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[ecrea] Information & Organization - Special Issue on: “Collective Action, Social Movements and Digital Technology”
Tue May 16 11:35:09 GMT 2017
*Information & Organization*
Special Issue on: “Collective Action, Social Movements and Digital
Technology”
*_Special Issue Editors:_*
Lisen Selander, University of Gothenburg
Amber Young, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Emmanuelle Vaast, McGill University
Elizabeth Davidson, University of Hawai’i
*_Motivation and Overview_*
Technological advances have revolutionized both the means and ends of
collection actions and movements. It seems what we are witnessing is not
only changes in how individuals approach protest and resistance, but
also what it means to /be/ organized. This fundamental shift in the
nature of organization beyond formal boundaries of established
organizations and firms demands a renewed effort to understand
organization and organizing in its current form (Winter et al., 2014).
On the one hand, digital technologies bring unprecedented opportunities
to organize masses of individuals in democratic actions, lower
participation costs, and foster new information and action repertoires
that go beyond offline communities. On the other hand, questions remain
regarding the actual impact of technology-enabled collective action, its
consequences for inequality, and the ethical implications of ideologies
championed through collective action.
There is an emerging literature on the uses of Internet and social media
technologies in social protests and in technology use for collective
actions within the communications field (cf. Bennett & Segerberg, 2012;
Bimber et al., 2012), but research on digital technologies’ implication
for organizing, or the ability to help reach collective action goals is
nascent in the information and organizational fields. Topics that have
been addressed include: digital action repertoires of social movement
organizations (Selander & Jarvenpaa, 2016), cyberactivism (Benjamin,
Chen & Zimbra, 2014; Yetgin, Young & Miranda, 2012), systems
standardization as collective action (Markus, Steinfield, Wigand &
Minton, 2006), collective efforts to complete tasks in a dispersed work
context (Subramaniam, Nandhakumar & Baptista, 2013), collective action
and knowledge contribution in voluntary, computer-mediated settings
(Wasko, Faraj & Teigland, 2004), and ICT tool use in social movements
(Young, 2017).
Important research opportunities yet to be explored include using
collective action and social movements lenses to consider organization
more broadly, including large-group collaboration phenomena such as
collaborative innovation networks or crowd funding. This research stream
has the potential to contribute to IS and reference discipline theories
as well as develop practical insights for organizations, practitioners,
activists, and policy makers.
*_Scope and Focus of the Special Issue _*
The purpose of this special issue is to develop understanding around the
roles of digital technologies in collective action and movement
phenomena and to contribute theoretical insights related to collective
actions in the digital age. We encourage submissions that explore the
roles of digital technology in collective action generally as well as
those focused social movement phenomena. In keeping with the aims and
scope of /Information & Organization/, we are particularly interested in
papers that examine in depth the social and material interplay of
information technologies and organizational and organizing phenomena.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to the following:
* Online resource mobilization and digital opportunity structures for
collective action
* Social and material implications of digital activism
* Fake news movements, propaganda diffusion and organizing responses
* Corporate strategy / involvement in social movements to shape public
policy
* Botivists (web bot programmed for activism), online petitions, and
other tools for digital protest and engagement
* Digital marketing of social agendas
* Empowerment / marginalization campaigns enacted in online digital
technologies
* Social media capabilities and facilitation of echo chambers
* Media capabilities for voice-giving and perspective-shaping
* Financing of social agendas through crowd funding or bitcoin exchanges
* Crowd funding, bitcoin exchange or similar phenomena examined as
social movements or collective actions
* Privacy and ethical issues in researching online collective action
* Methodological challenges in researching collective action and new
digital technologies
*_Special issue timeframe:_*
Submission Deadline: November 1, 2017
First round decisions: March 1, 2018
Revisions due: July 1, 2018
Second round review: October 1, 2018
Final papers due: December 1, 2018
Publication: Issue 1, 2019 (available online
approximately 1/1/2019)
*_References_*
Benjamin, Victor, Hsinchun Chen, and David Zimbra. "Bridging the virtual
and real: the relationship between web content, linkage, and
geographical proximity of social movements." /Journal of the Association
for Information Science and Technology/ 65.11 (2014): 2210-2222.
Bennett, W. Lance, and Alexandra Segerberg. "The logic of connective
action: Digital media and the personalization of contentious politics."
/Information, Communication & Society/ 15.5 (2012): 739-768.
Bimber, Bruce, Andrew Flanagin, and Cynthia Stohl. Collective action in
organizations: Interaction and engagement in an era of technological
change. Cambridge University Press, 2012.
Markus, M. Lynne, Charles W. Steinfield, and Rolf T. Wigand. "Standards,
Collective Action and IS Development-Vertical Information Systems
Standards in the US Home Mortgage Industry." /MIS Quarterly/ 30 (2006):
439-465.
Selander, Lisen, and Sirkka L. Jarvenpaa. "Digital Action Repertoires
and Transforming a Social Movement Organization." /MIS Quarterly/ 40.2
(2016): 331-352.
Subramaniam, Niran, Joe Nandhakumar, and John Baptista. "Exploring
social network interactions in enterprise systems: the role of virtual
co‐presence." /Info Systems J./ 23.6 (2013): 475-499.
Wasko, Molly McLure, Samer Faraj, and Robin Teigland. "Collective action
and knowledge contribution in electronic networks of practice." /Journal
of the Association for Information Systems/ 5.11 (2004): 2.
Winter, Susan, et al. "Beyond the organizational ‘container’:
Conceptualizing 21st century sociotechnical work." /Information and
Organization/ 24.4 (2014): 250-269.
Yetgin, Emre, Amber G. Young, and Shaila M. Miranda. "Cultural
production of protest frames and tactics: Cybermediaries and the SOPA
movement." /International Conference on Information Systems /(2012).
Young, Amber G. “Using ICT for social good: Cultural identity
restoration through emancipatory pedagogy.” /Info Systems J./ 2017.
https://doi.org/10.1111/isj.12142
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