Ä¢¹½´«Ã½

Jose  Marichal

Jose Marichal, Ph.D.

Professor of Political Science

marichal@callutheran.edu
(805) 493-3328
Swenson 228




Ä¢¹½´«Ã½

I am a professor of political science at Ä¢¹½´«Ã½. I specialize in studying the role that algorithms and AI play in restructuring social and political institutions. I am currently writing a book entitled "You Must Become an Algorithmic Problem" that will come out in 2025 with Bristol University Press (UK). The book explores the unwritten social contract we have with the algorithms that shape what we see, hear and think. I have a number of projects with collaborators looking at how social media shapes political discourse. My next project is entitled "Machine Liberalism. Reconceptualizing Rights in the Age of AI" It looks at how algorithms and AI are changing our expectations of liberal democracy and will be published by Intellect Ltd./ University of Chicago Press in late 2026.

Education

  • B.S., Florida State University
  • M.S., Florida Atlantic University
  • Ph.D., University of Colorado, Boulder

Expertise

Courses I Teach (or Have Taught)

Technology and Politics

Social Media and Politics 

Social Media as Data - Intro to Natural Language Processing and Network Analysis

Scope and Methods of Political Science

Race, Multiculturalism and Politics

Contemporary Issues in Public Policy

Modern Political Thought

American Political Thought

Introduction to Political Science

The Politics of Community Development

Seminar in Citizenship and Civic Engagement

Publications

Books

Forthcoming. Machine Liberalism: Reconceptualizing Rights in the Age of AI. Intellect Books/University of Chicago Press.

Affiliations

Scholarly Articles

2000. Reprinted in: Wilbur Rich (ed.) The Economics and Politics of Sports Facilities. Westport, Connecticut: Quorum Books. 

Book Chapters

Articles and Essays

2025. Becoming an algorithmic problem: Resistance in the age of predictive technology in Transforming Society Blog

2025. We Must Re-Negotiate the Algorithmic Contract in Tech Policy Press

2025. ill Your Epistemic Arrogance in Front Porch Republic

2025. AI Isn’t Responsible for Slop. We Are Doing It to Ourselves for Tech Policy Press

2023. Section 230 Rightly Protects Voice, but Allowing Platforms to Use Amplification Algorithms With Total Impunity Does Harm. Tech Policy Press.

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2015. "The Debates Should Be a TV Mini-Series Instead of a Marathon," New York Times.

 

Podcasts and Interviews

Personal Data and Society for The Measure of Everyday Life” radio program

The new AI video app Sora is here: Can you tell what’s real? for CBC Voices

Presentations

2024.

2021. “Fracking Twitter: Machine Learning and Natural Language Processing Tools for the Identification of Coalition and Causal Narratives”. With Will Cipolli and Jose Marichal. Presented at the Midwest Political Science Annual Conference. Chicago, IL. April 9, 2022. 

2019. Topic Modeling Trump Tweets: A Computational Grounded Theory Approach to Understanding Social Media Political Talk. Presented at the 2019 Western Political Science Association Annual Conference. San Diego, CA. April 19-22.

2019. Fracking Twitter: Applying the Narrative Policy Framework to fracking debates in New York. Presented at the 2019 Midwest Political Science Association Annual Conference. Chicago, IL. April 4-7. With Andy Pattison and William Cipioli.

2018. Factory Farmed Citizens: Social Media, the Public Sphere and Algorithmic Obligation. Presented at the Eight Annual International Symposium on Digital Ethics at Loyola University.  Chicago, IL. November 9, 2018. With Brian Collins and Richard Neve.

2018. Antagonistic Bias: Developing a Typology of Agonistic Talk on Twitter Using Gun Control Networks. Presented at the 2018 Western Political Science Assocation Annual Conference.  San Francisco, CA. April 14-16. With Richard Neve.

2018. The Role of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence in Democratic Life. Invited Talk at Whitman College. Walla Walla, Washington. April 23, 2018.

2017. A Social network Analysis of the Resistance Twitter Ecology. Presented at the 2017 APSA Political Neworks Conference. Columbus, OH. June 14-16.  With Ryan Mundy and Jack Rockwood.

2015. Microactivism: Explaining the Determinants of Effective Campaigns through Social Media Ecologies. Presented at the 2015 Western Political Science Association Annual Conference. Las Vegas, NV. April 2-4. 

2014. Civic Hacking, Place Based Social Networks and Urban Power. Presented at the 2014 Western Political Science Assocation Annual Conference.  Seattle, WA. April 17-19.

2013. Roundtable: Public Intellectualism: Academics who Engage in Real-Time Politics Through New Media. Presented at the 2014 Western Political Science Assocation Annual Conference.  Hollywood, CA. April 17-19.  

2012. Latino Participation Dynamics in the 2011 Occupy Wall Street Movement.  Presented at the 2012 Western Political Science Association Annual Conference. Portland, OR. March 22-24, 2012.

2011. Bringing the Blogosphere into the Classroom: Strategies for Incorporating External Discourses. Presented at the 2011 American Sociological Association Annual Conference. Las Vegas, NV. August 22, 2011.

2011.  .  Presented at the 2011 Western Political Science Association Annual Conference.  San Antonio, TX.  April 23, 2011. With Jessica Lavariega Monforti.

2010. Presented and the Oxford Internet Institute's Internet, Poltics, Policy: an Impact Assessment Conference. Oxford, England. September 16-17, 2010.

2010. "Red State, Red Blog, Blue State, Blue Blog?" with Ryan Kushigemachi. Presented at the 2010 Western Political Science Association Annual Conference. San Francisco, CA. March 31, 2010.

2010. Citizenship in the Cloud: Exploring Civic Obligations in Web 2.0 Space. Presented at the 2010 Western Political Science Association Annual Conference. San Francisco, CA. April 1, 2010.

2009. CyberPower: Social Production and Urban Politics. Presented at the 2009 American Sociological Association Annual Conference. San Francisco, CA. August 10, 2009.

2008. "Diversity in the Cloud." Keynote Talk at the 2008 Association of Lutheran College Faculty Annual Conference. Decorah, IA. June 30.

2007. “Improving HIV Prevention and Care for Ventura County Latinos: A Case Study of Community-Based Action Research” with Adina Nack. Presented as part of the CLU Center for Leadership and Values Alma Peterson Distinguished lecture Series. May 3, 2007 and as part of the Social for the Study of Social Problems Annual Conference. New York, New York. August 10.

2007. “Youth Civic Engagement: Diversifying Neighborhood Councils in Los Angeles” with Haco Hoang. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Urban Affairs Association, Westin Hotel, Seattle, Washington. April 23.

2006. “Creating Cross-Culturally Engaged Citizens: The Challenge and Opportunities for Lutheran Higher Learning.” presented at the 2006 Association of Lutheran College Faculty annual conference, Nelson Room, Thousand Oaks, CA. October 5.

Also presented at the 2006. Segerhammer Faith and Life Conference. February 10, 2006.

2005. “When Does Gender fit into Diversity: Unpacking the Micropolitics of Diversity” Presented as part of the CLU Gender and Women’s Studies Speaker Series. March.

2005. “The Struggle Over "Scapes": Bringing Identity into Minority Incorporation Theory”  Presented as part of the CLU Gender and Women’s Studies Speaker Series. March.

2005. Urban Affairs Association Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City, CA. 2004. “Governing Difference: The Role of Diversity Ecologies.” American Association of Colleges and Universities Diversity and Learning Conference. Nashville, TN. October 2004.