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[ecrea] CFP - 'Big Data, Big Questions, or, Accounting for Big Data' IJOC Special Section
Sun Aug 12 09:32:16 GMT 2012
We're sending out a call for papers for an IJOC special section on
critical engagements with Big Data. Apologies for cross posting, and
please get in touch if you'd like to contribute!
CFP- "Big Data, Big Questions, or, Accounting for Big Data"
International Journal of Communication
http://ijoc.org
http://socialmediacollective.org/2012/08/08/big-data-big-questions-or-accounting-for-big-data/
Guest editors: Kate Crawford (Microsoft Research, UNSW) and Mary L. Gray
(Microsoft Research, Indiana University)
Journal editor: Larry Gross (USC)
Previously isolated data sets, from social media and demographic surveys
to city maps and urban planning documents, are now routinely
interlinked. Combining separate, often disparate, multi-terabyte sets of
information reframes our capacity to see into the behaviors of --- and
relationships between --- people, institutions and things. Researchers
in fields as varied as computer science, geography, sociology,
marketing, biology, economics, among many others, use the term "big
data" to capture a wide range of activities revolving around accessing
and analyzing these vast quantities of information. What are the
implications of big data as a cultural, technological and analytic
phenomenon? What are the practices of big data, the underlying
assumptions, and ways of modeling the world? Who gets access to it, and
what effects does this produce?
This special section will offer a range of critical engagements with the
issues surrounding big data and its related models of knowledge. We seek
scholarly articles from diverse fields, and a wide range of theoretical
and methodological approaches: including media studies, communication,
anthropology, digital humanities, computational and social sciences,
cultural geography, history, and critical cultural studies.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
What is the history (or histories) of big data and its related practices?
What are the epistemological ramifications of big data?
How can computational and social sciences use big data in
cross-disciplinary work? What are the strengths and pitfalls of new hybrids?
What are the ethics of big data use, be it in city management, social
media research, or political campaigning?
Who gets access to big data? What are the issues of class, race, gender,
sexuality, religion and geography?
What are the labour politics of big data research?
The International Journal of Communication is an open access journal
(http://ijoc.org <http://ijoc.org/>). All accepted articles will be
published online. The anticipated publication date for this Special
Section is August 2013.
Manuscripts should conform to the IJoC author
guidelines. Seehttp://ijoc.org/ojs/index.php/ijoc/about/submissions#authorGuidelines
Send your abstract as your initial submission, including the title of
your paper and a list of five potential reviewers with their titles and
e-mail addresses by October 1, 2012 to (IJOCbigdata /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(IJOCbigdata /at/ gmail.com)>. Your suggested reviewers will help
streamline the peer-review process.
*Timeline*
*October 1: Abstracts due *
*November 1: Acceptance of abstracts*
*January 28: Articles due *
If you have any questions, please contact Kate Crawford at
(kate /at/ microsoft.com) or Mary Gray at (mlg /at/ microsoft.com).
_______________________________
Kate Crawford
Principal Researcher
Microsoft Research New England, Cambridge MA
http://bit.ly/21hiPf
Associate Professor
University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
http://bit.ly/iQwMVg
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