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[ecrea] cpf: Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture - redesigning or redefining privacy
Thu Sep 22 18:43:14 GMT 2016
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This is a reminder posting for the call for papers for: REDESIGNING OR
REDEFINING PRIVACY
Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture: 12:2
Deadline for abstracts: 1st October 2016: is coming shortly.
Please send abstracts to (WPCC2015 /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(WPCC2015 /at/ gmail.com)>.
The revelations of Edward Snowden in 2013 came as a wake-up call for a
public that increasingly depends on the internet for numerous everyday
activities. A shift of boundaries between the state and the public
came to the fore placing state scrutiny at the centre of public
debates, at least for a while. Recent studies suggest that individuals
who consider themselves as ordinary citizens disregard surveillance on
the basis of the argument, ³nothing to hide, nothing to fear². Others
like Stoycheff, 2016 suggest that surveillance has contributed to a
chilling effect on minority views, which are forcefully silenced.
The FBI-Apple dispute about a locked and encrypted iPhone shifted the
attention to privacy by design, which introduced an interesting
paradox: companies that harvest personal data of individuals for their
own commercial interest are to be found protecting the same data from
government agencies and promising privacy via encryption. In a
neoliberal context, though, many companies are driven by the
maximization of profit rather than the common good. Thus, such actions
can be seen as shrewd customer relationship management to boost their
loyalty. Blaming the ³bad² state that spies on people, the ³good²
companies come to "protect " human rights such as privacy.
This raises serious questions that need to be addressed: do new
technological developments empower the user and ensure privacy and
freedom of expression as the discourse suggests? Should citizens place
their rights in the hands of big corporations? Do many individuals now
show more trust in corporations than in democratically elected
governments? If so what are the implications for democracy as such?
Should the response to risks of computer-based surveillance be yet
more advanced technology? This special issue calls for papers that
contribute to the ongoing debate about surveillance, focusing on the
implications for democracy following Snowden¹s revelations and the
shift to privacy by design.
Themes may also include but are not limited to the following:
The role of corporations and the state in the digital era
The rethinking of privacy, democracy, and freedom of expression
Citizens¹ experience of the surveillance state
Privacy by design as a response to surveillance
New forms of resistance to surveillance
Trust in corporations and the state
National and international privacy protection policies and data
protection laws
Submission of Abstracts:
Prospective authors of research articles of between 6,000-8,000 words
including notes and references are encouraged to send a 250-word
abstract to WESTMINSTER PAPERS IN COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE no later
than 1st October 2016.
The editorial team of WPCC will inform authors of abstracts by the
15th October 2016 if the abstract meets the brief of the issue and if
they would like to request submission of a full text with a view to
inclusion, subject to peer-review and editing on delivery.
Deadline for full-text submission: 1st February 2017.
Authors of those abstracts encouraged by WPCC or new submissions
should register at the journal website by 1 February 2017 attaching
the article. Authors will be notified as soon as possible about
acceptance, revisions or rejection and the outcome of the review
process with a view to publishing accepted articles subject to any
amendments requested. Please route communications about articles
submitted via the journal's online system.
Please submit articles
via: http://www.westminsterpapers.org/about/submissions/
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