Hossein  Derakhshan

Hossein Derakhshan

PhD Researcher

Department of Media and Communications

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Languages
English
Key Expertise
Social theory, platforms, data, everyday life, sounds, news, decoloniality

About me

Biography

Hossein Derakhshan is an Iranian-Canadian author, researcher, and public speaker, as well as the pioneer of blogging, podcasts and tech journalism in Iran. His PhD research is about the everyday experience of mass personalization on digital platforms. (View his Google Scholar page.)

Hossein Derakhshan is an Iranian-Canadian author, researcher, and public speaker, as well as the pioneer of blogging, podcasts and tech journalism in Iran. He is currently completing a PhD at the department of media and communications at London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).

Before starting his PhD, he spent 2018 on a research fellowship at Harvard Kennedy School’s Shorenstein Center and at the MIT Media Lab, where he co-authored the report Information Disorder, commissioned by the Council of Europe, on the theory and practice of what is known as ‘fake news’. In 2019, he completed an MSc in Data and Society at the LSE’s media and communications department where his dissertation on ‘Distributed primetime’ received a Distinction.

Hossein spent six years in prison in Iran from 2008 until 2014 over his writings and digital activism. Upon his release, Derakhshan wrote an essay on the demise of blogs titled “The Web We Have to Save”, translated and published into numerous languages, and also one about television in prison titled “Television’s Reinvention and the Era of Post-Enlightenment”.

His other interests include journalism studies (‘Post-news Journalism‘), platforms (‘How about a European social platform for news‘), information disorder (‘Disinfo wars‘).

His writings have appeared in The New York Times, The Guardian, MIT Technology Review, Wired, Libération, Die Zeit, El Pais, and Corriere Della Sera.

He regularly tweets at @h0d3r and publishes on hoder.com.

Expertise Details

Social theory; platforms; data; everyday life; sounds; news; decoloniality; personalisation; journalism; information disorder