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[ecrea] Call for Papers: ICA 2017 Preconference - The Consequences of the Internet for Authoritarian Politics: Comparative Perspectives
Thu Nov 03 13:30:43 GMT 2016
Call for Papers: ICA 2017 Preconference**
*The Consequences of the Internet for Authoritarian Politics:
Comparative Perspectives*
*Time & Venue***
Date: May 25, 2017
Time: 9 am – 5 pm
Location: San Diego Hilton Bayfront (onsite, conference hotel of the ICA
annual conference 2017)
*Rationale***
Over the past decade, a vibrant body of academic literature has emerged
on the political consequences of the Internet for non-democratic
politics. However, the majority of extant studies have focused on
phenomena of political communication in one authoritarian regime only.
By contrast, very few studies have aimed at comparing empirical findings
from across different authoritarian contexts. Against this backdrop,
this preconference explicitly aims at providing a forum for scholars
from across the globe to discuss, and develop, comparative perspectives
on the consequences of the Internet for authoritarian politics.
In order to pursue this goal, we have invited a number of well-respected
scholars in the field to contribute to the event. Invited speakers
include Muzammil Hussain (University of Michigan, USA), Paolo Mancini
(University of Perugia, Italy), Sarah Oates (University of Maryland,
USA), and Katrin Voltmer (University of Leeds). In order to supplement
the preconference program, we would like to invite at least three types
of additional submissions. Firstly, we explicitly welcome submissions
that compare empirical data across different authoritarian contexts.
Secondly, we are also interested in papers that present empirical
findings from only one country, but that, at the theoretical level,
explicitly aim at embedding them into a wider regional or global
context. Such theoretically informed comparisons can be achieved, for
instance, by referring to the lively recent debates around new types of
responsive and competitive authoritarianism, or to the literature on
authoritarian institutions. As a third type of submission, we also
invite purely theoretical contributions.
Moreover, as a number of scholars have recently lamented, extant
research on the conference topic has largely focused on either how
oppositional activists leverage new digital tools to challenge
authoritarian rule or how authoritarian elites suppress and censor
online dissent. Against this backdrop, we are particularly keen to also
discuss questions around how authoritarian elites pro-actively deploy
the Internet to expand their communicative power. Why, how, and with
what consequences, for instance, do authoritarian leaders across the
globe reach out to their citizens via social networks? Why do they open
up virtual participatory spaces that host, for example, online polls,
online petitions, or virtual deliberative forums?
The topic of the preconference is situated at the intersection of two
divisions of the ICA, the Political Communication and the Global
Communication & Social Change divisions, which are cosponsoring the
event. At a more abstract level, a key goal of the preconference is thus
also to bring together scholars from these two communities, encouraging
intellectual exchange across manifold disciplinary and methodological
borders. Participants who would not like to contribute but would still
like to attend the event are welcome to sign up on the ICA registration
website as audience members. The participation fee, which is being
charged to cover the two coffee breaks, is 50 USD.
The conference is organized by the Emmy Noether research group
“Mediating (Semi-)Authoritarianism: The Power of the Internet in the
Post-Soviet World,” of Freie Universitaet Berlin. All news regarding the
conference, including its finalized program, will be published on the
research group’s website,
http://www.mediating-authoritarianism.net/ica-2017-pre-conference/.**
**
For additional information, please contact Anna Litvinenko
((anna.litvinenko /at/ fu-berlin.de) <mailto:(anna.litvinenko /at/ fu-berlin.de)>) or
Florian Toepfl ((f.toepfl /at/ fu-berlin.de) <mailto:(f.toepfl /at/ fu-berlin.de)>).
Please email submissions – which can be of any format, from extended
abstracts (800 words) to full papers (up to 10,000 words in length) – to
our student assistant Daria Kravets ((daria.kravets /at/ fu-berlin.de))
<mailto:(daria.kravets /at/ fu-berlin.de))>.
*The deadline for submission is December 11, 2016. Notifications of
acceptance will be sent out before January 1, 2017.***
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