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[ecrea] Workshop on Privacy and Data Protection in Europe: Traditions, Practices, and Discourses
Fri Apr 10 12:39:49 GMT 2015
CfP Call for papers
workshop
Workshop on Privacy and Data Protection in Europe: Traditions,
Practices, and Discourses
Nov. 26/27, 2015
Heidelberg
REMINDER: CALL FOR PAPERS - deadline next Sunday, April 12, 2015
Workshop on
Privacy and Data Protection in Europe: Traditions, Practices, and Discourses
The so-called digital revolution poses major threats to our privacy,
which is both a civil (or even human) right and an important democratic
norm. Social media applications and big data innovations, while highly
beneficial in many respects, affect the societal fabric of visibility
and retreat, of rights, power, and legitimacy, often to the disadvantage
of the citizen and/or consumer. Accordingly, data protection has become
a contentious political issue. A transnational campaign for better data
protection has emerged and gained support over recent years. Fundamental
EU regulation is under way to create a harmonized European data
protection regime. However, while the concomitant lobby battles in
Brussels and the Snowden revelations have taught us a lot about economic
and governmental interests in this new and complex area of the internet
governance macrocosm, we know much less about the socio-political
reality of privacy and data protection and how it varies across
different countries,
even within the European Union. Lacking such knowledge, the
democratic legitimacy of the EU's efforts in internet governance and the
chances and pitfalls for an international regulation in general are
difficult to assess.
It is against this backdrop that we are planning an international
workshop, in order to study the variety of privacy and data protection
across Europe. In our theoretical framework, we assume on the one hand
that privacy has pre-political roots and relevance, but that it also
constitutes citizen-state and citizen-business relationships and is
therefore an essentially political concept. On the other hand, we
distinguish three levels on which conceptions of privacy manifest
themselves, namely traditions, social practices and discourses (public
or special). We expect privacy to vary considerably in these aspects
across European countries. Thus, contributions should not deal primarily
with (common) threats to privacy, but with questions that address
socio-political differences in both fundamental conceptions of privacy
and data protection regimes:
Traditions
? Which administrative, legal and moral traditions and
political cultures are constitutive for national data protection regimes?
? What cultural factors or historical experiences affect
political or legal regulation and practices of privacy and data protection?
Practices
? Which social practices with regard to privacy and
publicity can be observed?
? Can practices be traced back to important turning points
in history or to critical junctures (e.g. end of the soviet rule)?
? How have new governmental and economic activities in the
digital age affected citizens'/users' attitudes towards data protection
so far?
Discourses
? Which interpretive schemes appear in current debates about
privacy and data protection?
? Which optimistic or pessimistic narratives are told in
response to the digital challenges?
? Which traditions and practices are reflected, challenged
or renegotiated in privacy discourses?
Authors are invited to submit papers that offer deep insights into the
national socio-political backgrounds of privacy and data protection
issues, covering any of the aspects mentioned above. The contributions
should have a solid empirical foundation, but theoretical reflections
are also welcome.
Further process: Abstracts of no more than 500 words should be submitted
to Dr. Wolf J. Schünemann ((wolf.schuenemann /at/ ipw.uni-heidelberg.de) ) and
Dr. Max-Otto Baumann ((max.baumann /at/ mill-institut.de) ) by April 12, 2015.
Please indicate your institutional affiliation. Acceptance notifications
will be sent until May 31, 2015. A two-day-workshop will take place in
Heidelberg on November 26/27, 2015. After that, papers for an edited
volume will be selected based on quality and coherence of the book. We
hope to be able to provide travel grants for international participants.
If you have further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Kind regards,
Max-Otto Baumann and Wolf J. Schünemann
Contact person: Dr. Wolf J. Schünemann
email: (wolf.schuenemann /at/ ipw.uni-heidelberg.de)
telephone: +40 6221 543186
Address: Institut für Politische Wissenschaft
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
Bergheimer Straße 58
69115 Heidelberg
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