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[Commlist] Weizenbaum Conference 2022: Practicing Sovereignty – Interventions for open digital futures
Sat Dec 11 07:56:36 GMT 2021
CFP: Weizenbaum Conference 2022: Practicing Sovereignty – Interventions
for open digital futures
The Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society is organizing its
2022 annual conference on the subject of “Practicing Sovereignty.
Interventions for open digital futures”. The international conference
and exhibition will investigate new opportunities for digital
participation and policymaking and discuss technological and social
practices from various fields and disciplines. We frame digital
sovereignty as a condition of the ability to critically partake in the
digital transformation.
Introduction
The Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society is organizing its
2022 annual conference on the subject of “Practicing Sovereignty.
Interventions for open digital futures” and invites interested scholars
and artists to submit papers and abstracts for presentations and
workshops. The conference will take place at the venue „Alte Münze“ in
Berlin on Thursday, 9 June and Friday, 10 June 2022.
The premises of how ICT impacts societies worldwide have changed.
Instead of further indulging in collective imaginaries of better,
digitally ediated futures, today’s narratives are dominated by worrying
aspects of the digital transformation. Issues such as the increasing
vulnerability and manipulation of individuals, the violation of
fundamental rights through mass surveillance, and the digitally mediated
undermining of democratic institutions and practices have become more
and more threatening to an open and free society.
Against this backdrop, the notion of “digital sovereignty” is currently
witnessing an increasing interest. Being hotly debated for its implied
potentials, but also for its shortcomings, the term denotes diverse
concepts that negotiate competences, duties, and rights in the digital
age. Questions of trust, confidence, and competence – intensified by the
COVID-19 pandemic – contextualize digital sovereignty in a fundamental
reconsideration of what has been known as democratic principles, civil
rights, and national identities.
The international conference and exhibition will investigate new
opportunities for digital participation and policymaking and discuss
alternative technological and social practices from various fields and
disciplines. We frame digital sovereignty as a right to be claimed and a
process constantly in the making, as a condition of the ability to
critically partake in the digital transformation.
The conference will provide a transdisciplinary platform for scholars,
artists, activists, and human rights advocates who develop
transformative practices spaces to foster digital involvement.
Grassroots initiatives, community projects, and participatory practices
in design, art and activism appear as collective counter strategies and
bottom-up interventions that challenge the normalization of inequalities
and insecurities and push back against threats to an open society. They
lay the groundwork for new forms of agency, paving novel ways of
practicing sovereignty – both in the sense of collective activities as
well as in terms of public education and experimentation.
To investigate the notion of digital sovereignty while respecting the
plurality of its notion and approaches, the conference and exhibition
offer four different tracks with shifting focuses:
1) Digital sovereignty: terms, concepts, limitations
2) Datafication and democracy
3) Digital literacies and inequalities
4) Digital sovereignty and scientific autonomy
1. Digital sovereignty: terms, concepts, limitations
As a central concept in current policy discourses, digital sovereignty
addresses various challenges posed by the digital transformation. This
track will address theoretical approaches in the current discourses on
regulatory, technological, and civil society perspectives on digital
sovereignty, and discuss approaches that are being negotiated. They
range from a territorial viewpoint for digitally sovereign entities to
an individual perspective of self-determination in everyday life and
touch upon questions of autonomy, control, and authority. Contributions
may include but are not limited to:
- Different (digital) ontologies and corresponding notions of sovereignty
- Relations between sovereignty and the digital
- Conceptual elements of how to analyze (digital) sovereignty
- Shifting power systems through the digital transformation of societies
- Public reflections of sovereign powers
- Alternative sovereignty concepts for democratic value
2. Datafication and democracy
How can we reimagine the politics of data? Automated decision-making,
predictive policing, social scoring – computational datafication and
automation are changing structures and procedures not only of private
corporations but also of governments and public institutions. At the
same time, people\s everyday lives become datafied lives. Digital means
and tools empower them to demand access to government information
(freedom of information, open government) and to actively partake in
political decision-making. But they also burden citizens with
responsibility: It is often up to the individual to resist and protest
the collection and exploitation of their personal data by private
corporations and intelligence agencies. With these new challenges and
possibilities, liberal democracies seem to be at a crossroads: Are
people becoming a mere datapoint in an opaque machinery of computation
whose results and decisions we can neither comprehend nor challenge? Or
can we, by new means of engagement and by redefining technical
infrastructures as public infrastructures, strengthen democracy and
advance social progress? Contributions may include but are not limited to:
- Changing structures in governments and public institutions through
datafication
- Open government, open data, open source
- Public interest design
- Surveillance capitalism: data extractivism and the quantification of
the individual
- Automated decision making vs. digitally aided sovereignty
- Ownership of digital infrastructure: private property and the public
sphere
3. Digital literacies and inequalities
How can we grasp and trace the interrelations between social
inequalities and digital divides? How can we develop new strategies for
socio-technical public education that ensure equitable and democratic
engagements with regulatory debates around technologies? Through the
lens of a so called “third level digital divide” – a concept that
addresses the capacity to achieve adequate outcomes and benefits from
our digital actions – we can look beyond simplistic conceptions of
access to technologies and information. This track will discuss digital
literacies in a broader, socio-cultural sense as a creative,
performative, and inherently political everyday practice and thus use
digitality as a lens to discuss intersectional inequalities. With this,
it will examine both the causes and consequences of power, privilege,
and oppression in the digital realm, and feature theories, practices and
tactics for addressing and countering the increasing amount of digital
inequalities and disparities on a global level. Contributions may
include but are not limited to:
- Digitalization and gender and intersectionality
- Gender-equitable design of digital or socio-technical systems
- In/visibility of oppressive forces in digital algorithms and products
- New strategies for socio-technical public education and public pedagogy
- Art, technology and exploit: exposing power inequalities through
artistic practice
- Digital activism as digital empowerment of groups and individuals
4. Digital sovereignty and scientific autonomy
The digital transformation of scientific work comes with promises of
faster collaboration, increased rigour and broader access to knowledge.
