This chapter explores the implications of the distribution of entrepreneurial agency across a key set of non-human actors of particular importance to the contemporary digital era: algorithms, and the systems of artificial intelligence they drive. Through a novel transdisciplinary theoretical approach that blends critical anti-racist sociology, abolitionist feminist science and technology studies, intersectional feminism and realist methodology, it conceptualises the accountability gaps that arise as algorithmic agents are given rights without commensurate obligations. In so doing, it develops a robust critique of algorithmic agency in the context of digital entrepreneurial activity.
This is a draft chapter/article. The final version is available in Handbook of Digital Entrepreneurship edited by Mohammad Keyhani, Tobias Kollmann, Alina Sorgner, Andishe Ashjari and Clyde Hull, published in 2022, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
http://dx.doi.org/10.4337/9781800373631
The material cannot be used for any other purpose without further permission of the publisher, and is for private use only.