[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP: Reimagining Platforms: Research, Governance, and Labour
Thu Jun 09 16:53:57 GMT 2022
*CFP: Reimagining Platforms: Research, Governance, and Labour*
*October 31, 2022*
*Edinburgh*
/Web is Dead. Long Live the Internet, /so goes the title of a story
Chris Anderson and Michael Wolff published in Wired (2010). Their main
argument was that digital culture was entering a new paradigm that would
shape the next years of capitalism: we were on the verge of the age of
“social media” facilitated by the rise of the streamlined and integrated
“platform.” Platformization is premised on the principle of
interoperability between technologies, software, and data (Helmond 2015;
de Kloet, Poell, Guohua & Fai 2019). In the past decade, the story of
successful platforms has been told repeatedly by platform owners,
academics, and journalists alike. Social media platforms, such as
Twitter, dominate and shape our news cycles. Facebook has grown to a
position where it has two billion users and is one of the world’s most
important advertising platforms. Airbnb has transformed travel markets
globally, and Uber, Deliveroo, Skip the Dishes and other on-demand
labour platforms now pose serious challenges to labour law and labour
regulations across numerous countries (Pasquale 2016.)
As we head into 2022, corporate platform owners are looking for the next
sectors to conquer, from intelligent connected vehicles (Alibaba), to
virtual reality (Meta’s metaverse), and even outer space (Blue Origin).
We propose that these entities are pursuing these directions not only
voluntarily but also because they are facing criticism from the outside
and from within. The Federal Trade Commission and 46 states in the US
filed an antitrust lawsuit against Facebook in 2020 (Smith 2021). Gig
workers across the globe are organizing to challenge the data-driven
labour models (Guest 2021). A public demand for regulating, and even
breaking up, platforms is growing (Taplin 2017). It may be too early to
pronounce platforms dead,//but their vulnerability does carry a
potential to rethink and reform their role and influence in our daily
lives (McCammon & Lingel 2022). Additionally, it may be time to ask:
which voices can (and do) shape the future of these platforms? How is
academic research capable of influencing these conversations, especially
in light of the access constraints that researchers face when examining
proprietary platforms and systems? Who conceptualises notions of fair
platform governance? What role do workers themselves play in reimagining
platform futures?
/Reimagining Platforms /is//a new collaboration between The University
of Edinburgh and University of Toronto. It is a one-day symposium taking
place at the University of Edinburgh on October 31, 2022 that will bring
academics and community and local partners together to develop methods
and concepts to analyze the different futures and possibilities of
platforms and platform economies. We invite papers and presentations
that reimagine platforms in alignment with three specific themes: 1)
researching proprietary digital platforms; 2) governing digital
platforms; and 3) new labour futures.
**
*>>Researching Proprietary Platforms: Access, Methods, and Insight*
The academic subfield of platform studies explores how platforms and
their attendant processes reshape consumption, production, and the
distribution of cultural artifacts. Platforms are conceptualised as
forms of infrastructure and public service media, as well as being
deeply powerful and complex political actors. However, due to the
proprietary nature of platforms and the corporations responsible for
them, gaining research access to platform infrastructures, data,
employees, and processes can be very challenging– if not impossible. In
this section, we invite contributions that offer new methods for
examining platforms and that are capable of addressing questions that
are underrepresented in platform studies. How do (or can) we study
platforms given the access constraints that researchers face?
*>> Governing Digital Platforms: Algorithms, Data, and Rights*
Research of digital platforms shapes a vital critique of the platform
as a necessary or needed social actor or assemblage. Scholars and
researchers argue that platforms exploit our time and attention, that
they gather novel and valuable data from users’ everyday behaviors,
capture network effects and essentially dominate or attempt to
monopolise markets. Others have argued that platforms function as data
science companies, capturing and aggregating data at scale, while
resisting regulations from the state (Sadowski and Badger 2020). This
tendency isvisible, for instance, in platforms for on-demand work, which
have become a deeply contested terrain of employment and privacy rights
(Gregory 2020). In this section, we are looking for contributions that
address the theme /of /governance of and /by/ platforms from different
perspectives. How do (or can) different governance models - proposed by
private entities, civil society and the state - shape the future of
platforms?
**
*>>New Labour Futures: Fair Work and Building With Workers*
Sorely missing from any discussion about the future of platforms is
local voice. While platforms seemingly transcend state boundaries and
work across and through global markets, platforms nonetheless shape and
mediate local environments, particularly urban space, particularly for
workers. These voices, however, are not reflected in the debates about
the future of platforms. In this section, we are interested in
presentations that address how labor practices can change platforms.
What does fair work and building with workers mean in the context of
platform economy?
*Keynote*: TBD
This event will take place in-person at the University of Edinburgh. All
symposium presenters will be required to book their own travel and
accommodation for the event. Papers presented in the symposium will form
a backbone for a proposal for a journal special issue.
Please send a 250 word abstract to (k.gregory /at/ ed.ac.uk)
<mailto:(k.gregory /at/ ed.ac.uk)>by July 8th.
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/reimagining/ <https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/reimagining/>
_Organising Committee_
Tero Karppi, University of Toronto
Karen Gregory, University of Edinburgh
Kate Miltner, University of Edinburgh
Morgan Currie, University of Edinburgh
Liz McFall, University of Edinburgh
Cailean Gallagher, Workers Observatory, Edinburgh
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]