At the heart of these scientific imaginaries are new digital
infrastructures that connect researchers, organizations, and artifacts.
However, today an increasing number of these infrastructures are
developed and controlled by a handful of powerful technology firms and
publishing companies. This development poses a threat to scientific
autonomy, as such crucial infrastructures are shaped by the data
imperative and extractive logics of platform capitalism rather than the
needs of the scientific community. To contribute to the project of
digital sovereignty, science needs to reclaim its autonomy in digitally
networked environments first. The goal of this conference track is to
bring together critical perspectives and generative proposals on the
crisis of scientific autonomy in the digital condition. Contributions
may include but are not limited to:
- Data repositories and preprint servers
- Tracking technologies and academic surveillance
- Predatory publishing
- Open science and open education
- Distributed trust technologies in science
- Digital metrics and evaluation tools
Submission Categories:
Papers
Paper length should be between 2,500 and 3,000 words (including notes,
excluding references) and follow the Word template formatting. When
using LaTeX, please adapt the formatting of the Word template. Please
upload the paper in PDF format. As the paper will be reviewed in a
double-blind process, please anonymize any information which could point
to your authorship (including information in references and notes).
Papers accepted in the review or revision process will be published as
part of the conference proceedings. In addition, selected submissions
will be given the opportunity to be published in a special issue of the
Weizenbaum Journal of the Digital Society
(https://ojs.weizenbaum-institut.de/index.php/wjds/index
<https://ojs.weizenbaum-institut.de/index.php/wjds/index>) that will
focus on the conference topics. Authors are expected to hold a 20-minute
presentation of their submitted papers.
Authors are expected to hold a 20-minute presentation of their submitted
papers.
Proposals for workshops and project presentation
The conference will provide space for workshops and project
presentations in fields of scientific research and also for artistic
research and projects, activism/hacktivism, design, or other interactive
or participatory formats. Please submit a project proposal as PDF (max.
3 pages) including a description (max. 1,000 words) and, if applicable,
images. If the proposal includes video or audio material, please provide
within the pdf hyperlinks to a video/audio hosting platform where the
work can be accessed (e.g., Vimeo or platforms of educational
institutions). The review process will be single-blind and include
suggestions for revision considering the conditions of the conference
site and schedule. The description will be published in the conference
proceedings (a selection of descriptions also in the Weizenbaum Journal,
s. above), combined with images and potential documentation material
(depending on the individual project and to be discussed with the
contributor).
Procedures:
1) Please submit a paper or abstract for workshop and project
presentation by 15 February 2022 via Easy Chair
(https://easychair.org/account/signin_timeout?l=kLXLKooTH1U8znHsHhk8Ed#
<https://easychair.org/account/signin_timeout?l=kLXLKooTH1U8znHsHhk8Ed#>).
The paper or abstract should indicate the conference track.
2) Submissions will be reviewed, and decisions of acceptance will be
issued by 15 March 2022. Peer review of papers (double-blind) and
abstract for workshop and project presentation (single-blind). Decisions
of acceptance or revision will be issued by 15 March 2022.
3) After the potential revision the papers will be published in the
conference proceedings. The conference proceedings will be published
open access by the Weizenbaum Institute (providing DOIs). In addition,
selected submissions will be given the opportunity to be published in a
special issue of the Weizenbaum Journal of the Digital Society that will
focus on the conference topics.
Contact information:
(conference /at/ weizenbaum-institut.de) <mailto:(conference /at/ weizenbaum-institut.de)>
www.weizenbaum-institut.de <http://www.weizenbaum-institut.de>
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