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[ecrea] Call for papers: The Data Turn & Ethics - A Special Issue of the Russian Journal of Communication
Fri Mar 17 10:19:58 GMT 2017
Call for papers:
*The Data Turn & Ethics*
*/A Special Issue of the Russian Journal of Communication (Taylor &
Francis)/*
*/Edited by Marina Shilina (Plekhanov Russian University of Economics),
Robert Couch (Earlham College), and Andrea Catellani (Université
catholique de Louvain)/*
Big data, like Russia, marks a new generator in the promises and perils
of the digital – and social – revolution. Hidden algorithms, invisible
software, and a trivially large scaling of real-time data processes are
increasingly shaping our individual, interpersonal, organizational and
international communication. Addressing the question – to be or not be,
sentient data hubs and sentient human beings, we see ethics as point of
bifurcation in this brave new world of machine-to-machine communication.
Smart data transforms our thinking and acting: decision-making processes
follow in part computational quantity, quality, speed, and efficiency.
Might data seed new solutions to massive information coordination and
other stubborn problems of socialism? And capitalism? Who would be the
next Rembrandt or Pushkin in art driven by data and data driven poetry?
Open data dystopia in governance, presumably, doesn’t mean open
governance, and the bigger the data, the bigger risks as well. The same
services that may profit organizations may also disrupt delicate social,
cultural, political, economic ecosystems. Concerns about fake news and
fake identities abound. Bots can be used to manipulate perceptions and
numbers on social networks. Astroturfing campaigns can create alternate
realities serving the interests of the few at the expense of the many.
Russia finds itself at the forefront of these global technological
disruptions in a number of ways: in its historic alternative to the West
responses to how information should be used to organize society, in its
both providing and requiring traditional strengths in cybersecurity,
computer programming, and strategic information services, and in its
timeless capacity to be mind-boggling big, small, and normal, often all
at the same time.
In light of these and other developments, the Russian Journal of
Communication hereby issues a call for papers that intersect
interdisciplinary approaches to big and open data, ethics and the
Russian case.
/Abstracts for papers should be submitted by March 31, 2017; based on
these abstracts, editors will contact prospective authors by April 10 to
invite selected authors to prepare full papers for publication.
Published paper length may be range between 2000 and 8000 words,
including endnotes, although book reviews may be shorter. Final papers
will be due on June 1, 2017. Please send inquiries and submissions to
//(bigdatarjc /at/ gmail.com)/ <mailto:(bigdatarjc /at/ gmail.com)>/./
A by-no-means exclusive list of sample topics—ranging broadly across
data ethics, governance, globalizations, transparency, privacy, and
technology—follows:
1. Ethical standards governing data access, use, and distribution
2. Data potential and problems for communication issues at the heart of
capitalism, socialism, and democracy
3. Comparative analysis of culturally-, historically-,
politically-informed sources of and attitudes about sociotechnical change
4. Professional and organizational standards in different fields and
safeguards governing data use
5. Potentials and problems following from informal trust networks and
data practices
6. Algorithmic accountability, machinic (a)morality, and the humane use
of data
7. Technological, social, and legal defenses against ethical data abuses
8. Data automation and surveillance, their consequences, and critics
9. The data mediated relationship between a consumer public and
participatory governance, social mobilization, and activist organizations
10. Criticism of current, future, or historical data governance
theories, models, and practices
11. Data transparency, privacy, ethics across business, professional
communication, media, art, interpersonal, and international scales
12. Technological innovations and social impacts
13. Challenges presented by the industrial revolutions up to 4.0
14. Organizational and economic, social and cultural data driven changes
15. Critical intellectual, activist, government, managerial,
professional, and other responses to these changes
16. The impact of these changes on class, ethnic, gender, and other
questions of identity politics and power
And no doubt many others…
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