[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Call for papers : Questioning Ethics In Digital Contexts From The Perspective Of Information And Communication Sciences
Fri Jul 16 15:22:45 GMT 2021
* Call for papers *
* QUESTIONING ETHICS IN DIGITAL CONTEXTS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION SCIENCES (SIC) * [1]
**
full paper submission 3/11/2021 in English and French for the RFSIC «
Revue Française des Sciences de l’information et de la communication »
N°25 (publication date May 2022);
https://journals.openedition.org/rfsic/11530 Open Access Journal - no
payment from the authors will be required.
Coordination : GENIC (Groupe sur l'Éthique et le Numérique en
Information-Communication) including the following GENIC group members :
Jean-Claude Domenget and Carsten Wilhelm, group coordinators, as well as
Camille Alloing, Béa Arruabarrena, Christine Barats, Orélie Desfriches
Doria, Gérald Kembellec, Mariannig Le Béchec, Franck Renucci, Marta
Severo and Samuel Szoniecky
**
Created two years ago, the Group on Ethics and the Digital in
Information-Communication research (GENIC) is now an accredited working
group of the French national scientific association for information and
communication science (Société Française des Sciences de l’Information
et de la Communication - SFSIC) [2]. The group promotes work on
questions of ethics affecting all information-communication processes,
in a context marked by the growing presence of digital technologies,
through the analysis of phenomena, practices, social interactions.
Indeed, all fields of research are touched by ethical questions (we
refer the reader to the volume Dynamics of Information-Communication
Research edited by the Conference of French Research Centers in
Information-communication Sciences [3], take for instance the research
fields related to the media, to legal, communicational, or
organizational issues, or the role and the place of technologies in
methods of research and scientific publication, in particular through
the design of algorithms and data processing.
Beyond analyzing research practice, work in information-communication
ethics should also take into account the logic of actors and their
productions embedded in discursive, socio-economic, cultural, political
and regulatory realities of digital and communication practices [4].
Faced with a generalization of social controversies, whether related to
the health crisis, the environmental crisis, public health issues, etc.
it appears essential today that information-communication researchers
participate in public debates around ethics and prepare those on the
questions to come.
This call therefore intends to broadly question ethics from the vantage
point of information communication sciences (SIC), in the current
digital context. Indeed, even though ethical questions and issues do not
find their origin in digital technology, this special issue invites
submissions problematizing the role of “the digital”. Three fundamental
characteristics can guide expected proposals :
* Ethics through the prism of information and communication sciences.
The ethical questions triggered by the use of digital technologies
pervade the whole of society. In recent years, many organizations
(including the French National Digital Ethics Committee) have started to
question digital ethics based on the respect for the human person. As
such, ethics is not simply a necessity but it also stems from a desire
to regulate digital practices and to develop a critical stance and a
dialogue aimed at questioning fundamental principles in a different way.
These aspects in particular call for an analysis in the field of SIC.
Indeed, what is a digital ethic? What ethical questions do digital
technology raise from the point of view of information and human
communication (considering anthropological, sociological, etc. approaches)?
* Ethics as situated practice.
Ethics is fundamentally neither of legal nature, nor simply expertise.
It is a form of reasoning on concrete problematic situations, which is
expressed in action — beyond legal or regulatory frameworks — when
contradictory logic of values are at work. According to the situated
ethics approach [5], ethics is, first of all, a questioning exercised
with reference to a system of values such as social justice,
responsibility, etc. This approach, based on pragmatism [6], promotes
ethics that do not separate values from facts insofar as it is the
value itself, constructed by experience, that is constitutive of social
norms and facts. Encouraging field research and experiments, this call
aims to stimulate ethical questioning of research practice, professional
practice, digital uses and the various forms that ethics take in
society. Indeed, if ethics precedes the law, where does it come from?
How is it construed, and how does it come to be a standard, or even
reified in regulations, as in the case of GDPR?
* Ethics from an international perspective.
Despite being a universal principle, ethics and its implementation are
dependent on situated, localized contexts, which are also culturally and
socially diverse when observed from an international vantage point [7].
