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[ecrea] CfP Workshop on Social media and the prospects for expanded democratic participation in national policy-setting
Thu Oct 02 01:01:19 GMT 2014
Call for Papers - Workshop on social media and the prospects for
expanded democratic participation in national policy-setting
Date and Venue: April 9, 2015, Boston University, Boston, MA USA
Abstracts Due: November 29, 2014
Decision Date: December 15, 2014
The power of social media appears at times almost limitless. Indeed,
when explaining the reasons for ISIL’s surprising success, President
Obama included in the list that they had been “savvy in terms of their
social media” (CBS 60 Minutes, 9/28/14). Social media have been credited
at least in part with not only a catastrophe in Iraq and Syria, but in
catalyzing the overthrow of Middle Eastern dictators and helping elect
America’s first African-American president. While there is no arguing
that social media have affected daily life, their impact on the conduct
governance, widely considered, seems slight. This is perhaps surprising
since social media offers the promise of expanded participation and more
inclusive participation opportunities in governance. That is, not only
in creating more responsive policies, but better ones as well. Yet
although social media have demonstrated their critical role in electoral
politics and many other domains including disseminating political news
and information, they have not yet been effectively deployed in helping
set national policy. New social media platforms could potentially expand
the quality and level of public support in areas such as law
enforcement, health, education, and public diplomacy.
To better understand the barriers as well as potential role, both
positive and negative, of social
media in setting national goals and policies, leading thinkers will be
coming to Boston
University’s College of Communication on April 9, 2015. With papers
having been prepared in
advance, the day-long event will allow in-depth analysis of the latest
thinking on these issues. In
addition, time will be set aside for a mapping exercise to consider what
the next steps are in
terms of needed future research so that the insights presented at the
workshop can help inform
other researchers both in the United States and beyond. The papers and
discussions from this
workshop will be widely disseminated and follow-up meetings with other
groups will be held.
Depending on the findings presented at the workshop, further steps, such
as convening a blueribbon panel to advance recommendations may be
considered.
The format of the workshop will combine invited and competitively
accepted papers. In terms of
invited speakers, we have acceptances from professors at Harvard
University, Oxford University,
George Washington University, University of Washington, Syracuse,
Wellesley, Roskilde
University, and the Sorbonne, among other academic centers. Moreover, to
help assure that innovative thinking and a broad array of perspectives
will be included, we are circulating this call for papers. In this way,
we will be able to accommodate an additional small number of
paper-presenters.
Hence, we are soliciting additional papers on the workshop topic.
Although we will consider for inclusion in a broad array of related
topics, new and previously unpublished work that goes directly to the
question at hand is of most interest to us. Those wishing to be
considered as presenters should send an abstract of about 250 words to
Dr. Jill Walsh ((JillW /at/ BU.edu)) no later than November 29, 2014. Notice of
acceptance will be given on December 15, 2014. Completed papers will be
circulated on March 9, 2015 and will be made available on the Center for
Mobile Communication Studies website (http://sites.bu.edu/cmcs/). Due to
limited space, the number of participants must be strictly limited.
Co-organizers
James E. Katz, Ph.D., Dr.h.c., is the Feld Family Professor of Emerging
Media at Boston University’s College of Communication and director of
its Division of Emerging Media Studies. His latest book, The Social
Media President: Barack Obama and the Politics of Digital Engagement
(2013, Palgrave Macmillan), provides an in-depth exploration of the use
and abuse of social media for civic participation at the White House level.
David Karpf, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the School of Media and
Public Affairs at George Washington University. His work focuses on
strategic communication practices of political associations in America,
with a particular interest in Internet-related strategies. Author of The
MoveOn Effect: The Unexpected Transformation of American Political
Advocacy (2012, Oxford University Press), Karpf highlights the
disruptive role that the Internet has played in the advocacy group
system and differential partisan adoption of new technologies.
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