Papers
Ryland, H. (2022) ‘Whose rights are they anyway?’, Implications Philosophique. Online Open Access: https://www.implications-philosophiques.org/whose-rights-are-they-anyway/
Ryland, H. (2021) ‘It’s friendship, Jim, but not as we know it: A degrees-of-friendship view of human-robot friendships’, Minds and Machines, 31, 377-293. The article is not open access, but a readable version of the article is available here: https://rdcu.be/cixt2
The URL for the article is here: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11023-021-09560-z
Ryland, H. (2021) ‘Could you hate a robot? And does it matter if you could?’, AI & Society, 36, 637-649. Open Access: link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00146-021-01173-5?fbclid=IwAR1wa_eBfQPqeBI4Avkq5VxCVKoeUpW7fbnsYluTRSFMe1GUkRK1VtwcxYQ
Ryland, H. (2019) ‘Getting away with murder: why virtual murder in MMORPGs can be wrong on Kantian grounds’, Ethics and Information Technology, 21, 105-115. Open Access: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10676-019-09498-y
Ryland, H. (2021) ‘It’s friendship, Jim, but not as we know it: A degrees-of-friendship view of human-robot friendships’, Minds and Machines, 31, 377-293. The article is not open access, but a readable version of the article is available here: https://rdcu.be/cixt2
The URL for the article is here: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11023-021-09560-z
Ryland, H. (2021) ‘Could you hate a robot? And does it matter if you could?’, AI & Society, 36, 637-649. Open Access: link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00146-021-01173-5?fbclid=IwAR1wa_eBfQPqeBI4Avkq5VxCVKoeUpW7fbnsYluTRSFMe1GUkRK1VtwcxYQ
Ryland, H. (2019) ‘Getting away with murder: why virtual murder in MMORPGs can be wrong on Kantian grounds’, Ethics and Information Technology, 21, 105-115. Open Access: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10676-019-09498-y
Blog Posts
'#EverydayLookism Facebook Live Panels'. Summary of the #EverydayLookism Facebook Live events. Blog post for Beauty Demands.
'Blog: Helen Ryland'. Discussion of Professor Heather Widdows' #EverydayLookism campaign, and why lookism should be a public health concern. Blog post for Big Issue North.
"#EverydayLookism - Body Image As A Public Health Issue". Event summary. Blog post for Beauty Demands.
"How the Global Beauty Ideal Pressures Women to Be Perfect: #EverydayLookism and Cleavage Shaming". Written with Jessica Sutherland and Professor Heather Widdows as part of the #EverydayLookism project. Blog post for Psychology Today.
"Dad Bods and Six Packs - We're All to be Looked at Now". Written with Jessica Sutherland and Professor Heather Widdows as part of the #EverydayLookism project. Blog post for Psychology Today and Beauty Demands.
"Eat and Be Merry, for Tomorrow We DIET!" Written with Jessica Sutherland and Professor Heather Widdows as part of the #EverydayLookism project. Blog post for Psychology Today.
"Now you see me: The phenomenon of marginalised invisibility". Blog post for Minorities and Philosophy UK (MAP UK).
"Developing Rights in a Developing World". Event summary. Blog post for the University of Birmingham's Imperfect Cognitions blog.
'Blog: Helen Ryland'. Discussion of Professor Heather Widdows' #EverydayLookism campaign, and why lookism should be a public health concern. Blog post for Big Issue North.
"#EverydayLookism - Body Image As A Public Health Issue". Event summary. Blog post for Beauty Demands.
"How the Global Beauty Ideal Pressures Women to Be Perfect: #EverydayLookism and Cleavage Shaming". Written with Jessica Sutherland and Professor Heather Widdows as part of the #EverydayLookism project. Blog post for Psychology Today.
"Dad Bods and Six Packs - We're All to be Looked at Now". Written with Jessica Sutherland and Professor Heather Widdows as part of the #EverydayLookism project. Blog post for Psychology Today and Beauty Demands.
"Eat and Be Merry, for Tomorrow We DIET!" Written with Jessica Sutherland and Professor Heather Widdows as part of the #EverydayLookism project. Blog post for Psychology Today.
"Now you see me: The phenomenon of marginalised invisibility". Blog post for Minorities and Philosophy UK (MAP UK).
"Developing Rights in a Developing World". Event summary. Blog post for the University of Birmingham's Imperfect Cognitions blog.