We thus invite proposals to compare the ethical politics of scientific
communities internationally, primarily in the field of communication,
media and digital studies. We also wish to solicit contributions from
other continents and in particular those from countries and regions
lesser or little known in the context of these questions. What issues
are highlighted by the documents and the practices established? How do
they contribute to the effort of researchers to situate or even
legitimize themselves in relation to social demands, themselves largely
dependent on a given socio-historical context, or even on democratic and
socio-economic models of the research? By what mechanisms does the
research community organize its deliberations and decision-making? To
what extent are collective ethical approaches interwoven in variable
political configurations and power issues, in particular by providing an
additional tool for the administration of research professions, which in
turn might trigger resistance?
Complementing these three fundamental aspects, this call is structured
around four complimentary areas, which are not exclusive:
* Questioning ethics in information and communication sciences : new
objects, new issues?
This topic area concerns issues around research questions linked to
digital technology. The digitization of society has led to a fundamental
change in our relations to information and communication, thus affecting
social transformations at all levels. The new objects produced by
digital technology (big data, data, algorithms, platforms, etc.),
irrigating many if not all information-communication practices, have
generated innovations and uses making it possible to create, to put in
relation and to share new knowledge. Yet, they also reveal new phenomena
such as algorithmic biases, the automation of processes with artificial
intelligence, or the production of fake news. Indeed, in a digital
context, many ethical questions update and transform reflections on
issues such as the regulation of access, production and circulation of
knowledge, but also the construction of the modalities of debate and
deliberation which put in tension the desire to disseminate knowledge
and media standards in the context of platformization (see, for example
the controversy surrounding the suspension of ex-President Trump's
accounts on Facebook and Twitter). Under these conditions, how can we
access the "black boxes" of digital interfaces to bring to light the
socio-technical, cultural, economic and political logic at work in the
regulation of information-communicational practices, in the production
of algorithms and content and their circulation ? What role can the law
play in these contexts ? What legitimacy do mainstream media have in
order to take on the role of a content regulator? What rules do media
editors apply to control information in fact checking? How can they
support the controversies necessary for the emergence of consensus? What
editorial procedures and what paradigms of quantification govern media
publications ? Similarly, as the Cambridge Analytica case showed, how do
content designers instrumentalize content to generate traffic? This
question can also be applied to the field of scientific publications, to
the formats and visibility associated with it, as shown by the
controversies on science communication during the Corona pandemic.
More broadly in contemporary societies, digital devices have created
unprecedented possibilities for capturing and tracking data, triggering
legal issues of personal data protection, but also anthropological
consequences, in particular the effects on individual and collective
attention, behavior and decision-making, putting the protection of the
human person at stake. What impact does automation have on
decision-making? What roles do applications such as Stop Covid,
presented as a solution to the pandemic, but also apprehended as
exemplary for a certain solutionism [8], play for the social
acceptability of public policies?
Ethical issues often arise in the face of dilemmas, borderline cases,
which question its limits, principles and scope. How does this
questioning fit into the digital practices of researchers, professionals
and citizens? What forms does it take: deontology, codes of ethics,
including in the development of legal translations of its objects? Faced
with algorithmic logic and new digital devices and applications, what
are the contributions of our field (SIC) to renew ethical reflections in
the construction of research issues and the production of knowledge
about information-communication practices?
* Ethics and transformation of professional practices in
information-communication related professions
The object of this second topic area is to focalize on professional
practices in different sectors of activity related to information and
communication in order to analyze their transformations and to evaluate
the impact of ethical reflexivity on those transformations. There are in
fact a number of principles, rules, ethical questions that practitioners
ask themselves during the exercise of their profession, which when
controversial, might be included in codes, charters, etc., drawn up as
guidelines, as supervision and recognition tools for professional
practices. The transformations of professions are often accompanied by a
generalization of tools, of digital communication devices, in turn taken
into account in regulations, such as the GDPR. These transformations, as
mediations of professional practices by algorithms or even AI, directly
question professional ethics. To analyze this tension, we wish to
solicit case studies relating to professional ethics, to reflect on the
conditions for exercising professions, as well as to analyze their
regulatory framework.
Is an ethical regulation of professional practices indeed possible?
