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[Commlist] CfP EASA 2024: P036 Digital Ethnography and Experiences from the Global South
Sat Dec 23 13:28:31 GMT 2023
We are organizing an in-person panel at the *EASA conference* in
Barcelona, Spain from July 23 to 26, 2024.
The panel is titled (P036) *'Digital Ethnography and Experiences from
the Global South'.* We welcome ethnographic and methodological
contributions concerning digitalization and datafication. The aim is to
learn from people’s engagements with rising technologies in the Global
South. Please see the end of this message or
https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easa2024/p/14507
<https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easa2024/p/14507> for the panel
information.
If you would like to join us, please submit a short abstract of max 300
characters and a long abstract of max 250 words via the conference
website: https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easa2024/p/14507
<https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easa2024/p/14507>. The deadline for
submitting your paper proposal is *Jan. 22, 2024*.
Please feel free to contact us via *(jingjing.fu /at/ qmul.ac.uk)* or
*(yueran.tian /at/ uni-bielefeld.de)*, if you have any questions. We look
forward to meeting you in Spain for our panel discussion!
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*P036 Digital Ethnography and Experiences from the Global South*
*Convenors:*
Yueran Tian (Bielefeld University)
Jingjing Fu (Queen Mary University of London)
*Discussants:*
Prof. Tim Jordan (University College London)
(More to be confirmed)
*Short Abstract:*
This panel welcomes ethnographic and methodological contributions
concerning digitalization and datafication. The aim is to learn from
people’s engagements with rising technologies in the Global South.
*Long Abstract:*
Data-intensive logics and practices have become highly intertwined with
many aspects of people's everyday lives, spanning healthcare,
communication, digital activism, and more. In the Global South, the
rapid expansion of telecommunication infrastructure, combined with the
widespread availability of smartphones and AI tools, has significantly
reshaped how people engage with public services, work, consumption and
many more. Mobile apps for instance have expedited the implementation of
welfare policies, extended access of payment solutions and financial
services to previously marginalized communities. However, as more
individuals embrace digital platforms, corporations and governments also
employ algorithms to control, selectively include, or exclude
individuals from this digital ecosystem. This raises concerns and sparks
debates regarding equality, inclusion, and privacy.
The study of people's experiences thus is crucial as responses to these
changes are highly contextual and dependent on individuals' material and
affective conditions. Additionally, observing and uncovering ambiguities
embedded in digitally mediated everyday life poses methodological
challenges.
The point of departure for our panel is that datafication remains a
highly interactive and relational process. Drawing insights from
experiences in the Global South, we aim to reexamine and further explore:
*
The roles of digital technologies
*
How people interact with digitally mediated society
*
The evolving strategies and approaches that (digital) ethnographers
employ in their "fieldwork"
* The opportunities for interdisciplinary dialogues among scholars
from sociology, information science and technology, communication,
and media studies.
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