Up to four PhD scholarships are available for research into the relationship of trust to news media, digital platforms, public institutions, and artificial intelligence.
You will be working with a collaborative team of researchers led by ARC Laureate Fellow Professor Terry Flew on the Mediated Trust: ideas, interests, Institutions, Futures project.
Trust has been described as a feeling of safety and security; an attitude of way of thinking and disposition to action; and a relationship between a person and others. Trust has been described as an invisible institution, whose existence is hard to measure and is more often observed in its absence than in its everyday role.
Communication is central to social trust, as seen with concepts such as mediatization, misinformation and post-truth. A central premise of the concept of mediated trust is that something has fundamentally changed in the contemporary public sphere linked to the rise of the Internet and digital technologies. The blurring of lines between experienced reality and that which is digitally mediated generate new forms of sociality and social identity, civic engagement, political polarization and cultural practice. Mediated trust points to the relationship of trust to technology, whether through online news, digital platforms, digital governance or artificial intelligence.
PhD projects in this program will involve in-depth comparative and case study work exploring mediated trust in relation to news, digital platforms, institutions or AI. You will be working with a project team which includes post-doctoral research fellows and data scientists in the Media and Communication discipline Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.
These positions provide the chance to further research capabilities through international travel and the opportunity to tackle a major issue of our time whilst building research capability and working in one of the world’s leading universities. Successful candidates will also be affiliated with the new Centre for Artificial Intelligence, Trust and Governance at The University of Sydney.
The three-year scholarship is part of an Australian Research Council-funded Laureate Fellowship, and is open to Australian and New Zealand citizens and international applicants.
The successful applicant will have a degree in the arts and social sciences, and experience with qualitative research methods. Experience with digital tools and methods will be advantageous.
Benefits
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- Excellent supervision and mentorship from internationally leading researchers.
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- Opportunities for engagement with industry professionals and policy makers.
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- Development of high impact research published in world leading field journals.
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- Engagement with a range of research methods including digital research methods.
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- Working with a collaborative research team addressing issues of high public significance.
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- Affiliation with the newly established Centre for AI, Trust and Governance as an interdisciplinary research centre.