From Meaning to Metrics How Algorithmic Morality Reorders Educational Values in Humanitarian Education Governance
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As humanitarian education becomes increasingly reliant on digital infrastructures, moral values governing access, protection, and recognition are now mediated through data and algorithmic decision-making. This paper develops the concept of algorithmic morality to analyze how digital governance systems reorder educational values in humanitarian settings. Employing critical document analysis of policy texts, technical specifications, and documented cases, the paper maps how humanitarian ideals move across the three analytical sites of articulation, encoding, and encounter. Three patterns emerge: relational dimensions of educational value compress into individual metrics, procedural flexibility hardens into algorithmic thresholds, and ethical imperatives transform into severity rankings. Cases from Jordan and Kenya illustrate the functioning and the limits of this logic. The paper makes two contributions. First, it conceptualizes algorithmic morality as a field-level logic that actively constitutes moral worth rather than operationalizing pre-existing values. Second, it introduces a moral-technical analytic for examining digital systems as moral infrastructures. As global disorder intensifies and digital humanitarianism expands, the central challenge is not a shortage of data but a crisis of meaning: the marginalization of relational and contextual dimensions of humanitarian education that resist computational reduction.
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