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Power Structures and their Impact on Software

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Steve
Power Structures and their Impact on Software

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GET YOUR TICKET HERE: https://dddlondon.com/events/power-structures-and-their-impact-on-software/

Code is literally knowledge made manifest, and therefore offers a history of knowledge; it is a record of how people understood a problem over an extended period of time.
But code is also power, and the ability to write/approve/deploy it can be used for ill or good, (intentionally or unintentionally). In so doing, code solidifies power structures; embedding that which is inevitably unequally distributed (unintentionally or intentionally) but embedded all the same.
Code is therefore also a geology (genealogy?) of power structures. Code forms the landscape where records of our old ways of (dis)organising, and ideas that won, continue to shape everything because this code is where teams live now.
We experience this “code-as-knowledge-and-power” every day; our freedom to act restricted or permitted.
In this talk I’ll dissect what is at play here. I’ll consider what is happening with “code-as-knowledge-and-power” and show how to work with it intentionally, instead of suffering/benefitting disproportionately at the hands of it.
Your code, and your life, will be better as a result.
A big thanks to Thoughtworks for hosting the event. Also thank you to The Ministry of Software Design for organising.

### About Andrew Harmel Law (Technical Principal, ThoughtWorks)

A highly enthusiastic, self-starting and responsible Tech Principal; Andrew specialises in Java / JVM technologies, agile delivery, build tools and automation, and domain driven design.
Andrew is also an author and trainer for O’Reilly. They’ve written one book about facilitating software architecture and one chapter about implementing the Accelerate/DORA four key metrics. They also run regular online training sessions in Domain-Drive Design (First Steps) and Architecture Decision Making by Example.
Andrew is experienced across the software development lifecycle and in many sectors including government, banking, and eCommerce. What motivates them is the production of large-scale software solutions, fulfilling complex client requirements. They understand that people, tooling, architecture and process all have key roles to play in achieving this.
Andrew has a passion for open source software and its communities. They have been interested in and involved with OSS to a greater or lesser extent since their career began; as a user, contributor, expert group member, or paid advocate.
Finally, Andrew enjoys sharing their experience as much as possible. This sharing is not only seen in their formal consulting engagements, but also informally through mentoring, blog posts, conferences (speaking and organising), and open sourcing their code.

## Refreshments

Attendees can bring your own refreshments to the event - “brown bag” style - sandwiches, fruit, drinks bottles or similar. There will be snacks and drinks including chocolates, biscuits, sweets, and crisps. There are free soft drinks and coffee.

## Agenda

  • 6:00pm: Arrive for networking - please see above regarding refreshments
  • 6:30pm: Talk begins
  • 8:30pm: Finish

## Recording

Photos and video will be taken at the event. We are intending to publish the presentations including the Q&As (technology gods permitting).

## Tickets

This is a ticketed event. Please register for your free tickets in good notice. Please read the terms and conditions.

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Domain-Driven Design London: Software Design UK
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