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[ecrea] cfp: New ICTs + New Media = New Democracy? Communications policy and public life in the age of broadband
Tue May 24 14:32:09 GMT 2011
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Call for Paper Proposals
New ICTs + New Media = New Democracy? Communications policy and public
life in the age of broadband
A by-invitation experts’ workshop New America Foundation September
20-22, 2011
Are “new media” fundamentally changing the practice of democracy? Recent
years have seen a sig- nificant transition in the role computer mediated
communications play in the political sphere. A tech- nological
revolution driven by economic and market forces is undermining settled
practices, estab- lished institutions, and traditional communications
norms. As a result, public policies governing the telecommunications and
media infrastructure need to be re-examined, and their theoretical
founda- tions and paradigmatic assumptions reformulated.
Technological developments and broadband communications have forced the
rules of political dis- course to change: contemporary new media are
circumventing and displacing old media; political can- didates and
public officials are finding new ways of communicating with the public;
fundraising and advertising in political campaigns are being reshaped;
and voiceless organizations and communities around the world are making
themselves heard -- both within their national boundaries and around the
world.
The Institute for Information Policy at Penn State University and the
New America Foundation's Open Technology Initiative are pleased to
announce this call for paper proposals, which focuses on the role
broadband policies play in the promotion and preservation of democracy
and human rights. Authors of the selected papers will be invited to
present and discuss them during a three day by-invitation-only experts
workshop designed to bring together American and international experts
and to be held at the New America Foundation in Washington, DC, between
September 20-22, 2011. This workshop is part of a series of events
focused on “Making Policy Research Accessible,” organized by the IIP,
with the support of the Ford Foundation. Presenters at the workshop will
be invited to submit their completed papers for review by the Journal of
Information Policy (www.jip-online.org <http://www.jip-online.org>).
Paper topics may include, but are not limited to: • Freedom, democracy
and justice: Changing concepts of democracy in the 21st century •
Campaign financing policies in the age of broadband communications •
Viability of existing telecommunications/media policies in light of
technological change • Preservation of freedom of expression and the
public sphere in the new media environment • Human rights and policy
implications of recent popular uprisings around the world • Allocation
of resources allowing broadband communication to fulfill their role in
democracy • Private and public ownership of communication networks and
their implications for democracy
Abstracts of up to 500 words and a short bio of the author(s) should be
submitted to (pennstateiip /at/ psu.edu) <mailto:(pennstateiip /at/ psu.edu)> by June
30, 2011. Please write IIPOTIWS: YOUR NAME in the subject line.
Abstracts not sent according to the above instructions will not be
reviewed. Accepted presenters will be notified by July 15, 2011.
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