FELICIA JING
POLITICAL THEORY + AI RESEARCHER
Department of Political Science,
Johns Hopkins University
Thomas J. Watson Research Center,
IBM Research
Johns Hopkins University
Thomas J. Watson Research Center,
IBM Research
I am a PhD Candidate in political theory at Johns Hopkins University. Since 2022, I have also concurrently worked as a full-time researcher at IBM Research. There, I interact daily with algorithmic systems, observe their design and development, and conduct AI audits using methods from the humanities.
My research seeks to restage dominant histories of computing as histories of political struggle. In my dissertation project, titled AI and Revolutionary Desire, I locate untimely algorithms across the history of political and economic thought, especially in the technological imaginations of utopian political projects and competing discourses on central planning. The first chapter is forthcoming in Political Concepts: A Critical Lexicon.
In addition to my dissertation research, I also have two accepted articles: one in Social Text on the colonial studies of the platform and the other in Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, and Technoscience on workplace AI and emerging strategies of accumulation in the tech industry. Moreover, as part of my work at IBM, I publish empirical research in information science and human-computer interaction venues like ACM FAccT and CSCW.
From 2024-2026, my research will be supported by grants from the Notre Dame-IBM Tech Ethics Lab and the National Endowment for the Humanities.