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[ecrea] Call for Chapters: Networks, Movements & Technopolitics in Latin America: Critical Analysis and Current Challenges
Tue May 03 12:30:26 GMT 2016
BOOK: Networks, Movements & Technopolitics in Latin America: Critical
Analysis and Current Challenges
<http://www.compoliticas.org/web/images/stories/CFP-%20Networks,%20Movements%20&%20Technopolitics%20in%20Latin%20America-%20Critical%20Analysis%20and%20Current%20Challenges.pdf>
Edit by Francisco Sierra Caballero (CIESPAL) and Tommaso Gravante (UNAM)
This publication aims to: firstly, present a critical reflection on the
different scenarios and challenges that are appearing in Latin America
regarding the power relationships that are produced based on new digital
technologies and the social processes of which they are part; secondly,
to establish a dialogue with researchers in other places who have
critically analysed the use and application of technology and digital
culture for the active participation of citizenship in decision-making,
exchange and social solidarity processes, such as the Arab Spring, the
Occupy movement in the USA, protests against the economic crisis in
Europe and protests for a broader democratic arena in Hong Kong,
Singapore, Taiwan and Japan, among others.
We therefore invite academics and researchers to contribute to one
of the topic areas discussed in this book:
1. Technopolitics: a theoretical framework. In this first topic
area, we are interested in and propose, based on an interpretation of
Communicology of the South and together with researchers from different
countries, a theoretical framework that makes it possible to
conceptualise the different mediation processes that emerge between
cyberdemocracy and the emancipation practices of new social movements in
Latin America.
2. Dissident technopolitics practices in Latin America: critical
analysis and current challenges. Taking Latin American experiences as a
starting point, in this second topic area we are interested in
reflecting on the practices and experiences that are, autonomously and
using self-management, creating other identities and social spaces on
the margins of and against the neoliberal system through the use of
digital technology. We are interested in the dissenting experiences in
Latin America whose practices are used not only to hack and make pirate
copies of hardware and software in order to make their own technologies
and liberating tools, but also to hack the concept of the body, gender,
maternity, sexuality, health, care, education, knowledge, nature,
spirituality, etc. They are experiences in which technologies are a
pretext for rethinking and collectively rebuilding on the margins of and
outside the state. There is a particular emphasis on collective writing
about common culture, assets and knowledge, as well as successes,
failures and challenges.
INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS
The book will be edited by Francisco Sierra Caballero and Tommaso
Gravante. Anyone who wishes to collaborate in the publication can submit
their proposal by sending an abstract in English, which must be between
800 and 1500 words in length, by 1 July 2016.
Authors will be notified of the proposals chosen by 1 August 2016.
The full, original text should have a maximum length of 8,000 words
(including bibliography, notes and tables) for theoretical texts and
6,000 words (including bibliography, notes and tables) for case studies.
The full text, in UK English, should be sent by 1 November 2016.
SUBMISSION
Proposals and full texts should be sent to the book’s two editors: Dr.
Francisco SIERRA CABALLERO ((fcompoliticas /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(fcompoliticas /at/ gmail.com)>) and Dr. Tommaso GRAVANTE
((t.gravante /at/ gmail.com)).
Call (PDF
<http://www.compoliticas.org/web/images/stories/CFP-%20Networks,%20Movements%20&%20Technopolitics%20in%20Latin%20America-%20Critical%20Analysis%20and%20Current%20Challenges.pdf>)
Francisco Sierra Caballero
Professor of Communication Theory. Director of the International Centre
for Advanced Studies in Communications for Latin America (CIESPAL),
Quito. Director of the Interdisciplinary Group of Studies in
Communication, Politics and Social Change (www.compoliticas.org),
University of Seville.
Tommaso Gravante
PhD in Politics. Postdoctoral Fellow at UNAM, Mexico. Researcher of the
Interdisciplinary Group of Studies in Communication, Politics and Social
Change (COMPOLITICAS).
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