Workshop 2: Política de la IA

Actores, políticas, geopolítica y resistencias

Programa sobre la política de la inteligencia artificial: actores, políticas públicas, geopolítica, economía política, opinión pública y resistencias.

2-3 octubre 2025
Barcelona
Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals

Jueves, 2 de octubre

09:00-09:20
Registro y café de bienvenida
09:20-10:00
AI's Political Disruptions: Mapping the Winners and Losers at Varying Rates of Change
Helen Milner, Princeton University
10:00-10:40
The Political Economy of Automation and Global Production in a Global Context: Evidence from Mexico
Erica Owen, University of Pittsburgh / Carles Boix
10:40-11:20
Labor Shocks and the Future of Capitalism
Leonardo Baccini, McGill University
11:20-11:40
Pausa café
11:40-12:20
Mapping Digital Governance and Artificial Intelligence in European Parliamentary Debates
Bastian González, Leiden University
12:20-13:00
AI Governance with Policy Portfolios
Xavier Fernández i Marin, Universitat de Barcelona
13:00-14:00
Comida
14:00-14:40
Data Commodification and Regulation in the Tech Sector: A Structural Topic Modeling Approach
Andrew Alexander, San Jose State University
14:40-15:20
Geopolitics in the digital age: The US-China competition through their narratives on digital technologies
Juan Pablo Soriano, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
15:20-15:40
Pausa café
15:40-16:20
Trust in Care Robotics for the Elderly: Innovative Care in Nursing Homes?
Ixchel Perez and Joaquin Rozas, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
16:20-17:00
The Data Center Dilemma: understanding public preferences on the tradeoffs between the green and digital transition
Jonas Heering, Georgetown University
17:00-17:40
Aspiration and Disillusion. The Impact of AI-driven Shocks in Occupational Expectations on Meritocratic Beliefs and Redistribution
Gaetano Inglese, London School of Economics
20:00
Cena de la conferencia
Por invitación, en A restaurant, plaça Sant Felip Neri

Viernes, 3 de octubre

09:00-09:20
Café de bienvenida
09:20-10:00
Will Robots and AI Steal your Job? Public Opinion, Technological Change and Political Mobilization
Alberto Parmigiani, Free University of Bolzano
10:00-10:40
Unfair and contestable? Union membership and beliefs about inequality in Western Europe and the United States
Michael Becher, IE University
10:40-11:20
Big Tech, Big Risk? How Education and Ideology Shape Public Attitudes toward Big Tech Companies
Tobias Tober, Konstanz University
11:20-11:40
Pausa café
11:40-12:20
Are LLMs Persuasive Because They Are Non-Partisan?
Matthew DiGiuseppe, Leiden University
12:20-13:00
Understanding the General Public's Attribution of AI Governance Responsibility: A Cross-National Survey
Clara Juarez, University of Barcelona and Hao Xu, University of Melbourne
13:00-14:00
Comida
14:00-14:40
The impact of AI on Electoral Outcomes: Evidence from the US
Felipe Carlos Balcazar, University College London
14:40-15:20
Algorithmic Influence in Elections: Auditing Microsoft Copilot's Role in Shaping Political Information During the 2024 EU Elections
Salvatore Romano, UOC
15:20-15:40
Pausa café
15:40-16:20
What If You See It? Workers' Perceptions of and Reactions to LLMs
Massimo Anelli, Italo Colantone, Aina Gallego and Piero Stanig
16:20-16:50
Conclusiones
Carles Boix, Princeton University

Asistencia: La convocatoria original invitaba a las personas interesadas a contactar con Aina Gallego.