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Sex robots: The end of love

10 December 2018
12.00pm – 1.30pm AEDT
Michael Crouch Innovation Centre
This event has ended
phot of wooden model hand holding a metal heart

There are more ways of connecting and communicating via technology than ever before. Yet loneliness is on the rise as we begin to experience an 'attachment crisis' in forming and maintaining intimate relationships.
Enter sex robots. Built from the bodies of sex dolls, they are created to help humans – particularly men – cope with our inability to connect. But what does the rise of sex robots tell us about the way that women and girls are imagined? And to what extent are porn, prostitution and child sexual exploitation driving the attachment crisis?

Join Professor Kathleen Richardson as she explores important questions surrounding this emerging technology.

A UNSW Grand Challenges event

Program
12pm: Kathleen Richardson presentation
12.40pm: Audience Q and A
1pm: Optional light lunch

Speakers
black and white photo of Kathleen Richardson

Professor Kathleen Richardson

Kathleen Richardson is Professor of Ethics and Culture of Robots and AI at De Montfort University, Leicester. She studied social anthropology at Cambridge University where she studied the making of social robots at MIT. Her work examines what it means to be human in the age of robots and AI and can machines replace intimate human relationships.

In 2015, along with a colleague, she founded the Campaign Against Sex Robots warning against the normalisation of the idea that women could be replaced with ‘sex-machines’. Since then her work has explored the kinds of robotics and AI that could develop if women’s humanity was recognised rather than fundamentally ignored. Kathleen has recently written a book entitled Sex Robots: The End of Love with Polity Press that is due for publication in March 2019.