Genevieve Bell | |||||||||||||||
13th Vice-Chancellor of the Australian National University | |||||||||||||||
Term Start: | 1 January 2024 | ||||||||||||||
Chancellor: | Julie Bishop | ||||||||||||||
Predecessor: | Brian Schmidt | ||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Australia | ||||||||||||||
Nationality: | Australian | ||||||||||||||
Alma Mater: | Bryn Mawr College Stanford University | ||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Cultural Anthropologist Distinguished Professor | ||||||||||||||
Module: |
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Genevieve Bell is the Vice-Chancellor of the Australian National University and an Australian cultural anthropologist. She is best known for her work at the intersection of cultural practice research and technological development (including as a pioneer in the field of futurist research[1]), and for being an industry pioneer of the user experience field.[2] Bell was the inaugural director of the Autonomy, Agency and Assurance Innovation Institute (3Ai), which was co-founded by the Australian National University (ANU) and CSIRO’s Data61, and a Distinguished Professor of the ANU College of Engineering, Computing and Cybernetics.[3] [4] From 2021 to December 2023, she was the inaugural Director of the new ANU School of Cybernetics. She also holds the university's Florence Violet McKenzie Chair,[5] [6] and is the first SRI International Engelbart Distinguished Fellow. Bell is also a Senior Fellow and Vice President at Intel. She is widely published, and holds 13 patents.
Daughter of renowned Australian anthropologist, Diane Bell, Genevieve Bell was born in Sydney and raised in a range of Australian communities, including Melbourne, Canberra, and in several Aboriginal Communities in the Northern Territory.[7] [8] [9] Bell attended university in the United States, where she graduated from Bryn Mawr College[7] in 1990 with a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Philosophy in anthropology. She went on to attend Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, for graduate studies.[7] [8] In 1993, Bell earned her master's degree from Stanford, followed by a PhD in 1998, both in anthropology.[7] Her doctoral research focused on the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, which operated in rural Pennsylvania in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
From 1996 to 1998, Bell taught anthropology and Native American Studies at Stanford University, in both the Department of Anthropology and Department of Anthropological Sciences, as well as in the Continuing Studies Program.
Bell was recruited from her faculty position by Intel Corporation in 1998 to help build out their nascent social-science research competency in the advanced research and development labs.[10] [11] She was based at one of the company's campuses in Hillsboro, Oregon, where she worked as a cultural anthropologist, studying how different cultures around the globe used technology.[10] [11] [12] She and her colleagues helped reorient Intel to a more market-inspired and experience-driven approach, and she is widely credited with establishing "user experience" as a recognised competency at Intel.[13]
Bell started Intel's first User Experience Group in 2005, as part of Intel's Digital Home Group. The company named her an Intel Fellow, their highest technical rank, in November 2008, for her work in the Digital Home Group.[14] She rejoined the advanced research and development labs in 2010, when Intel made her the director of their newly forming User Experience Research group.[10] This group was Intel's first fully integrated user experience research and development group; they worked on questions of big data, smart transportation, next generation image technology and ideas about fear and wonder.[13] After steering that group to a range of successes inside and outside the company, she was made a vice president in 2014 and senior fellow in 2016.
Bell's impact has been recognised repeatedly outside Intel.[15] In 2010, she was named one of the Top 25 Women in Technology to Watch by AlwaysOn and as one of the 100 Most Creative People in Business by Fast Company.[8] [16] In 2012, Bell was inducted to the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame[17] and in 2013, she was named Anita Borg’s Women of Vision in Leadership. In 2014, she was included in Elle Magazine's first list of influential women in technology[18] and also included in a new exhibit at London's Design Museum profiling 25 women from around the world.[19]
Bell was also a Thinker in Residence for South Australia from 2008 to 2010.[20] Her visiting appointment was intended to help guide government policy surrounding a new national broadband initiative. Bell conducted ethnographic research and developed new innovative research methods to identify barriers to adoption and drivers around broadband uptake. Her final report, “Getting Connected, staying connected: exploring the role of new technology in Australian society” is available online.[21]
After 18 years as Intel's resident anthropologist in Silicon Valley, Bell returned to Australia in 2017 as the first of five appointments under the ANU Vice-Chancellor Brian Schmidt's Entrepreneurial Fellows scheme. She is a distinguished professor at the ANU College of Engineering, Computing and Cybernetics, where she initially focused on "exploring how to bring together data science, design thinking and ethnography to drive new approaches in engineering; and ... exploring the questions of what it means to be human in a data-driven economy and world".[4] She is the university's inaugural appointee of the Florence Violet McKenzie Chair, named in honour of Australia's first female electrical engineer and lifelong proponent of technical education for women.
In 2017, the ANU announced a major 10-year plan to drive the expansion of its program in engineering and computer science. The expansion in part was to be led by Bell as the director of the newly founded Autonomy, Agency and Assurance Institute, to be known as the 3A Institute or 3Ai, co-founded by Australian National University and CSIRO’s Data61, Australia's largest data innovation network.[22] The 3A Institute brings together a diverse team from a range of disciplines to tackle complex problems around artificial intelligence, data and technology and managing their impact on humanity.
