Scholar

Alysia Blackham

H-index: 8
Law 49%
Political science 27%
alysiablackham.bsky.social
“most of the studies [conducted] find that the industry- and economy-wide productivity gains that have been promised by AI companies are not happening.”
404media.co
A new study, based on a survey of 1,150 workers suggests that the injection of AI tools into the workplace has not resulted in a magic productivity boom and instead increased the amount of time that workers say they spend fixing low-quality AI-generated “work.”

🔗 www.404media.co/ai-workslop-...
AI ‘Workslop’ Is Killing Productivity and Making Workers Miserable
AI slop is taking over workplaces. Workers said that they thought of their colleagues who filed low-quality AI work as "less creative, capable, and reliable than they did before receiving the output."
www.404media.co
alysiablackham.bsky.social
This is a serious breach of privacy. Yet employee records have limited protection under federal privacy law. We urgently need legal change to better protect employee privacy.

dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn...
alysiablackham.bsky.social
I dug into this in the Alternative Law Journal, and trials of the four day work week are absolutely worth expanding in Australia if we want to boost productivity.

doi.org/10.1177/1037...
colmocinneide.bsky.social
Excellent thread.
abeba.bsky.social
most people want a quick and simple answer to why AI systems encode/exacerbate societal and historical bias/injustice and due to the reductive but common thinking of "bias in, bias out," the obvious culprit often is training data but this is not entirely true

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Reposted by: Alysia Blackham

ifow.org
Our firm-level work not only surveyed 1000 UK firms about tech adoption, but also did 12 in-depth case studies of AI and automation, with hundreds of hours of interviews with workers about the impact of these tools on the quality of their work, and on their wellbeing.
Firm-level adoption of AI and automation technologies: Case Studies Report - IFOW
What is happening on the ground in UK firms as they adopt AI and automation technologies?
www.ifow.org
alysiablackham.bsky.social
Totally coincidentally, this from me yesterday: “A four-day week could help Australia’s economy” on Pursuit

pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/a-f...
alysiablackham.bsky.social
I argue that the four-day work week should prompt us to reconsider what ‘full-time’ work entails. It should be seriously pursued by governments, policy-makers, employers, employees and unions.
alysiablackham.bsky.social
Just published, open access, in the Alternative Law Journal: 'Productivity and the four-day work week'

I consider whether adopting a four-day work week in Australian labour law could boost labour productivity, drawing on existing trials in Australia and internationally.

doi.org/10.1177/1037...
Productivity and the four-day work week - Alysia Blackham, 2025
Australia faces declining productivity growth, which risks affecting national prosperity. This article considers whether adopting a four-day work week in Austra...
doi.org
alexjwoodsociology.bsky.social
Our article "Beyond the ‘Gig Economy’: Towards Variable Experiences of Job Quality in Platform Work" has been published by 'Work, Employment and Society'. With Nick Martindale and @brendanburchell.bsky.social

doi.org/10.1177/0950...

Reposted by: Alysia Blackham

msei-unimelb.bsky.social
Expressions of Interest have opened for a new PhD scholarship in partnership with the Reproductive Justice Hallmark Research Initiative – please share!
socialequity.unimelb.edu.au/news/latest/...

#AcademicSky #ReproductiveJustice #UniMelb
Reproductive Justice PhD Scholarship Opportunity 2025
A new scholarship is being offered to research topics relevant to reproductive justice.
socialequity.unimelb.edu.au

Reposted by: Alysia Blackham

nteuvictoria.bsky.social
Are you being watched at work?
A new Victorian parliamentary committee report calls for tougher #WorkplaceSurveillance controls, heeding NTEU input based on member submissions by NTEU's Joo-Cheong Tham and team:
theconversation.com/being-monito...
#HigherEd #auspol #Auspol2025
Being monitored at work? A new report calls for tougher workplace surveillance controls
Developments in technology mean there are more ways for workplaces to be monitored, and not always with the knowledge of workers.
theconversation.com
alysiablackham.bsky.social
The latest from me, Joo Cheong Tham and Jake Goldenfein on workplace surveillance, and what a Victorian inquiry says we should do to regulate it.
aunz.theconversation.com
Developments in technology mean there are more ways for workplaces to be monitored, and not always with the knowledge of workers.
Being monitored at work? A new report calls for tougher workplace surveillance controls
theconversation.com

Reposted by: Alysia Blackham

aunz.theconversation.com
Developments in technology mean there are more ways for workplaces to be monitored, and not always with the knowledge of workers.
Being monitored at work? A new report calls for tougher workplace surveillance controls
theconversation.com

Reposted by: Alysia Blackham

meganprictor.bsky.social
Research fellow - job opportunity (with me!) - University of Melbourne Law School - 0.5 FTE, to December 2027. Health law and genomic data governance as part of national LINEAGE project jobs.unimelb.edu.au/en/job/92007...
Details : Research Fellow (Health Genomics Governance) : The University of Melbourne
Careers at The University of Melbourne
jobs.unimelb.edu.au
alysiablackham.bsky.social
New article: ‘Collective Action, Voice and Equality: Equality Bargaining to Achieve More Equal Futures?’, just published open access in the Adelaide Law Review.

I examine equality bargaining in Australian agreements, and conclude there is still a way to go.

law.adelaide.edu.au/ua/media/330...
law.adelaide.edu.au

Reposted by: Alysia Blackham

joshtaylor.bsky.social
Two more AI hallucinations in Australian court judgements today
14. The case referred to in the first paragraph of this extract does not exist. The judgment with the medium neutral citation referred to is a completely different matter which did not involve Rofe J. We apprehend that the reference may be a product of hallucination by a large language model. We have therefore redacted the case name and citation so that the false information is not propagated further by artificial intelligence systems having access to these reasons. 68. The appellant sought to rely on an authority which she said supported the proposition that a judge must recuse where there is a connection with a previous employer. However, the citation she provided did not align with a judgment from any Australian court searched by reference to the names of the parties or the subject of recusal. The appellant was unable to provide a copy of the judgement but said that she had a summary. Having conducted further enquiries, I am satisfied that the authority cited was generated by artificial intelligence and does not correlate with a decision of an Australian court. I do not consider that the appellant has misled the Court deliberately but has mistakenly assumed that her internet searches would yield accurate results.

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Fields & subjects

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