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[Commlist] CFP - GIGARTS 2020: Online Information Governance
Wed Nov 13 11:34:39 GMT 2019
The Fourth European Multidisciplinary Conference on Global Internet
Governance Actors, Regulations, Transactions and Strategies
*(GIG-ARTS)* will be held in Vienna, 7-8 May 2020.
The general theme of this edition is "*Online Information Governance -
More Expression, Less Freedom?*"
Abstract submission is now open.
Authors are invited to submit their extended abstracts (no longer than
500 words), describing their research question(s), theoretical
framework, approach and methodology, expected findings or empirical
outcome. Submitted abstracts will be evaluated through a peer-review
process.
You can download the full call for papers here: https://bit.ly/2CCU1Lu
*Key dates*
Deadline for abstract submissions: 9 February 2020
Notification to authors: 19 March 2020
Programme publication: 9 April 2020
Conference dates: 7 & 8 May 2020
*Further details*
Website: events.gig-arts.eu <http://events.gig-arts.eu/>
Email: (events /at/ gig-arts.eu) <mailto:(events /at/ gig-arts.eu)>
Submissions: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=gigarts2020
Twitter: @GigArtsEU - Hashtag: #GIGARTS20
Mailing list for updates: http://tinyurl.com/yc7rvxm4
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*Theme rationale and main topics*
It is now 30 years since the invention of the World Wide Web, and over
fifteen years since the development of the interactive Web or also known
as Web2.0. Online information and communication have never seemed easier
and more accessible to everyone, thanks to the mediation of social
networks, search engines, and other kinds of platforms and technologies.
With such capabilities “to seek, receive and impart information and
ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers”, freedom of speech
and freedom of the press should have grown to such an extent that some
of the utopian visions of full participatory democracy would have
appeared to be within our reach. At the very least, some of the
long-standing informational imbalances concerning information flow
globally, diversity of content and authors, and the accessibility of
accurate information would have been taken as a given framework against
which societies would have been called to solve problems and to look
after citizens’ well-being. Paradoxically, the levels of freedom and
freedom of expression, as captured in global measuring instruments by a
variety of institutions and organisations, do not show the expected or
desired advancement. Rather there is evidence that freedom in societies
and freedom of the press deteriorate.
Ambitious goals of freedom to express one’s own identity and opinion at
the global public sphere on an equal basis and free from fear of
retaliation or misuse evaporate for many, such as those subjected to
hate speech, those persecuted by autocratic authorities and the great
majority of citizens whose personal data become de facto ownership of
private companies.
Misinformation, spread not only by politically extreme groups but also
by “normal”, mainstream parties in the (desperate or calculated) attempt
to influence voters, can undermine the quality and freedom of global
debate. Information conflict thus becomes even more an object of state
rivalry and diplomacy, but also the tool for the erosion of citizenship
as the utmost form of participation in the commons. These phenomena are
coupled with the fact that even values once considered unquestionable,
such as the value of independent journalism, the value of human rights
such as privacy and dignity, are being challenged.
The technological capabilities allowed the world over to express and
share information and opinions, to connect and form alliances. However,
they have also enabled the spread of misinformation, have been
undermining the human right to privacy on digital communication
channels, subjected vulnerable groups to more vulnerability, and
provided for economic models putting at stake the fundamental pillars of
democracy. Within this context, policies governing the fate of users’
data, citizens’ freedoms and the integrity of content have fallen short
of helping pave the path to the desired communication environment.
Regulatory responses capturing communication and information have
oscillated between forms of a ‘knee-jerk’ reaction to resist any attempt
to provide for the normative standards of content and a tendency to
securitise communication as a matter of national security.
Importantly, critics argue that even where governance has allowed for
more democratic processes in raising concerns and suggesting solutions,
the gaps in connecting the dots are glaring. If governance refers to the
role of ideas and principles, the role of actors and the processes of
negotiation and solution, it is urgent to return, on the one hand, to
the basic and fundamental rights questions and take stock of the
achievements of hitherto frameworks. On the other hand, it seems crucial
to interrogate what futures exactly are current policy frameworks
shaping, especially in relation to a politics of care for young citizens
and hence the future generations?
After having addressed global internet governance as a diplomacy issue
at its first edition held in Paris in 2017, how to overcome inequalities
in internet governance at the second edition held in Cardiff in 2018,
and the role of Europe in the global governance of the internet at its
third edition held in Salerno in 2019, this year’s GIG-ARTS conference
turns its attention to the governance of online information, to address
the relation of citizens to the quality of content online as an often
neglected area of regulation and governance of the internet. In that
respect, the conference continues the conversation on internet
governance turning its attention from institutions and structural
factors to the role of content and misinformation as an object of
governance, and to internet users as forces of change.
Hence, in addition to general internet governance issues and topics,
submissions are particularly welcome on the following possible areas of
investigation:
- The governance of fundamental freedoms online between global
platforms, conflicts of jurisdictions and extraterritorial legislation
- The role of European and global institutions in shaping the conditions
of free expression online
- Responsibility and liability of platforms and other intermediaries in
content regulation
- Restrictive regulation and the securitization of content
- Privacy, misinformation, democracy: challenges to internet governance
- Structural role of individual targeting, behavioural advertising and
other economic models of online platforms on the reshaping of
fundamental freedoms and democracy
- From nudging to manipulation: consequences on autonomy and human dignity
- Successive copyright reforms and their impact on freedom of
expression, freedom of the press and democracy
- Changes in and challenges to journalism practice through intentional
misinformation
- Governance from below: how practices and principles by civil society
aim to shape the conditions of technology for the advancement of
democracies and human well- being
- Youth and access to information; news and misinformation in the online
world; the purpose of thinking towards the future
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