaged research project to address the intricacies of āseeingā in court. Working in partnership with the American Bar Associationās Scientific Evidence Committee, her project will systematically examine the use of video as evidence in state and federal court trials (1990-2020) in criminal, immigration and American Indian law.
Harsha Gangadharbatla, associate professor of advertising at the College of Media, Communication and Information, is the newest president of the American Academy of Advertising (AAA) and the first ĄÖ²„“«Ć½ Boulder professor to earn the title. Established in 1958, AAAās mission is to provide a platform for its academic and professional members to exchange ideas that are relevant to the field of advertising. The organization has over 600 advertising scholars and professionals dedicated to advancing advertising knowledge and education globally.
For the next chapter in her career, Assistant Professor Casey Fieslerāāwho studies technology ethics, internet law and policy, and online communitiesāāwill launch a five-year research project on ethical speculation in technology design. Her work will be supported by a $549,513 CAREER grant from the National Science Foundationāāone of the most prestigious awards given to faculty in the early phases of their careers.
Itās inevitable that at some point we must all āget our affairs in order,ā and when we do, there are checklists, policies and professionals to help create everything from wills and trusts to advance directives. But a key elementāāguidance surrounding technology and end-of-life planningāāis missing. Assistant Professor Jed Brubaker will work to close this gap through a five-year research project supported by a prestigious NSF CAREER grant.
The Communication assistant professor was one of four winners. The award recognizes significant achievements of university community members in developing a culturally and intellectually diverse university community, reflective of inclusive excellence. Awardees, each of whom received $2,000, engage in meaningful diversity activities beyond their primary CU responsibilities.
Morgan Klaus Scheuerman, an Information Science PhD student, has been awarded the Microsoft Research Fellowship for 2021. He studies how and why facial recognition technologies get it wrong.
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