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[ecrea] CfP - AoIR preevent on STS and Internet governance
Thu May 26 14:14:58 GMT 2016
Call for Contributions
Deadline: 15 June 2016
The Internet Rules, But How?
An STS take on doing Internet governance
Preconference workshop – AoIR 2016
5 October 2016 – Berlin, Germany
Workshop facilitators:
Dmitry Epstein, Christian Katzenbach, Francesca Musiani, Julia Pohle
Keynote speaker:
Laura DeNardis
Over the last decade, the regulation and governance of the Internet at
the national and international level have attracted growing attention by
policy-makers and researchers. This is particularly the case in
post-Snowden times which increased distrust of formal government
institutions and their ‘dangerous liaisons’ with the private sector.
Traditionally, Internet governance (IG) research focussed on new
institutions that have been explicitly established to negotiate the
Internet’s technical coordination or deliberate Internet-related public
policy issues. Recently, authors have criticised this institutional
focus, including a small group of scholars who draw on perspectives from
Science and Technology Studies (STS), calling to rethink and
substantiate questions of ordering and governing the net. Their
contributions highlight the day-to-day, mundane practices that
constitute IG, take into account the plurality and ‘networkedness’ of
devices and arrangements involved in the governance of information
technology, and investigate the invisibility, pervasiveness, and
apparent agency of the digital infrastructure itself.
IG, in this view, consists of practices and controversies of design,
regulation, and use of material infrastructures. Accordingly, the
observation and investigation of practices require different, innovative
research approaches, which delve into the variety of ways in which
digital uses and practices may be an integral part of today’s IG. In
this way, STS-informed perspectives are increasingly instrumental for
challenging and expanding our understanding and for informing our
examination of ordering and governing processes in the digital realm.
This preconference workshop seeks to nurture the growing interest in
researching and observing IG from an STS-informed perspective. More
broadly, the workshop aims to facilitate a discussion and an exchange of
perspectives about the intertwined roles of design, infrastructures, and
informal communities of practice in IG.
For the full-day workshop, we are inviting contributions for four sessions:
1. The first research panel will focus on theory, inviting papers
that share a strong conceptual interest in understanding how STS can
inform theoretical perspectives on Internet governance, for instance by
revealing socio-technical controversies or by unveiling power and
control structures embedded in Internet architecture and its governance
institutions;
2. The second research panel will focus on STS-informed empirical
work on Internet governance, inviting papers that make use of the
conceptual and methodological tool-sets of STS to observe and study IG
practices and the ways in which the norms shaping the provision, design
and usage of the Internet are negotiated, and de- and re-stabilised;
3. For the methodological fishbowl session, we will invite
researchers to report on their experience with STS-inspired Internet
governance research. The open discussion will focus on the
practicalities of doing participatory observation in IG and the
challenges of negotiating one’s role as a researcher and an active
participant (or even an activist) in IG processes;
4. For the final open roundtable discussion we are inviting
researchers to reflect on the notion of “black box” as it relates to the
treatment of technological artifacts in public and media discourses
(e.g. related to the French intelligence bill). We foresee that
unpacking the notion of the “black box” will also help engage IG
research and researchers with the broader community of Internet scholars
who are deliberating topics such as politics of platforms and algorithms.
Please submit your contributions no later than June 15 to
(ig-workshop-aoir2016 /at/ hiig.de). We expect extended abstracts for sessions
1-2 and position papers for sessions 3-4, max. 800 words. Registration
at the AoIR 2016 conference is necessary in order to participate at the
workshop. Notification will be sent out in mid-July so that participants
can book Early Bird Tickets for the conference before August 1.
This workshop is part of a broader effort of advancing an STS-informed
conversation on Internet governance. It builds on the successful panel
on STS perspectives on IG that took place during AoIR 2015 in Phoenix
and a special issue of the Internet Policy Review to be published in
early September 2016.
The workshop is supported by the Global Internet Governance Academic
Network (GigaNet), the Internet Policy Review of the Alexander von
Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG, Berlin), the
Department of Communication, University of Illinois at Chicago, and the
Institute for Communication Sciences (CNRS/Paris-Sorbonne/UPMC, Paris).
Contact: (ig-workshop-aoir2016 /at/ hiig.de).
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