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[Commlist] cfp - Datafied Welfare for Human Flourishing: People-centered perspectives on automation and communication from Europe
Tue Nov 26 13:13:22 GMT 2024
Call for Abstracts
Datafied Welfare for Human Flourishing: People-centered perspectives on
automation and communication from Europe
Communications: The European Journal of Communication Research
Guest edited by: Christian Pentzold, Leipzig University, Germany; Anne
Kaun, Södertörn University, Sweden; Stine Lomborg & Sille Obelitz Søe,
both Copenhagen University, Denmark.
Much is at stake: The welfare sector across the EU faces growing
demands and dwindling resources, with automation expected to bring about
significant changes. Automated decisionmaking (ADM) is being proposed as
a solution to improve efficiency in the provision of public goods and
services by leveraging data-driven processes and reallocating resources
to better support citizens’ well-being. Recent academic work, especially
within the humanities and social sciences, has critically examined
algorithms, datafication, and AI. These studies often emphasize the need
for accountability in technical systems, focusing on data ethics,
transparency, and regulatory oversight to safeguard human justice within
ADM systems. Yet, real-world examples abound of human rights violations,
including privacy breaches, biases in automated systems, and
discriminatory outcomes. Cases such as the use of data for fraud
detection, welfare distribution, and profiling vulnerable populations
illustrate these issues globally. Consequently, concerns about the
potential adverse effects of automation on various aspects of
life—healthcare, welfare, labor, and the functioning of public
spheres—have been raised by researchers, public figures, and the general
public.
Stories about the implications of ADM for the welfare of citizens
sometimes come to public scrutiny, such as a recent WIRED piece on the
Danish welfare system turning into a ‘surveillance nightmare’. When
these stories surface, they relay ADM as extraordinary and scandalous.
But in fact, ADM for welfare provision is becoming ordinary, widespread,
and is fundamentally changing the nature of public goods provision and
public services, and thus the conditions for human flourishing. Some
argue that ADM is critically altering European welfare states from being
based on trust, equity and solidarity to being based on efficiency,
control, and discrimination of vulnerable populations. This
transformation is largely happening under the public radar. As
governments try to ride the waves of automation and drive the
exploitation of technological potentials and vast registers of data on
citizens, we argue that it is urgent to have a critical and informed
debate to shape the use of ADM in the interest of public values, and for
the people. Indeed, this call comes at a moment when automation is
changing the very notion of what communication and information is.
Rather than being mainly about the rights and processes of creating and
distributing messages, of speaking and being heard, data streams become
significant assets and objects of interest no matter what they contain.
This Special Issue seeks to explore the impact of ADM on welfare and
well-being from European perspectives. It starts from the position of
those directly involved: the engineers and designers, the case workers
who collaborate with these systems in welfare and service provision
decisions, and the people whose data fuel the systems and are affected
by automation efforts. The Special Issue aims to address the digital
transformation of the citizen–state relationship by examining the
development, data work, and human-machine collaboration within ADM,
alongside the technological, social, and cultural dynamics that either
facilitate or impede progress in automating welfare for the public good.
A people-centered approach builds on the idea that welfare in
societies is fundamentally about fostering the conditions for the
flourishing of everybody. Hence public goods and services provision
becomes a question of justice and equity. When welfare is increasingly
automated this consequently has implications for social justice for the
people more generally and must be addressed through the lens of the
people implicated in the process of automation.
The Special Issue is open to theoretical and empirical approaches. It
invites senior as well as emerging scholars. Contributions can address,
but are not limited to, the following aspects:
· Conceptualizations of automation, datafication, and communication
· Reflections on human flourishing in datafied and automated
citizen–state relationships
· Public communication and discourses around datafication and
automation for the public good
· Communicative and media practices around automation, datafication
and artificial intelligence
· Case studies of ADM implementation in public administration and
public service provision, including public service broadcasting
· ADM’s and AI-powered tools in newsrooms and their implications
for journalistic practices and the public’s right to information
· Policies, norms, and regulations of ADM deployment and development
· Human rights perspectives on automation and public goods
· Resistance and civic actions against automated processes
· Impacts of ADM on employability in the media sector and beyond,
and the shifting roles of human labor
· Environmental and climate impacts of ADM and AI deployment for
public service provision and media production
There will be no publication fee.
Timeline and procedure
500 to 700 word abstracts should be sent to
((christian.pentzold /at/ uni-leipzig.de)) by March 30, 2025. The abstract
should articulate: 1) the issue or research question to be discussed, 2)
the methodological or critical framework used, and 3) the expected
findings or conclusions. Feel free to consult with the Special Issue
Editors about your article ideas and potential angles or approaches.
Decisions will be communicated to the authors by April 30, 2025. Invited
paper submissions will be due August 31, 2025 and will be submitted to
(christian.pentzold /at/ uni-leipzig.de). They will then undergo peer review
through Communications: The European Journal of Communication Research
following the journal’s standard double-blind procedures. The invitation
to submit a full article does not guarantee acceptance into the Special
Issue. The Special Issue is scheduled for publication in summer 2026.
This call for abstracts is also accessible via
https://www.degruyter.com/publication/journal_key/COMM/downloadAsset/COMM_Datafied%20Welfare%20COMMUNICATIONS.pdf
Contact
Prof Christian Pentzold
Email: (christian.pentzold /at/ uni-leipzig.de)
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