Personal profile
Biography
Dr Jenna Imad Harb is a Research Fellow based at RegNet, the School of Regulation and Global Governance at the Australian National University (ANU). Her research examines how inequality and regulatory governance interface in 'Tech for Good,' referring to digital applications that aim to alleviate social and environmental harms. She has published on issues of anti-violence technologies, humanitarian technologies, welfare technologies, policing technologies, data protection, digital platforms, the regulation and social implications of AI, and the financialization of welfare.
She has several years of experience conducting ethnographic fieldwork in the Middle East and United States and collaborating with humanitarian practitioners and researchers on the sector’s use of biometric technology. She has delivered invited lectures on her research to Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Mongolian Human Rights Commission, the New Zealand Privacy Commissioner, The Australian Sociological Association, and University of Melbourne, as well as presented at conferences all around the world. She holds memberships in several research communities including the ANU Justice and Technoscience Lab and Labor Tech Research Network. Jenna has also worked with Data & Society to contribute to its blog series on ‘Toward a Mindful Digital Welfare State’ and has published her research in other open-access venues, including The Conversation, Power to Persuade, and Bread&Net, which is hosted by Social Media Exchange.
Education/Academic qualification
Sociology, PhD, Backstage Labour on the Frontlines: A Feminist Analysis of Technology and the Everyday Repair Work of Humanitarian Aid in Lebanon, The Australian National University
Feb 2020 → Feb 2024
Sociology, Master, University of Waterloo
Sept 2015 → Aug 2016
Sociology and Legal Studies (Honours), Bachelor, University of Waterloo
Sept 2011 → May 2015
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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
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Colonial grids, exhausted bodies: Humanitarian energy's politics and temporal entanglements
Harb, J. I. & Anantharajah, K., Jan 2026, In: Energy Research & Social Science. 131, 10 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access -
Unblackboxing How Sociotemporalities Inform AI Accountability: The Case of Targeted Advertising
Hardcastle, F., Henne, K., Harb, J. I., Lee, A., Viana, J. N. & Halford, S., Feb 2026, In: Social Science Computer Review. 44, 1, p. 131-149 19 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access1 Citation (Scopus) -
Doing STS Now: Of Hackers and Angels in Technoscience
Gül, Z., Harb, J. I., Shaik Ali, M. & Pandian, S., Jan 2025, In: Science, Technology & Human Values. 50, 1, p. 3-11 9 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Editorial › peer-review
Open Access3 Citations (Scopus) -
Epistemic Injustice in and through AI
Chamma, D., Ahmadpour, N., Ishtiaque Ahmed, S., Jahan Mim, N., Qi Zhang, W., di Bona, C., Sachathep, T., Horst, H. & Harb, J. I., Dec 2025, 37th Australian Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) (OZCHI ’25): Generative Intelligences, Planetary Futures. New York: Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), p. 1-6 6 p.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference Paper › peer-review
Open Access1 Citation (Scopus) -
Mechanisms of invisibility: the contradictions of localising and decolonising humanitarian aid
Harb, J. I., 11 Jun 2025, In: Third World Quarterly. 46, 7, p. 1 18 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access1 Citation (Scopus)