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Darin Barney

Darin Barney

Grierson Chair in Communication Studies

Department Chair

Professor

B.A., M.A. (Simon Fraser), Ph.D. (Toronto)

Darin Barney was born in Burnaby, Canada, and studied at Simon Fraser University and the University of Toronto, where he trained in political theory and received a Ph.D. in 1999. He has worked at several universities in Canada and the United States and from 2005-2015 was Canada Research Chair in Technology & Citizenship at 㽶Ƶ, where he has also served as Chair of the Department of Art History and Communication Studies (2005-2007) and Director of the Graduate Program in Communication Studies (2010-2013). He was President of the Canadian Communication Association from 2010-2012, and served on the Advisory Council of the Law Commission of Canada from 2000-2005. He has received several awards for his academic work, including the inaugural Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada's Aurora Prize for outstanding contribution to Canadian intellectual life by a new researcher (2003).

Darin Barney is the author of several scholarly works, includingOne Nation under Google: Citizenship in the Technological Republic(2007 Hart House Lecture);Communication Technology: The Canadian Democratic Audit(UBC Press: 2005);The Network Society(Polity Press: 2004); andPrometheus Wired: The Hope for Democracy in the Age of Network Technology(University of Chicago Press 2000). He is co-editor of several books and journal editions, including “Solarity” a special issue ofSouth Atlantic Quarterly(2021; with Imre Szeman),The Participatory Condition(University of Minnesota: 2016, with Coleman, Ross, Sterne and Tembeck);Community in the Digital Age: Philosophy and Practice(Rowman and Littlefield: 2004 with Andrew Feenberg) and a special issue ofTheory & Eventon Quebec’s “Maple Spring” (2012; with Brian Massumi and Cayley Sorochan).

Prof. Barney’s current research, teaching and supervisory interests include: materialist approaches to media and communication; infrastructure; energy; environment; and insurgent political forms. His current work includes projects on emerging energy formats, resource infrastructures, energy transition and negative politics. He is a member of the Petrocultures Research Group, the After Oil collective, the McGill Centre for Innovation in Storage and Conversion of Energy, Future Energy Systems and an associate member of the Bieler School of Environment. He convenes the Grierson Research Group.

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