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The Future of Work; Will the intended users trust the automation?

April 30, 2021 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm UTC+0

Free

Invited Speaker

Susan Hasty

Graduate of East Carolina University (Greenville, NC) and holds a BSBA in Business and Psychology.

Certificate of attendance available

This week Susan Hasty will make a presentation \”The Future of Work; Will the intended users trust the automation?\” followed by a discussion.

As industries and markets are reshaped by platforms and ecosystem innovations, the social rules that define professional roles and identities will undergo massive changes due to AI and blockchain. How will these changes impact social capital, social \”currencies\” and community resilience?

Susan will make a brief presentation on the nexus of research regarding platform design, business model evolution & collaboration engineering and co-facilitate group discussion exploring how community resilience might be impacted by these sociotechnical and socioeconomic changes and if Social Capital research could support a better trajectory.

 

About the presenter:

Susan Hasty has over 30 years experience as a serial entrepreneur in multiple industries including real estate, commercial finance and business consulting.
Her passion for business architecture, organizational design and human development, fueled by her work with organizations and curiosity to learn more about how strategy, structures and governance impact economic performance, led her on a multi-year research journey. Her findings draw from multiple fields of research including Information Management, Technology Architecture & Design, Knowledge Management, Cognitive Science, Physics, Complexity Science and Evolutionary Economics. Susan is a Graduate of East Carolina University (Greenville, NC) and holds a BSBA in Business and Psychology.

About Our Webinar Series

This event is part of our regular webinar sessions for social capital researchers including PhD/master students. These sessions include invited presentations from prominent scholars as well as presentations by PhD students and experts in professional practice.

For social capital researchers, these sessions are an opportunity to hear about the latest social capital research and insights from scholars working on the concept. They can be a great way to connect with people, to get advice, discuss ideas or issues, get suggestions for literature to read, or you can just listen.

Are you researching social capital and want to present your research? Click here for more information and to submit a proposal.

Generally, presentations can be 20 to 30 mins. The content of your presentation will depend on your research stage.

Details

Date:
April 30, 2021
Time:
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm UTC+0
Cost:
Free

Venue

Organiser

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