Faced with the hegemony and potential abuses of GAFAM or other web
giants, their capacity for the storage and processing of data, new
functions or even new professions have appeared within companies
requiring an ethical dimension. In this context, what is the real role,
what are the strategies and tactics of the data controller, the data
protection officer, the data analyst, the community manager, the traffic
manager, etc. ? What are the ethical perimeters of all these emerging
professions? Is there really a place for ethics in this data market
economy? The attempts to moralize and regulate social mediation
platforms, are they, or can they become efficient? In more traditional
information professions - communication, human resources, marketing,
etc. charters and codes of ethics have been drawn up to regulate
professional practices. What assessment can we make of the production of
these charters and ethical codes? Is it possible to think ethics
specific to the information-communication related professions?
Focusing more specifically on data, which ethical approaches can be
identified in the processes of data mediation and regulation by
algorithms? How to guard against biases and “social filtering” of
algorithms? How can we prevent online behavior tracking from leading to
the profiling of individuals, without even including the intentionality
of their digital practices? Likewise, it is now (theoretically) possible
to predict or even provoke Internet users' appetite for ideals and
products by observing their behavior online; big influencers and digital
marketing companies are not shying away from it. Can algorithms handle
subtle traits of human communication such as irony or sarcasm when
creating or relaying content on social media? More broadly still, what
are the interactions from an ethical point of view between the
professional world and regulations (in particular the GDPR)? Since the
raised awareness about data leaks and the commercial power at play, we
are witnessing a - literal - lifting of Europe's shield (privacy shield)
against the American “pure players” and the giants of consumer
computing. How are the new concerns about information rights and the
value of privacy reflected?
* Research ethics by experience: epistemology, methodology, data,
corpus, observables
Research ethics has a rich legal framework. However research on and with
digital technology renews epistemological and methodological questions,
in particular with regard to ethical issues, whether in the choice of
theoretical approaches, methods of collecting, processing and viewing
data, as well as their conservation, anonymization and openness
(long-term storage, open access, open data, etc.).
This topic area proposes to examine the experience and the questions and
choices of researchers before, during and after the implementation of
the research protocol. Far from an idealization, it questions the
practical solutions, the constraints, the difficulties, the limits
inherent in the confrontation with the field. Thus, in the preparation
of research, the choice of theories, methods, postures and definition of
the protocol requires taking into account ethical issues, whether the
research is funded or not. For example, when collecting data, ethical
issues can lead to making choices that can reorient research if the
question of consent is correctly put forward [9].
Epistemology and methods can be construed as opportunities and risks on
the ethical level, beyond the existing regulatory texts. Are there
theoretical paradigms and methods that are more easily mobilized in an
approach that prioritizes ethics? What choices are made beforehand in
the definition and selection of research data? What methods are used in
the constitution of corpora, in the case of data collection on the web
or online observation, for example? What are the protocols and
modalities for informing and collecting consent from participants? How
are interventional and participatory research methods (participatory
sciences, deliberative online debate systems, etc.) taken into account
in SIC? What are the modalities of processing, analysis and restitution
of results? How do the processes of peer validation of research
implement ethical rules aimed at producing convincing results? What
competent authorities have been set up for ethical regulation (ethics
committee, charter of ethics, guide for research)? From a legal point of
view, what are the methodological contributions of the RGPD and the Data
Protection Officer (DPO), particularly with the implementation of a data
management plan (DMP)? What are the solutions for data storage and
retention? These questions are all the more important as the approval of
an ethics committee is becoming a condition for obtaining research
funding in an increasing number of countries. The risk : substituting
the protection of the public participating in research for that of the
researchers and research institutions.
What are the frictions that question the ethics of research in a
reflective analysis of scientific publication? Don't the new digital
dissemination tools run the risk of conditioning scientific production
in order to meet the injunctions of visibility borrowed from marketing?
How can we reconcile the professional strategies of researchers with the
performance injunctions of the market economy? How are the metrics of
research evaluations constructed? Do they introduce ethical biases?
Indeed, to validate the results of their research, researchers are
inclined to adopt a perspective of distance in order to have their
results validated by the community of peers. How can we take into
account the reception by the public (object of the research) of this
distancing (of validating results by peers) inherent to the research
process? Does publication also require the involvement of the public
concerned by the research?
* Ethics and literacy: curricula and teaching practices
Information-communication systems require new skills of analysis and
decryption, constituting the basis of digital literacy. Indeed, several
recent controversies have revealed how “deep fake” technologies produce
very convincing information asking for a renewal of information
evaluation skills. Likewise, with regard to the manipulation of
individuals, social media and their media resonances have far-reaching
sociological, political, personal and epistemological consequences.
