INDL North America Symposium

Workers Building, Using, and Resisting AI

Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, United States

INDL-North America Call for Papers

Workers Building, Using, and Resisting AI

Yale, New Haven, April 29, 2026

The theme for this inaugural North American symposium, “Workers Building, Using, and Resisting AI,” highlights the essential role of labor not only in creating AI models but also in shaping how those technologies reshape work, sustaining labor practices, and developing local strategies to navigate, adapt to, or push back against AI‑driven change. The symposium adopts a broad interpretation of labor’s role in artificial intelligence and related technologies, encompassing the infrastructures and hardware of AI—from manufacturing and assembly to data‑center operations—as well as the many roles involved in its development, from engineering to data work. AI applications are also considered broadly, ranging from computer vision and large‑language models to recommender systems and other reinforcement‑learning‑based tools.

INDL-NA seeks submissions that discuss the role of workers and labor at any point in the extensive AI data pipeline, whether examined from a global or local perspective, and whether focused on data, hardware,infrastructure, models, and their usage. Submissions are welcomed on traditional INDL topics, including:

  • Digital labor and AI

  • Worker surveillance and algorithmic management

  • Governance, regulation, and legislation in AI-related digital labor

  • Worker resistance, collective action, refusal, and alternatives

  • Automation

As well as on emerging themes within INDL such as:

  • The role of women and gender in AI‑related occupations

  • Global aspects of labor in the development and uses of AI

  • Environmental challenges of labor and AI

  • The influence of management and corporations on labor’s persistence in AI

We invite contributions from both established and early‑career academic researchers (including graduate students), as well as from all professionals engaged with these themes including labor organizers, practitioners, and others. All disciplines that study labor and/or technology are welcome, for example economics, management, political science, law, sociology, psychology, history, geography, science‑and‑technology studies (STS), media studies, design, and information and computer sciences.

We are pleased to offer a limited number of scholarships for graduate students, non-academics, and independent scholars. These scholarships and the symposium are funded by Yale’s MacMillan Center. 

This in-person symposium will take place the day after Yale’s university‑wide AI symposium, and participants are welcome to attend that event as well (registration details will be sent separately). 

INDL-NA Opening Keynote

Julia Ticona, Ph.D.

Julia Ticona is an assistant professor at the Annenberg School for Communication, where her research investigates the ways that digital technologies shape the meaning of precarious work. She uses qualitative methods to examine the role of tech in the construction of identity and inequality for low-wage workers. Previously, she was a postdoctoral scholar at the Data & Society Research Institute, where she collaborated on an amicus brief on behalf of Data & Society for Carpenter vs. U.S. before the U.S. Supreme Court. She is an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Virginia, where she was a member of the Society of Fellows, and her B.A. from Wellesley College. You can find her work in the Journal of Communication, New Media & Society, the International Journal of Communication, and Information, Communication, and Society. She has also published op-eds and essays in Wired, Dissent, FastCompany, and Slate. She has also been called on as an expert by local and national media outlets, including: The New York Times, NPR, The Nation, and The Philadelphia Inquirer.

INDL-NA Scientific Committee

Mathilde Abel Polytechnic Institute of Paris France
Antonio Casilli Polytechnic Institute of Paris France
Daniel Green University of Maryland United States
Rafael Grohmann University of Toronto Canada
Noah Khan University of Toronto Canada
Ema Mauko University College London United Kingdom
Emily Mazo Columbia University United States
Ruth Livier Núñez University of California, Los Angeles United States
Yoehan Oh Yale University United States
Julián Posada Yale University United States
Paola Tubaro National Centre for Scientific Research France
Iraklis Vogiatzis National & Kapodistrian University of Athens Greece
Tianling Yang Weizenbaum Institute Germany