Eubanks connects its failures with overarching societal mechanisms that use discriminatory profiling on the impoverished. The first case study is the automated welfare eligibility system in Indiana. Eubanks argues that the digital entrapments of the modern welfare state are just a digital version of these rickety structures, making profit from poverty in a similar manner. Critically lauded on publication, Automating Equality won the 2019 Lillian Smith Book Award, the 2018 McGannon Center Book Prize, and was shortlisted for the Goddard Riverside Stephan Russo Book Prize for Social Justice.Įubanks uses the history of the poorhouse-a way to punish and contain the impoverished in the 19th and early 20th centuries-as a metaphor for modern automated data and technological systems.
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