Associate Professor of Political Science at the University at Albany. He spent three years conducting a research study on digital privacy, economic inequality, and data-driven discrimination, which sought to examine the collection, storage, and sharing of personal data in poor and working-class American neighborhoods. She is the author of The Automation of Inequality. Advanced technology tools to monitor and punish the poor and Digital Dead End: Fighting for Social Justice in the Information Age, and co-editor, with Alethia Jones, of Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around: Forty Years of Movement Building with Barbara Smith. His writings on technology and social justice have appeared in media outlets such as Scientific American, The Nation, The Guardian, Harper's and Wired. For two decades, Eubanks has worked in community technology and economic justice movements. He was a founding member of the Our Data Bodies project. After receiving her college tenure, she studied journalistic techniques, including for a stint as a New America fellow, that allowed her to make her book The Automation of Inequality a vivid portrait of Americans trapped in data mining systems, algorithm policies, and predictive risk models that worsen economic inequality.