Could the individual dimension of the relationship between ethics and
reflective practice benefit from opening up to cognitive approaches and
to taking into account social dimensions, particularly in the regulatory
process. This reflection also relates to the individualized and situated
teaching practices of higher education and university staff aiming to
transmit a critical posture through mastering the tools for manipulating
information and opinions. What ethical posture could be taken into
account in communicational and professional practices and among young
researchers?
Indeed, we also invite reflections on the transformation of ethical
questioning in organized and structured teaching contexts (training of
PhD candidates, methodological workshops, etc.). To this end,
contributions on concrete teaching cases will be welcome. How is this
training structured when it is aimed at research ethics? What structures
exist and what are their effects? How to implement learning ethics
through sensitive and concrete examples ? How do the increasingly
numerous critical approaches (critical digital studies, critical
literacy, critical privacy studies, empowerment, etc.) question
education and teaching practice? What critical approaches of dominant
educational practices exist ? Which approaches of emancipation and
empowerment? What are their purposes? How to go beyond the vision of
ethics as a moral judgment? What capacity to individually question the
compatibility between practices and values? How to combine hierarchical,
organizational and disciplinary injunctions with the individual freedom
of the teacher? How to take into account the commons? What methods of
adherence / rejection / revision of ethical principles? By whom, and how
can these ethical principles specific to collectives emerge? What are
the effects of an absence of ethics?
These are many of the questions that this issue of the RFSIC wishes to
see debated.
* SUBMISSIONS *
All submissions may be written in either English or French
Timeline
November 3, 2021: Full papers submitted
January 30, 2022: Assessment and return to authors for final decision
March 30, 2022: Authors send camera ready papers for publication
May 2022: publication of the Special issue
Submission of a complete text (Times, size 12 and single-spaced, 35 000
characters, spaces and bibliography included) in English or French on
November 3, 2021 to (jcdomenget /at/ gmail.com) and (carsten.wilhelm /at/ uha.fr);
complete with a title, an abstract, and 3 to 5 keywords, all in French
and English or even in a third language if suitable.
The file will be sent in two copies to (jcdomenget /at/ gmail.com) and
(carsten.wilhelm /at/ uha.fr):
1 file in .docx format including the name, affiliation and email as well
as a short bio of the author(s),
1 file in .pdf format completely anonymized
This complete article will undergo a double-blind peer review process
mobilizing the members of the scientific committee.
For more information, including formatting standards, we invite you to
consult the website of the Revue Française des Sciences de l'Information
et de la communication https://journals.openedition.org/rfsic/
this call is also on the journal website :
https://journals.openedition.org/rfsic/11530
* Notes *
1 We use the French acronym SIC for “information and communication
sciences”.
2 https://www.sfsic.org/la-sfsic/groupes-detudes-et-de-recherche/
3 « Dynamiques des recherches en sciences de l'information et de la
communication »,
http://cpdirsic.fr/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/dyresic-web-08-2019.pdf
4 Balicco Laurence, Broudoux Evelyne, Chartron Ghislaine, Clavier
Viviane et Paillart Isabelle (dir.), L’éthique en contexte
info-communicationnel numérique. Déontologie, régulation, algorithme,
espace public. Actes du colloque « Document numérique et société »,
Echirolles-Grenoble, 2018, Louvain-la-Neuve, De Boeck Supérieur, 2018, 158p.
5 Zacklad Manuel et Rouvroy Antoinette, « Enjeux éthiques situés de l’IA
», XXIIème congrès de la SFSIC, 2021.
6 Dewey John, « What does pragmatism mean by practical ? », The Journal
of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods, 1908, 5(4), 85–99;
Dewey John, Ethics. The later works of John Dewey, 1925–1953. 7.
Carbondale : Southern Illinois University Press, 1985 [1932]
7 Ess Charles, Digital Media Ethics, Polity, 2013.
8 Evgeny Morozov, To save everything, click here, Public Affairs, 2014;
French edition : Pour tout résoudre, cliquez ici, Editions fyp, 2014.
9 Latzko-Toth Guillaume et Pastinelli Madeleine, « Par-delà la
dichotomie public-privé : la mise en visibilité des pratiques numériques
et ses enjeux éthiques », tic&société, vol.7, n°2, 2013.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]