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[Commlist] CFP Good bye, anarchy? Internet politics in the 21st century
Wed Mar 06 07:33:20 GMT 2019
/This is a reminder for our two-day workshop “Good bye, anarchy?
Internet politics in the 21st century” that we organize during the
Annual Convention of the Belgian Association for Political Science (VPW)
and the Dutch Political Science Association (NKWP) in Antwerp (13 and 14
June 2019). This workshop consists of four panels aimed at unfolding the
tensions around the regulation of the internet. Which actors try to
limit internet freedoms, which actors try to defend them, and what are
their motivations? What is the institutional context of their
contestations? And finally, what could the internet look like in the
future?/
//
/Below, you will find a more detailed description of our panel.//Please
send your abstract (max 300 words) and contact details to Thomas R.
Eimer (//(t.eimer /at/ fm.ru.nl) <mailto:(t.eimer /at/ fm.ru.nl)>//) and Daniëlle
Flonk (//(flonk /at/ hertie-school.org) <mailto:(flonk /at/ hertie-school.org)>//) by
15 March 2018, at the latest. If you have any questions, please do not
hesitate to contact us./
//
/More information on the Convention can be found under:
//https://politicologenetmaal.eu//
//
+++
*Good bye, anarchy? Internet politics in the 21st century*
*Chairs*
Thomas R. Eimer (Radboud Universiteit), (t.eimer /at/ fm.ru.nl)
<mailto:(t.eimer /at/ fm.ru.nl)>
Daniëlle Flonk (Hertie School of Governance), (flonk /at/ hertie-school.org)
<mailto:(flonk /at/ hertie-school.org)>
*Short description*
Our panel aims at unfolding the tensions around the regulation of the
internet. Which actors try to limit internet freedoms, which actors try
to defend them, and what are their motivations? What is the
institutional context of their contestations? And finally, what could
the internet look like in the future?
*Long abstract*
Conventional wisdom perceives the internet as a free harbor for all
kinds of social, cultural, and economic interactions. At least
implicitly, this perception is linked to the internet pioneers’ vision
of a digital sphere of freedom and independence. Empirically, however,
this perception can hardly be upheld anymore. National and international
authorities are increasingly interfering with the internet via
regulation in various fields. The prevention of hate speech and fake
news upright to online censorship are the most prominently discussed
examples. But international organizations and bureaucracies also limit
the openness of the internet by intellectual property and privacy
regulations, the persecution of cybercrime and cyberterrorism, and
intermediary liability regulation. At the same time, large private
companies (e.g. Google, Facebook) are increasingly dominating the most
popular spaces within the internet and create entry barriers for newcomers.
At the same time, however, we are witnessing countervailing dynamics.
For instance, the European Commission refers to antitrust measures to
avoid oligopolistic strictures, and the European Parliament understands
itself as the guardian of net neutrality. Simultaneously, civil society
actors defend the openness of the internet both inside and outside the
institutionalized decision-making structures. While their engagement for
internet freedom is essentially based on idealistic motivations, many
dark net participants also have commercial reasons to insist on an
uncontrolled digital sphere.
Our panel aims at unfolding the tensions around the regulation of the
digital sphere. Which actors try to limit internet freedoms, which
actors try to defend them, and what are their motivations? What is the
institutional context (national, international, global) of their
contestations? And finally, what are the immediate consequences, and
what could the internet look like in the future? We are looking forward
to empirical (both quantitative and qualitative), conceptual, and
normative contributions.
*Language papers*: English
*Language discussion*: English
*Please send your abstract (max 300 words) and contact details to
Daniëlle Flonk and Thomas R. Eimer by March 15, 2018, at the latest.*
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