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[Commlist] Call for Papers - Regulating African Digital Media Conference
Tue Nov 02 15:39:11 GMT 2021
*Conference on the Regulation of Old and New Media Forms in Africa***
*Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research*
*Birmingham City University*
*May 2022**
**Location: Zoom***
*
*
*Conference Theme: Regulating African Digital Media*
Increasingly more African countries are instituting laws, procedures,
and policies, seeking to regulate the media ecosystem. Governments
typically justify such approaches to regulation as a way to combat the
negative consequences of online media usage, such as hate speech and
mis/disinformation. This trend generally reflects the historical
application of censorship laws that have targeted the critical press and
journalistic autonomy (Obijiofor et al., 2016). The implications of this
are considerable. What we are witnessing is the integration of two
regulatory paradigms – for the traditional and digital media – into one,
with the potential for state authorities to expand blanket censorship
from media to citizen expression in ways that mirror the politics of
regulation. A central issue at play here is the struggle over the
appropriation and exercise of power over collective voices, with
consequences for democracy, plurality, independence, dissent, and freedom.
No doubt, media and digital regulation have intensified in recent years
across the globe in what has been described as the “regulatory turn”
(Flew et al., 2021, p. 208). The aim, it seems, is to manage the
disruptive effects of the usage of media technologies. What has been
largely overlooked, however, is an overarching investigation of this
trend in Africa. This is in spite of the reality that state
interventions such as social media bans, which are becoming common on
the continent, are disruptive in themselves. Meanwhile, the few
scholarly collections which have examined separate angles of the subject
have done so predominantly from the traditional media lens only
(Chan-Meetoo, 2013; Sampaio-Dias et al., 2019). For instance,
Chan-Meetoo’s (2013) edited collection considers how African journalists
negotiate regulatory and ethical requirements demanded of them. Other
works have looked at regional or linguistic peculiarities in traditional
media regulation on the continent (de la Brosse and Frére, 2012;
Limpitlaw, 2021). What has also been neglected is the fact that new
media platforms are mainly domiciled in the West, bearing implications
for digital sovereignty in Africa.
Furthermore, research centred on Africa has barely considered emergent
regulatory practices that cover the traditional media, online harms,
social media, blockchain technologies, privacy concerns, virtual
reality, artificial intelligence, and the wider internet of things. This
conference thus creates a space for researchers to build on previous
scholarly work and to share, discuss and debate contemporary regulatory
interventions in media technologies across Africa in attempts to
regulate disruption, and their impact on societies. Topics may include,
but are not limited to:
* Press and broadcasting regulation
* Social media regulation and online harms
* Online broadcasting regulation
* The politics of regulation
* Internet and social media bans
* Regulation as disruption
* Regulating/regulated disruption
* Platform governance and self-regulation in Africa
* Regulatory frameworks, methods, and methodologies
* Online privacy and data concerns
* Regulation, the balance of power, and digital sovereignty
* Punitive media registration
* African Union, multi-stakeholderism, and media regulation
* Regulating artificial intelligence and other new media technologies
in Africa
We also invite conceptual papers and reflections on alternative, and
perhaps homegrown approaches that can be exploited at the national
and/or regional level on the continent to address the challenges of
media and digital regulation.
*Abstract Submission*
Please send a 300-word abstract proposal for a 20-minute presentation by
*14 January 2022*to (regulationafrica /at/ protonmail.com)
<mailto:(regulationafrica /at/ protonmail.com)>.
Proposers will be notified of the outcomeof the selection by *7
February 2022*.
Abstracts should be in MS Word format and should include name, position,
institutional affiliation, email address of proposer(s), and a 150-word
biography.
*Conference Details***
Conference registration will open in early *April 2022*and the
conference schedule will be released afterwards. The conference will be
held on *Zoom*and will be organised weekly in a panel format in *May
2022*. To make this work, a single panel (90 minutes long) will be
scheduled for each of the Tuesday afternoons (UK time) in May 2022.
Further details on timing will be confirmed to selected participants.
*Special Issue Publication*
Shortly after the conference, we will invite full papers based on the
presentations for publication in a journal special issue to be
announced. In your abstract submission, please indicate whether you
would like your contribution to be considered for the special issue
publication. Interested contributors should please note that full papers
will be requested by *September 2022*.
**
*About BCMCR*
The Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research (BCMCR
<http://www.bcmcr.org/>) was established in 2009 to develop excellent
research as a core activity within the Birmingham School of Media. Our
team of independent researchers at Birmingham Centre for Media and
Cultural Research (BCMCR) generates work of internationally excellent
standard. BCMCR aims to produce distinctive, collaborative work within
the field of media and cultural research.
*References***
Chan-Meetoo, C. (2013) /Media Ethics and Regulation: Insights from
Africa/. Bamenda: African Books Collective.
de la Brosse, R. and Frére, M. (2012) Media regulation in sub-Saharan
Africa: trends and stakes in French-speaking countries. /Ecquid Novi:
African Journalism Studies/, 33(3), pp. 74-92.
https://doi.org/10.1080/02560054.2012.732259
<https://doi.org/10.1080/02560054.2012.732259>
Flew, T., Gillett, R. and Cole, R. (2021) Editorial. /Journal of Digital
Media & Policy/, 12(2), pp. 207-214.
https://doi.org/10.1386/jdmp_00059_2 <https://doi.org/10.1386/jdmp_00059_2>
Limpitlaw, J. (2021) /Media Law Handbook for Southern Africa/.
Johannesburg: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung.
Obijiofor, L., Murray, R. and Singh, S. (2016) Changes in journalism in
two post-authoritarian non-Western countries. /The International
Communication Gazette/, 0(0), pp. 1-21.
Sampaio-Dias, S., Mabweazara, H.M., Townsend, J. and Osman, I. (2019)
Practices, policies and regulation in African journalism: mapping a
research agenda. /African Journalism Studies/, 40(3), pp. 1-9.
https://doi.org/10.1080/23743670.2019.1750197
<https://doi.org/10.1080/23743670.2019.1750197>
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