Home Business & Management Corporate Strategy Innovation Strategy
Responsible Innovation: Ethics, Safety and Technology

Responsible Innovation: Ethics, Safety and Technology

How to deal with risks and ethical questions raised by development of new technologies.
Video Beginner Advanced
Gallery
Description

There is no doubt that technological innovation is one of the key elements driving human progress.

However, new technologies also raise ethical questions, have serious implications for society and the environment and pose new risks, often unknown and unknowable before the new technologies reach maturity. They may even lead to radical disruptions. Just think about robots, self-driving vehicles, medical engineering and the Internet of Things.

They are strongly dependent on social acceptance and cannot escape public debates of regulation and ethics. If we want to innovate, we have to do that responsibly. We need to reflect on –and include- our societal values in this process. This course will give you a framework to do so.

The first part of the course focuses on ethical questions/framework and concerns with respect to new technologies.

The second part deals with (unknown) risks and safety of new technologies including a number of qualitative and quantitative risk assessment methods.

The last part of the course is about the new, value driven, design process which take into account our societal concerns and conflicting values.

Case studies (ethical concerns, risks) for reflection and discussions during the course include – among others- nanotechnology, self-driving vehicles, robots, AI smart meters for electricity, autonomous weapons, nuclear energy and CO2capture and coolants. Affordable (frugal) innovations for low-income groups and emerging markets are also covered in the course. You can test and discuss your viewpoint.

The course is for all engineering students who are looking for a methodical approach to judge responsible innovations from a broader – societal- perspective.


Pricing:
Free
Level:
Intermediate
Duration:
7 weeks, 4h-6h/week
Educator:
Jeroen van den Hoven
Organization:
Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Submitted by:
Coursearena
Reviews
Would you recomment this course to a friend?
Discussion
There are no comments yet. Please sign in to start the discussion.