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No Harm Done #2: Risk, Technology, and Climate
19 May @ 6:00 pm AEST

No Harm Done continues its exploration of ethical, sustainable pathways for technology with its second installment focusing on the critical intersection of risk, technology, and climate. This event brings together three leading voices who are reshaping how we understand and respond to technological systems and their impacts on our communities and environment.
As technological systems increasingly shape our response to climate challenges, we face urgent questions about risk, power, and democratic control. Who benefits from these systems? Who bears the costs? And how might we build alternatives that truly serve the many, not the few?
No Harm Done #2 brings together three pioneering thinkers who are not just critiquing extractive technological systems but actively building and supporting real-world alternatives. From platform cooperatives operating across 60+ countries to local government innovation labs and critical analyses of “smart” technologies, this event cuts through techno-optimist narratives to explore how communities are taking back control of their digital futures.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

Trebor Schulz
An associate professor at The New School and Faculty Associate at Harvard’s Berkman Klein Center, he coined the concept of “platform cooperativism” to describe worker-owned digital platforms that advance economic, social, and environmental justice. His work combines analysis, organizing, education, and institution-building—and has improved the lives of over a million workers globally.
Scholz founded the Platform Cooperativism Consortium (PCC) and the Institute for the Cooperative Digital Economy (ICDE), which support research and practice across more than 60 countries. From AI co-ops to community-run data centers and food delivery networks powered by worker-owners, his focus is on functioning alternatives, not solely theoretical analysis. A global keynote speaker and author of Own This! and Uberworked and Underpaid, his contributions have shaped practice, policy, and scholarship.

Jathan Sadowski
Dr. Jathan Sadowski studies the political economy and social theory of information technology at Monash University’s Emerging Technologies Research Lab. His research focuses on the political economy of insurance technology and the socio-economic impacts of this “risky business” on our lives and future. Author of “Too Smart: How Digital Capitalism is Extracting Data, Controlling Our Lives, and Taking Over the World” and “The Mechanic and the Luddite,” Sadowski’s work demystifies the material relations underlying technological systems and advocates for democratically reclaiming power over technology—ensuring it works “for the many, not the few.”

Bonnie Shaw
Bonnie Shaw leads MAVlab, an innovative initiative by Victoria’s Municipal Association supporting local governments as they navigate complex social, environmental, and technological challenges. With experience as Practice Lead for Australia’s first award-winning smart cities team at the City of Melbourne and as co-founder of a successful data analytics startup, Shaw brings a unique perspective to civic innovation. Her approach is “data informed, wilfully optimistic and wildly collaborative,” with a focus on achieving better outcomes for people, places, and the planet through local government innovation.