Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BehindAI (Building Responsible Technology: Global Digital Transformations, Tech Workers’ Agency and the Making of Artificial Intelligence)
Période du rapport: 2023-04-01 au 2025-03-31
And yet, the driving force behind the development and maintenance of the incredibly expansive technology ecosystem sustaining modern digital life – apps, websites or platforms used by millions of workers and clients across the globe – is actually to be found in a sprawling network of tech consultancy companies. These employ hundreds of thousands of tech workers spread across tech powerhouses in the Majority World, such as India or Brazil, in various forms of subcontracting or outsourcing contracts with clients based in Europe or the US.
But who are these workers? In which way are their life trajectories, rooted in Southern Asia or Latin America, coming to inform their views about technology, the conception they have of their own work, and their very experiences in the industry? And how is the international division of labour that structures the global software services industry shaping both their work environment and the kinds of technologies they build?
Through these dialogues with these technologists, it is indeed the many social, cultural and political challenges of tech consultancy in a context of global division of labour that become visible. These include highlighting the many repercussions and boundaries associated with developing technologies as workers (in a wage labour relation with a private company, itself working for another company) and consultants (in a commercial relationship where the technologists’ working hours, knowledge and skills became the products to be sold to a client) from the Majority World (in a neocolonial relation with both companies and clients based in the Minority World).
A second dimension arising from the very dynamic of global software development teams is the imposition of Global Business English as the de facto workplace lingua franca, in either non-English speaking (Brazil) or highly multilingual (India) societies. Facing European or North American clients or managers very often with no multi-linguistic experience or knowledge of the social and cultural backgrounds of the Majority World’s team members, this dynamic of coloniality through language has a significant impact on the production of subjectivities in these global remote tech workplaces. It hinders the technologists’ abilities to deploy and be recognized for the full range of their knowledge and skills, and putting them at greater risk of discriminatory hiring practices and making them more vulnerable to poor performance reviews or even lay-offs.