Dear colleagues, The international conference "*Profile, Predict and Prevent. Data-Driven Policies, Markets and Societies*", organised by the CERSA (CNRS-Paris 2 University) will be held Friday 30th and Saturday 31st October in Paris. Entrance is free, but due to limited seating *registration is required*. Please find below the detailed programme and the precise location of the event. For the organisation committee, Danièle Bourcier Primavera de Filippi Benjamin Loveluck http://cersa.cnrs.fr/profile-predict-and-prevent ---------- PROFILE, PREDICT AND PREVENT *Data-driven policies, markets and societies* October 30-31, 2015 Salle des Conseils, Université Paris II, 12 Place du Panthéon, 75005 Paris Centre d'Études et de Recherches de Sciences Administratives et Politiques (CERSA) CNRS / PARIS II UNIVERSITY *Friday, October 30th* Welcome Coffee 09:30 - 10:00 Welcoming remarks: Michel Borgetto, Primavera De Filippi & Daniele Bourcier 10:00 - 10:45 - Keynote — Antoinette Rouvroy (Université de Namur) ------------------------------ 11:00 - 12:00 Panel 1 : Socio-legal implications of data-driven profiling - Dean Wilson: Pop tarts and crime: Big Data and the dreams of predictive policing - Bilel Benbouzid: Predictive policing, from neoliberal to libertarian algorithmic governmentality. - Marie Goupy: Prevention policies and proclamation of the state of exception after the 11 September: a contradiction? 12:00 - 12:30 Panel 1 Discussion -- moderated by Daniele Bourcier ------------------------------ Lunch break ------------------------------ 14:00 - 15:00 Panel 2: Surveillance & algorithmical governance - Christophe Lazaro: Control over personal data? Tips, tricks and tactics in the big data era - Serge Abiteboul: Responsibilities of algorithms and data 15:00 - 15:30 Panel 2 discussion -- moderated by Primavera De Filippi ------------------------------ 15:30 - 16:30 Panel 3: Big data, borders and mobility - Btihaj Ajana: Ethics and the datafication of borders - Gemma Galdon Clavell: Big data border 16:30 - 17:00 Panel 3 discussion ------------------------------ 17:30 - 19:00 Reception *Saturday, October 31st* Welcome Coffee 09:15 - 10:00 Keynote — David Lyon (Queen’s University, Ontario) ------------------------------ 10:00 - 11:00 Panel 4: Unveiling the practice of profiling - Gert Meyers: Personal data tracking in insurance: from solidarity to fairness? - Jeremy Grosman: Automating normality: Detecting abnormal behaviors – A case-study in computational visions - Jean-Amos Lecat-Deschamps: Les dispositifs de sécurité intelligents : marqueurs d’un dépassement de la biopolitique? 11:00 - 11:30 Panel 4 discussion ------------------------------ 12:00 - 13:00 Panel 5: Reflexions on data-driven policing - Martin Degeling: On the vagueness of online profiling - Cyril Piotrowicz: Criminological study of “predictive policing” about homeland security : toward a “predictive prevention”? - Anne-Mette Albrechtslund & Anders Albrechtslund: Reading, tracking and intimacy: The dynamics and implications of a digitized culture - Maša Savič: Big Data on the street: Discerning the facts and fictions of big data-driven surveillance of public space using the case study of Stratumseind ------------------------------ 13:00 - 13:15 Closing remarks: Primavera De Filippi & Daniele Bourcier