Dr
Marcos
Dias

Primary Department
School of Communications
Role
Academic Staff
Work Area/Key Responsibilities
Academic
Marcos Dias
Phone number: 01 700
6961
Campus
Glasnevin Campus
Room Number
GLA C153

Academic biography

Marcos Dias is Assistant Professor and Programme Chair of the BSc in Multimedia at the School of Communications, Dublin City University. He completed a PhD in Media Studies in the University of Melbourne, Australia in 2015 and a MSc with Distinction in Interactive Digital Media from Trinity College Dublin. He also holds a BA in Architecture and City Planning (University of Sao Paulo, Brazil) and a BA in Digital Media Design and Production-First Class Honours (Atlantic Technological University - formerly LkIT). He conducts research on citizen wellbeing, performance art and the impact of digital media on contemporary urban living.

In his recent book The Machinic City: Media, Performance and Participation (Manchester University Press, 2021), Marcos investigates the potential of performance art to help us reflect on contemporary urban living and its assemblages of human and machine agency.

Marcos is PI on the Community Engagement Through Performance Art (CEPA) project funded by the Irish New Foundations 2022 award. He is also the DCU coordinator and partner on the Digital Media Network Doctoral Experience (Dimendx) project funded by the ECIU SMART-ER Seed Programme.

He is Chair of the European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA) Media, Cities and Spaces Section. As part of the Section, Marcos was the local organiser of the Synthetic City Conference (DCU, 2023), which explored the impact of AI and digital media on urban living.

Marcos is available to supervise multidisciplinary PhD projects in media and communication studies, with a particular interest in the impact of digital technologies in urban space and also the role of public play, participatory art interventions, urban activism and artificial intelligence in the city.

He teaches on the BSc in Multimedia programme across a range of modules, including Media Spaces, Major Production Project, Information Design and Emerging Media, and coordinates the yearly DCU Multimedia Graduate Exhibition. Prior to joining DCU, he was Lecturer in Media Studies in Maynooth University and Assistant Lecturer and Programme Director for the BA in Communications in Creative Media in DkIT. 

Marcos has previously worked as an architect and web designer and was an Editorial Board Member of the Platform Journal of Media and Communications (2010-2011). 

Research interests

Marcos's main areas of research interest are citizen wellbeing, performance art and the impact of digital media on contemporary urban living.

In his recent book The Machinic City: Media, Performance and Participation (Manchester University Press, 2021), Marcos investigates the potential of performance art to help us reflect on contemporary urban living and its assemblages of human and machine agency.
Marcos is PI on the Community Engagement Through Performance Art (CEPA) project funded by the Irish New Foundations 2022 award. He is also the DCU coordinator and partner on the Digital Media Network Doctoral Experience (Dimendx) project funded by the ECIU SMART-ER Seed Programme.
He is Chair of the European Communication Research and Education Association (ECREA) Media, Cities and Spaces Section. As part of the Section, Marcos was the local organiser of the Synthetic City Conference (DCU, 2023), which explored the impact of AI and digital media on urban living.


He has published four articles in RTE Brainstorm about city surveillance, the impact of robots in everyday life in the city and the changing patterns of park usage in Dublin during the COVID pandemic and the social impact of performance art in urban space. His book The Machinic City: Media, Performance and Participation (Manchester University Press, 2021) investigates the potential of performance art to help us reflect on contemporary urban living and its assemblages of human and machine agency.

Marcos is interested in collaborations on both research-based and creative projects that are concerned with citizen wellbeing, digital media and urban living. His research interests include performative arts, social interaction, media and urban studies, urban activism, artificial intelligence, pervasive media, Internet studies, screen studies, interactive digital design, science and technology studies an