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[Commlist] CFP: Global Media and China_Special Issue: China’s Digital Infrastructures: Networks, Systems, Standards
Mon Apr 18 12:37:22 GMT 2022
*Global Media and China CFP *
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**** NO PAYMENTS FROM AUTHORS*
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*Special Issue: China’s Digital Infrastructures: Networks, Systems,
Standards*
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*Guest Editor: Gabriele de Seta, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of
Bergen, Norway ((gabriele.seta /at/ uib.no) <mailto:(gabriele.seta /at/ uib.no)>) *
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*Time Schedule:*
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*_—15 May 2022:_ *abstracts (250-300 words)
Submit to **
*Gabriele de Seta *
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* ((gabriele.seta /at/ uib.no) <mailto:(gabriele.seta /at/ uib.no)>) *
**
*_—15 June 2022:_ *Invasion’s to submit full papers sent to authors
*_—15 October 2022:_ *full paper submission
*—15 January 2023:* peer review reports sent to authors
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*—15 March 2023:* final paper submission to Global Media and China
*Overview: *
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This special issue of /Global Media and China /seeks to chart and
unravel China’s digital infrastructure by examining how networks,
systems and standards coalesce in sociotechnical assemblages with
profound cultural, economic and geopolitical implications. Decades of
infrastructure studies scholarship have demonstrated the increasingly
central role played by large technical systems in societies around the
world (Bratton, 2015; Edwards et al., 2009; Misa et al., 2003; Parks &
Starosielski, 2015). From the beginning of the reform era, the Chinese
state has consistently promoted its infrastructure-building achievements
by connecting them with economic growth, social stability and poverty
reduction. The success of China’s informational network-building efforts
(Hong, 2017), resulting in the world’s largest population of internet
users and a national tech industry challenging the global dominance of
Silicon Valley, testify to the increasing importance of digital
infrastructure ‘with Chinese characteristics’ (Stevens, 2019). As of
2020, the term /xin jijian/, or ‘New Infrastructure’, has become a top
policy priority earmarking developments related to key domains of
digital technology, including telecommunication networks, smart cities,
industrial automation, cloud computing, and energy production
(Meinhardt, 2020). Two years into the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, digital
infrastructure remains a key priority for both state and tech
industries, underpinning experiments in social governance, economic
resilience and technological innovation (de Seta, 2021).
But what /is /China’s digital infrastructure? How do networks overlap
and intersect, producing new infrastructural effects or reinforcing
existing inequalities? Where do large sociotechnical systems emerge and
which user populations do they enlist? When do practices and protocols
become standards, reshaping global flows of devices and data? In order
to answers these questions, we invite contributions from a broad range
of disciplines including media and communication studies, sociology,
anthropology, science and technology studies, digital humanities,
cultural studies, human geography and area studies. This special issue
revolves around a broad understanding of digital infrastructure that
ranges from physical and material components (QR codes, 5G stations,
data centers, surveillance cameras) to software and quantification
protocols (social apps, fintech, artificial intelligence, credit
scoring), and from policy imaginaries (New Infrastructure, New Silk
Road) to industry hypes (smart cities, blockchain, the metaverse). Open
to historical reviews, contemporary accounts and future speculations, we
welcome contributions that revisit and respond to concepts and theories
from infrastructure studies, drawing on empirically driven analyses of
networks, systems and standards to articulate new critical
understandings of China’s digital infrastructure. **
*References*
Bratton, B. H. (2015). /The Stack: On software and sovereignty/. MIT Press.
de Seta, G. (2021). Gateways, sieves, and domes: On the infrastructural
topology of the Chinese stack. /International Journal of Communication/,
/15/, 2669–2692.
Edwards, P. N., Bowker, G. C., Jackson, S. J., & Williams, R. (2009).
Introduction: An agenda for infrastructure studies. /Journal of the
Association for Information Systems/, /10/(5), 364–374.
Hong, Y. (2017). /Networking China: The digital transformation of the
Chinese economy/. University of Illinois Press.
Meinhardt, C. (2020, June 4). /China bets on “new infrastructure” to
pull the economy out of post-Covid doldrums/. MERICS.
Misa, T. J., Brey, P., & Feenberg, A. (Eds.). (2003). /Modernity and
technology/. MIT Press.
Parks, L., & Starosielski, N. (Eds.). (2015). /Signal Traffic: Critical
Studies of Media Infrastructures/. University of Illinois Press.
Stevens, H. (2019). Digital infrastructure in the Chinese register.
/Made in China Journal/, /4/(2), 84–89.
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