Since returning to Australia, Bell's expertise in the field of AI development and regulation has been recognised by government and industry. At the 2016 Advance Awards, Bell received the Award for Technology Innovation and Overall 2016 Advance Global Australian Award.[23] In October 2018, Bell was elected as a fellow of the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (ATSE), a not-for-profit organisation which brings together leading minds in technology and engineering from academia, government and industry sectors.[24] She was also appointed to the National Science and Technology Advisory Council among other members including Nobel Laureate and ANU Vice-Chancellor Brian Schmidt and Chair Prime Minister Scott Morrison.[25] The council is responsible for providing expert advice to the prime minister and other ministers on science and technology challenges facing Australia.[26] During her time on the council, Bell was involved in authoring a 2020 report titled "What motivates people to download and continue to use the COVIDSafe app?".[27] Additionally, Bell was the lead author of the 2023 Rapid Response Information Report (RRIP) on Generative AI for the Minister for Industry and Science.[28]
In January 2019, Bell was appointed as an independent non-executive director of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia board.[29]
On 22 January 2020, Bell was named the first Engelbart Distinguished Fellow by SRI International. The fellowship is named after Douglas C. Engelbart, a pioneer of modern computing, and recognises 'visionaries who are disrupting the traditional way we interact with and view technology' from around the globe.[30] Shortly after, Bell was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia in the 2020 Australia Day Honours for distinguished service to education, particularly to the social sciences and cultural anthropology.[31] That same year she was also elected as a Honorary Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities.[32]
In 2021, Bell created the new School of Cybernetics at the ANU and was appointed the inaugural Director.[33] Informed by the intellectual legacy of cybernetics and building on the foundational work of the 3A Institute, the School of Cybernetics aims to inspire and shape safe, sustainable, and responsible futures that consider people, the environment, and technology.[34] The School is committed to helping Australia and the world navigate major 21st century challenges, particularly those involving new and emerging technologies.[35]
On 26 September 2023, Bell resigned from the Commonwealth Bank board. The same day, Bell was announced as the 13th Vice-Chancellor and President of the Australian National University. She has held the position since 1 January 2024.[36] [37]
Bell is a notable public voice in the realms of emerging and historical technology, cybernetics, and artificial intelligence. She has given multiple TED and TEDx talks, including "6 Big Ethical Questions About the Future of AI" and "The Value of Boredom".[38]
In October 2017, Bell presented the ABC's 2017 Boyer Lectures, interrogating what it means to be human, and Australian, in a digital world.[39] Bell joins the list of prominent Australians selected each year by the ABC since 1959 to present the annual Boyer Lectures and stimulate a national conversation on social, cultural and political issues of contemporary Australian society.[40]
In 2021, Bell delivered the IPAA's Garran Oration, the Australian public sector's most prestigious address that honours one of the most prominent Australian Commonwealth public servants, Sir Robert Garran GCMG. The talk has been held every year since 1959 and has previously been delivered by former Australian Prime Ministers and other notable Australian figures.[41] Bell's 2021 Oration highlights the role of cybernetics in imagining, understanding, and building the future.
Bell also delivered the inaugural Ann Moyal Lecture in 2023 in association with the National Library of Australia, a talk given by distinguished speakers on a contemporary topic which draws on interdisciplinary knowledge relating to fields such as science, history, art, anthropology, technological change and more.[42] Ann Moyal was a highly influential Australian historian who pioneered the history of science in Australia. Bell's lecture explores Australia’s Overland Telegraph Line through a cybernetic lens, building on years of innovative research partly funded by Meta and their responsible Metaverse fund.[43]
Other speaking highlights include her 2016 O’Reilly Conference keynote on AI and making human connection,[44] her 2018 WIRED25 talk on ethical AI,[45] her 2018 ASSA Fay Gale lecture on anthropological interventions for decolonizing AI,[46] and her 2020 Long Now seminar on responsible AI in the fourth industrial revolution.[47]
Alongside her speaking engagements, Bell has authored several articles, books, and other publications. Her first book, Divining a Digital Future: Mess and Mythology in Ubiquitous Computing, written in collaboration with Paul Dourish, is an exploration of the social and cultural aspects of ubiquitous computing, with a particular focus on the disciplinary and methodological issues that have shaped the ubiquitous computing research agenda. The book was published by MIT Press in 2011.[48]
An earlier essay from 2007 by Bell, also co-authored with Dourish, Resistance is Futile': Reading Science Fiction Alongside Ubiquitous Computing", has been widely cited as an inspiration for, or a key influence on, the emergence of the field of design fiction.[49]
Bell contributed to the 2015 book Data: Now Bigger and Better! in her chapter “The Secret Life of Big Data”, building on her previous talks surrounding critical accounts of technology.[50]
In 2021, Bell contributed to the Griffith Review 71: Remaking the Balance through her piece “Touching the Future”, which builds on her 2017 ABC Boyer Lectures and aims to introduce an approach to the future and cybernetics to a broader audience.[51] The same year she also published the chapter “Talking to AI: An anthropological encounter with artificial intelligence” in The SAGE Handbook of Cultural Anthropology, drawing from her earlier talks and presentations on anthropological approaches to AI.[52] Additionally, she was lead author of the “Custodians and Midwives: The Library of the Future” School of Cybernetics report, a work which represents the culmination of a year-long collaboration with the National Library of Australia and provides a cybernetic analysis of the library and strategies for integrating AI in the library's future.[53]
In 2022, she published “The metaverse is a new word for an old idea” in the MIT Technology Review. In the article she discusses the origins and early histories of the metaverse and how it can inform the building of present day metaverse and other technologies.[54]
Bell has received a number of awards and fellowships throughout her career in recognition of her work, including: