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[ecrea] CfA International Symposium: Digital Participation and the Politics of Inclusion and Exclusion
Wed Mar 21 16:58:43 GMT 2018
*Call for Paper Abstracts*
*International Symposium: Digital Participation and the Politics of
Inclusion and Exclusion*
*Wednesday 18 July 2018*
*Ann Harding Centre, University of Canberra*
*Co-hosted by News & Media Research Centre and Institute for Governance
& Policy Analysis*
In information societies, inequalities are significantly structured by
exclusions: exclusion from access to technology, exclusion from data,
exclusion from knowledge production and circulation, and subsequently
exclusion from the networks of decision-making. Digital participation is
no longer a supplemental set of activities but has become a key
component of modern citizenship. With government, educational and
commercial services increasingly provided online, requiring citizens to
have internet access, those who are digitally excluded are experiencing
deeper disadvantages. The adoption and use of digital devices reinforces
the existing socioeconomic factors where social exclusion transfers to
digital exclusion.
This symposium is concerned with the political aspects of inclusion and
exclusion in information societies within three contexts: political
parties and electoral contestation, news and information inequalities
reinforced by levels of online engagement, and exclusionary practices
that emerge as a product of asymmetry in the collection and analysis of
personal data.
Themes of the symposium:
*Political parties and electoral competition*: With the growth of
professionalization within political parties we have seen a greater
decoupling between citizens and political parties. The party roles once
performed by amateurs have been ceded to professionalised communication
staff guided by advanced poling, focus groups, and data analytics. Long
since gone are the days when parties functioned as the organised
expression of social cleavages. Instead, political parties are
increasingly mining social media and pushing microtargeted ads based on
online profiles. On the other hand, social media may enable dispersed
citizens to participate in construction of party strategies, tactics,
and policies.
**
*News and information inequalities*: The term ‘fake news’ has received
considerable attention in recent times. We have witnessed the
proliferation of fake news during the closing days of the 2016 US
election campaign and the Brexit referendum in the UK. The term ‘fake
news’ has a long and varied history in journalism, referring to
misinformation, disinformation campaigns, satire, and sometimes as a
political retort to any claims one disagrees with or wishes to
delegitimise. In an age of information abundance, the ability to filter
fact from fiction is becoming an important aspect of civic participation.
*Data justice*: As aspects of political and social life are increasingly
rendered in forms of digital traces, wide varieties of political actors
are finding ways to utilise these data to push for political and social
change. Both commercial and public entities make use of digital data to
better understand and inform their end-users, using advanced
technologies such as low-cost satellite imagery, drones, and machine
learning to detect and monitor the environment. Aggregate forms of
personalised digital data and exclusion from the information and tools
have implications to what it means to participate in the digital world.
We invite papers investigating any aspect of the three themes, with an
aim to critically examine the broader issue of digital participation and
its complexity in international and transnational contexts. We will
examine the intricate relationship between digital exclusion, social
exclusion and the politics of digital participation in information
societies.
Hosted by News & Media Research Centre and Institute for Governance &
Policy Analysis, at the University of Canberra, the Symposium will bring
together international scholars, practitioners and activists to engage
with the contemporary issues in digital participation.
Our guest speakers include:
John Keane, University of Sydney
Karen Mossberger, Arizona State University
Eli Skogerbø, University of Oslo, Distinguished Visitor at the
University of Canberra
Key dates:
Closing date for abstracts: 1 May 2018
Author notifications: 31 May 2018
Program announcement: 15 June 2018
Registration: 1 May – 30 June 2018
Submission guidelines:
Send the following in PDF to (digitalparticipation /at/ canberra.edu.au)
<mailto:(digitalparticipation /at/ canberra.edu.au)>
Choice of theme: Political parties and electoral competition, news and
information inequalities, or data justice
Title
Abstract: Up to 800 words
Author(s) short bio: 150 words for each author
‘Digital Participation’ will take place in Canberra, shortly before the
25th World Congress of Political Science (July 21-25, 2018 in Brisbane,
Australia). Brisbane is 1 hour 40 min flight from Canberra.
‘Digital Participation’ is a free event sponsored by News & Media
Research Centre and Institute for Governance & Policy Analysis.
Registration is required for seating and catering purposes.
Symposium organisers: Sora Park & Michael Jensen
Contact: (digitalparticipation /at/ canberra.edu.au)
<mailto:(digitalparticipation /at/ canberra.edu.au)>
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