[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] EuroCPR call for abstracts 2014
Tue Sep 24 14:12:29 GMT 2013
Call for Abstracts: EuroCPR2014
CEPS 24-25/03/2014
Prospects, Challenges and Limits to User-Centric Approaches in the
Digital Information Society
The aim of EuroCPR2014 is to examine whether user-centric European
information society policies are serving the interests of the (European)
consumers/citizens, whether the rhetoric of European information society
policy is aligned with implementation, and how user-centric policies can
better inform market practice and policy making. What is the
contribution of users to our information society/economy and how can
this be integrated in research, business decisions, policy making, and
especially in multi-stakeholder approaches?
The evolution towards a digital society or knowledge economy has often
revolved around economic and technological questions and the effects of
national and transnational policies on European industry. Economic
growth was and still is the focal point of most European policies. The
standard assumption was that growth would automatically benefit
consumers and, hence, citizens and public interests were served.
In recent years we have witnessed a strong and almost euphoric focus on
the user as the possible source of many innovative and revolutionary
projects as well as ideas and business models. This has reinvigorated
interdisciplinary research on users in relation to digital media
developments, government policies and industry strategies. This
perspective is a substantive scholarly tradition in disciplines like
science and technology studies (STS), innovation economics, and consumer
sociology.
There is little doubt that the user is a central figure in the digital
society. Active users are a source of creative inspiration and avid
creators of cultural resources. Bloggers and citizen journalists reflect
critically on the world around them and have become acknowledged sources
of information. As enthusiastic consumers of digital content services
and products, users are the inspiration for a flourishing creative
economy and they fuel the globalization of information markets. At the
same time, user empowerment can turn into disempowerment. This happens
when users become the play thing of complex digital systems, designed
and applied to facilitate unfair business practices or objectionable
forms of government surveillance.
To further the emancipation of the user and to prevent user
disempowerment, businesses, policy makers, civil society, and academics
grapple with the challenge of accommodating users interests and
integrating a more user-centric perspective into their decision making,
technologies and research. This is not easy and it can challenge
professional routines, established research methods and familiar
approaches to law and policy making. It requires a better understanding
of who “the user” actually is, what her/his different roles are and the
measurable contributions she/he makes within the media ecosystem, and
how this position can be strengthened.
Causal relations among the economy, technology, and the wider society
are unpredictable. Consumer interests – though at the core of European
information society rhetoric – are often neglected in policies. EU
policies remain focused on supply-side measures, with little attention
being devoted to demand-side issues. The fragmentation of policy issues
oriented to consumer interests over several European Commission
Directorate-Generals and government departments of Member States
reinforces this neglect.
We invite papers addressing the following questions:
- What are the uncertainties and challenges in integrating the user in
business and politics in the digital society? Is there a paradox between
an information and digital society and user empowerment?
- How are services and business models taking users into account? Are
they able to respect users’ expectations and be commercially and
socially viable?
- What are the limits to user-centric policies? How are these assessed
in the light of the desirability of letting the user determine the agenda?
-How can demand-side policies centered on users improve the
unsatisfactory performance of existing supply-side EU policies?
- How can we assess user awareness, motivation, capabilities and practices?
- What characterizes an active user? What responsibilities does this imply?
- Is the user empowered or dis-empowered, and in what way does the
complexity of the design, affordances and algorithms of complex digital
systems influence user empowerment?
- How do we open the “black box” of users through research that takes
account of conflicting user interests?
- How do social media/ubiquitous media (e.g. Internet-of-Things) relate
to the (dis)empowerment of consumers and citizens? Does user-centered
design interfere with personal freedoms such as privacy, freedom of
expression, personal autonomy?
- Have users’ voices increased and what is the impact; who is listening?
- How is the economic crisis affecting users with regard to the take up
of digital services? Is the economic crisis an impediment or an
opportunity for user empowerment? Is the digital society enabling the
user to engage in novel behaviours or is it restricting access and
creating new divides?
- What conceptual/analytical frameworks are best able to encourage
user-oriented policies?
Note: The call for abstracts is aimed at attracting papers, which
address conceptual/theoretical/empirical issues and issues that are
clearly relevant to policy makers and business.
We welcome papers that reflect on the business/policy and policy/legal
dimensions of the topics listed above as well as on their societal and
economic implications.
Papers relevant to the overall conference theme, but not directly
related to the suggested topics will be considered in the blind peer
review assessment of the scientific committee as well.
Important Dates
Deadline for submission of abstracts: 28/10/2013
Notification of acceptance: 29/11/2013
Full paper submission: 24/02/2014
Important information
Abstracts should ...
* be 500 words maximum;
* specify the research question, highlight the theoretical framework and
methods, summarise the empirical content and findings, and highlight the
policy relevance;
* be submitted through the online submission system at www.eurocpr.org.
Euro-CPR is using the Easychair online submission system. To submit an
abstract to EuroCPR 2014 please go to the EuroCPR 2014 “Online
submission page”. The page can be accessed via the EuroCPR website at:
www.eurocpr.org.
If you do not have an account with Easychair you must set one up. If you
have used Easychair as an author or reviewer for a previous conference,
you can reuse your existing password and account. Please ensure that
your abstract is anonymised. You will be invited to enter your personal
information into a separate section.
If you have questions please contact (eurocpr2014 /at/ easychair.org).
All abstracts will be subject to blind peer review by the members of the
EuroCPR Scientific Committee.
More information on how to submit abstracts and important dates and
deadlines can be found on the EuroCPR website at: http://www.eurocpr.org
Professor Robin Mansell
Department of Media and Communications
London School of Economics
Tel. +44 20 7955 6380
Email: (r.e.mansell /at/ lse.ac.uk)
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service from ECREA and Nico Carpentier.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://www.ecrea.eu/mailinglist
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
--
Postal address:
ECREA
Chaussée de Waterloo 1151
1180 Uccle
Belgium
--
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]