
Lockdown lessons on balance and belonging at work
1 October 2025
OII doctoral researcher Lily Rodel explores what lockdown revealed about how we could all achieve the perfect work-life balance.
1 October 2025
OII doctoral researcher Lily Rodel explores what lockdown revealed about how we could all achieve the perfect work-life balance.
30 September 2025
The Oxford Internet Institute (OII) has moved to its new home in the Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities.
24 September 2025
A new paper from the Tony Blair Institute for Change, featuring a guest contribution from the OII’s Professor Helen Margetts, calls for government action to build better public trust in AI.
Find out more about research by OII academics
Professor of Human Behaviour and Technology
Professor Przybylski is a psychologist who studies how online social media and video games platforms influence users’ mental health. His research focuses on how data from these platforms can inform regulation, policymaking, and expert advice.
Professor of Internet Geography
Mark Graham is an economic geographer. His research focuses on digital labour, the gig economy, and digital inequalities. He is the author, most recently, of Feeding the Machine: The Hidden Human Labour Powering AI
Associate Professor in AI and Society
Ekaterina Hertog is an Associate Professor of AI and Society at Oxford Internet Institute and Institute for Ethics in AI. She studies how the rising digitalisation is reshaping private lives across the world.
This project seeks to understand how citizens listen and speak to public institutions, and how alternative AI-based models and framing might encourage democratic communication.
With mobile devices ubiquitous among young people, it is not surprising that parents are increasingly turning to technology for help in childcare. This project examines monitoring technologies and how parents use them as part of child supervision.
The shift to cloud represents a reversal of the 1980s personal computing revolution: computation is moving from personal devices back into large, centralized facilities. This project seeks to understand the economic drivers of this reversal.
By Andres Raieste, Andri Rebane, Madis Tapupere, Keegan McBride
In a world increasingly defined by crises—from pandemics and climate disasters to escalating wars—governments that fail to build digital resilience risk crumbling under pressure.
Foreign Affairs, 01 October 2025
The OII's Prof. Carl Frey explains why America outcompeting Japan matters for the US rivalry with China.
, 30 September 2025
A new £185m arts and humanities centre will open in October, it has been announced which will also include academic faculty space, including the Oxford Internet Institute.
The Register, 29 September 2025
Article highlights UK's dependency on vulnerable under sea cables, with commentary from OII researcher Anniki Mikelsaar.
Fabian Braesemann and Paul McCarthy discuss the impact of founder personalities on startup success, how a predictive model outperforms industry standards to predict company success, and what factors can help us predict which startups will succeed.