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[ecrea] Call for Papers: EuroCPR: Online content: policy and regulation for a global market
Sun Sep 26 10:27:32 GMT 2010
26th European
Communications Policy Research Conference (EuroCPR)
Online content: policy and regulation for a global market
27-29 March 2011, Ghent, Belgium
In May 2010, the European Commission published the “Digital Agenda for
Europe”. One of the priorities is the development of a “vibrant digital
single market”. Online content services are at the heart of the policy
debate. A single European market for online content is perceived as being
crucial for European competitiveness and growth. However, the reality of
fragmented content markets illustrates the diversity of Europe’s
cultures, languages and regulations. To some extent, firms benefit from
national markets, e.g. because this reduces competition and allows for
national pricing but firms also suffer from the fragmentation of Europe’s
markets, e.g. because it limits scale advantages.
The Digital Agenda is not just about the economic and cultural
implications of the single market. Market trends are challenging nearly
every definition, policy and regulation for online media. As audiovisual,
music and other content services move online, demarcations within and
between media and personal communication services and between platforms
blur. Online content cuts across dichotomies such as open-closed,
linear-interactive, professional-amateur, public-private, mobile-fixed
and national-global. Issues around copyright, standards and
interoperability become critical for the availability and use of online
content.
The Digital Agenda for Europe addresses these policy issues, many of
which were discussed earlier in the 1997 Green Paper on convergence.
Since then, market and regulatory developments have cast new light on
these issues. The Commission has announced a number of new initiatives
which will critically define the shape of European online content
markets, and the role of European players in global markets.
We invite the EuroCPR community to reflect critically on the lessons
learned over the last 15 years, and to contribute constructively to
ongoing debates about policy and regulation for online content services.
More specifically, we invite research papers that address:
· A single European market for
online content services? How is the European market developing for
different media and for different parts of the value chain? Which
European and global actors will benefit from a single European market?
How do firms combine national and international strategies for
innovation, service delivery and advertising? How is the single European
market hindered by EU, national and non-governmental regulations and
procedures for copyright licensing, copyright clearance, cross border
transactions and VAT?
· New competition and access
issues: Net neutrality is part of a broader policy debate on
competition and access at the intersection of networks, platforms and
content. How are specific parts of the content market affected? Search
engines are another issue. How dominant are search engines, what is the
economic and cultural impact, and is social networking becoming an
alternative for searching and advertising? What are the new
intermediaries, e.g. actors that bundle content and devices, and actors
that provide content distribution networks? Which new competition and
access issues are clear enough to start a debate on market definitions
and dominance, and whether policy makers should develop ex-ante
regulation or rely on competition law?
· Data protection and privacy:
de-centralised data capture (e.g. by users and sensors) and cloud
computing allow for ever-more data to be gathered and used for commercial
purposes and for use by public organisations. Online content services
that exploit these data, challenge the effectiveness of existing
regulations. The exploitation of data is at the heart of many business
models. Social networking and virtual worlds are two of the many
services. Can we avoid legacy regulation that may stifle innovation and
nascent markets? Do we need to adapt existing regulations to protect
citizens and create legal certainty for firms and public organisations?
· Social networking: the
development and take-up of social networking sites has been spectacular.
The economic and social importance of social networking has made it a
focal point in policy debates on privacy, security, digital literacy, and
the competitiveness of Europe’s ICT and media sector. What policy issues
emerge from studies on user behaviour? How is social networking
integrated with other content services? How do we protect and empower
youngsters? What is the right balance between self-regulation and formal
regulation to protect privacy, within countries and across borders? What
is the role of European firms in social networking, and why?
· Digital literacy: the social
and economic relevance of digital literacy is not disputed. However, the
picture is less clear on how digital literacy contributes to social
inclusion, involvement of users in the innovation process, take-up of new
services and the competitiveness of firms. A related question is how
policy programmes add drivers and remove barriers for digital literacy.
What can policy makers learn from specific case studies, empirical
analysis and policy evaluations?
· Transnational governance: as
new online services evolve, what role do national regulators,
international institutions such as ACTA, ICANN, Internet address
registries, or private sector self-governance play in setting and
enforcing rules? How should inconsistencies between media services
delivered over the Internet and those delivered through nationally
regulated media outlets be resolved? How much responsibility should
private sector internet intermediaries take for policing misbehaviour and
enforcing policy?
· Online content services after
2020: How do new services benefit from the semantic web, 3D,
augmented reality, virtual reality, open data (e.g. open public sector
data), and the combination of ICT and biotechnology and/or
nanotechnology? What are the results of rigorous foresight studies that
explore new content services and the implications for policy and
regulation?
Policy design and implementation can benefit from evidence-based papers
(empirical studies and impact assessments), prospective analysis and
original theoretical/analytical contributions. We welcome papers that
compare policy trends in Europe and other regions of the world.
Practical Information
Time lines
- Deadline for abstracts: 11 October 2010
- Notification of selected abstracts: 3 November 2009
- Deadline of final papers: 1 March 2010
Abstracts
- Abstracts should be no longer than 1000 words and should address the
research question, outline the main results, theory, methods and data (as
appropriate) and highlight the policy relevance.
- Abstracts should be sent to:
(Monica.Arino /at/ ofcom.org.uk)
and
(Aphra.kerr /at/ nuim.ie)
- All abstracts will be subject to a blind review procedure by the
members of the EuroCPR Scientific Committee.
Publications
A selection of papers will be published in Communication &
Strategies, Telecommunications Policy and Info, the journal of policy,
regulation and strategy for telecommunications, information and media.
Format
The conference takes place in a single room, with sessions consisting of
two presentations with discussants, and a general debate. The format has
deliberately been kept small - with a maximum of 80 participants - thus
favouring quality over quantity and encouraging a high level of
interaction. We aim for a mix of senior experts and young talents, from
academia, policy and industry. The conference includes a social
programme.
Registration
Registration will open the 3rd of November 2010 at
www.eurocpr.org. The conference fee
is 390 Euro (290 Euro for PhD students).
Organisation committee
Martijn Poel, TNO, the Netherlands (chair)
Monica Ariño, Ofcom, UK
Leo Van Audenhove, VUB, Belgium
Anastasia Constantelou, University of Aegean, Greece
Karen Donders, VUB, Belgium
Aphra Kerr, National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Jean Paul Simon, JRC-IPTS, Spain
EuroCPR
With the continuous aim to bring together academics, policy makers and
industry representatives, EuroCPR seeks to stimulate independent critical
reflection, whilst being responsive to policy challenges. For additional
information please visit
www.eurocpr.org
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