The call for papers is now available for the IPP2016 conference: "The
Platform Society", which examines the politics and policy of online
platforms (22-23 Sept 2016, University of Oxford)
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2016/call-for-papers
<http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2016/call-for-papers>
This is the fourth conference of the journal Policy and Internet,
convened by the Oxford Internet Institute (OII) in collaboration with
the European Consortium of Political Research (ECPR) standing group on
Internet and Politics.
Convenors: Helen Margetts (OII), Vili Lehdonvirta (OII), Jonathan
Bright (OII), David Sutcliffe (OII), Andrea Calderaro (Cardiff
University/ECPR).
Abstract deadline: 14 March 2016.
Contact: (policyandinternet /at/ oii.ox.ac.uk)
<mailto:(policyandinternet /at/ oii.ox.ac.uk)>
The rest of the call is pasted below!
Best, David
RATIONALE
Large scale internet platforms such as Google, Facebook, Amazon and
Uber play an increasingly important role in contemporary society.
These platforms facilitate connections between friends and family
members, between consumers and producers, between voters and
politicians, and between employers and employees. As such, they are
becoming venues where large segments of contemporary life are played out.
The data collected and in some cases made openly available by these
platforms creates huge opportunities for advancing research in many
fields of social science. Exciting advances have already been made in
understanding, for example, how information spreads across networks
and the importance of social influence on personal action. Yet
researchers have only scratched the surface of the possibilities
offered by new data sources and analysis methods.
At the same time, the decisions made by these platforms increasingly
shape contemporary life. Whether taking employment through Upwork,
purchasing goods on Amazon, seeking information via Google, remitting
money via PayPal, or debating politics on Twitter, our actions are
enabled and constrained by sophisticated algorithms and company
policies. The decisions, assumptions and interests reflected in these
algorithms and policies have potentially very significant consequences
to society at large, yet detailed understanding of these processes is
still very limited.
TOPICS
The aim of this conference is to bring together scholars studying
platforms, both in terms of interactions taking place on platforms and
the data they generate, as well as the platforms themselves and how
they are shaped and operated. We welcome theoretical as well as
empirical, qualitative as well as quantitative studies, from all
disciplines that can provide useful perspectives on the contemporary
“platform society”. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
* Data driven studies of platform-mediated interactions (e.g. using
APIs or scraped data)
* Petition platforms and government as a platform
* Studies of how algorithms and user interfaces shape interactions
(e.g. STS, HCI)
* Impacts of platforms in a given industry or government area (e.g.
taxis, local gov)
* Formal economic modeling of platform competition, strategy and policy
* Political mobilization around platforms (e.g. Uber and AirBnB protests)
* Open source and distributed platforms and their politics (e.g.
Bitcoin, blockchain)
* Innovation and entrepreneurship in platform marketplaces (e.g. App
Store, Google Play)
* Issues in research use of platforms (e.g. Mechanical Turk survey
practices)
* Conflicts between public policy and platform rules (e.g. Google in
Europe)
* Studies of how platform firms manage platforms (e.g. theoretical,
ethnographic)
* Comparative studies of platforms (e.g. rules of Twitter vs. Facebook)
* Public policy development related to platforms (e.g. EU Digital
Single Market)
* Transnational issues in platforms and digital markets (e.g. TTIP,
safe harbor)
Accepted papers will be organized into thematically and
methodologically relevant sessions and parallel streams.
PROPOSAL SUBMISSION
Paper Proposals
Paper proposals should consist of a title and a 1,000-word extended
abstract that specifies and motivates the research question, describes
the methods and data used, and summarises the main findings. Abstracts
will be peer reviewed, and the authors of accepted proposals are
expected to submit full papers prior to the conference. Applicants
will have the opportunity to co-submit their paper to the journal
Policy and Internet, which will operate a fast-track review process
for papers accepted to the conference.
Paper submissions can also be considered for a Best Paper Award
(sponsored by the journal Policy and Internet). The prize will be
awarded at the closing session of the conference. As the paper is
intended to be published in a future issue of the journal, authors
should indicate whether they would like their paper to be considered
for the prize.
SUBMIT YOUR ABSTRACT:
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2016/forms/abstract-submissions
<http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2016/forms/abstract-submissions> (deadline:
14 March 2016)
Poster Proposals
Posters should summarise in a visually engaging manner the purpose,
methods and results of an original piece of research. All accepted
submissions will be considered for a Best Poster Award. The prize will
be awarded at the closing session of the conference.
SUBMIT YOUR POSTER:
http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2016/forms/abstract-submissions
<http://ipp.oii.ox.ac.uk/2016/forms/abstract-submissions> (deadline:
14 March 2016)
IMPORTANT DATES
* Extended abstract submission deadline: 14 March 2016
* Decisions on abstracts: 2 May 2016
* Full paper / poster submission deadline (for accepted abstracts): 1
September 2014
* Conference dates: Thursday 22 - Friday 23 September 2016
****
David Sutcliffe
Managing Editor
Policy & Internet journal
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1944-2866/
<http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1944-2866/>
@policyinternet