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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Journal of Digital Media & Policy (Special Issue: ‘Emerging Debates on Internet Platform Policy and Regulation in Latin America’)
Wed Jun 01 11:25:16 GMT 2022
Call for Papers: Journal of Digital Media & Policy
Special Issue: ‘Emerging Debates on Internet Platform Policy and
Regulation in Latin America’
#JDMPJournal <https://twitter.com/hashtag/JDMPJournal?src=hashtag_click>
Deadlines
Abstracts (400 words): 4 July 2022
Full manuscripts (6,000–8,000 words, including references): 1 November 2022
All submissions should be directed to the guest editors. See the
journal’s peer review guidelines here
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/56753/1/JDMP_peer_reviewer_instructions.pdf>and
Notes for Contributors here
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/57055/1/JDMP_NfC.pdf>.
Guest Editors:
Ana Bizberge
Universidad Nacional de Quilmes (UNQ), CONICET, Argentina
(anabizberge /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(anabizberge /at/ gmail.com)>
Rodrigo Gómez
Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (UAM)- Cuajimalpa, Mexico
(rgomez /at/ cua.uam.mx) <mailto:(rgomez /at/ cua.uam.mx)>
Guillermo Mastrini
Universidad Nacional de Quilmes (UNQ), CONICET, Argentina
(gmastri /at/ yahoo.com.ar) <mailto:(gmastri /at/ yahoo.com.ar)>
Principal Editor:
Petros Iosifidis
City, University of London, UK
(p.iosifidis /at/ city.ac.uk) <mailto:(p.iosifidis /at/ city.ac.uk)>
Read the full call here:
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/66854/1/CfP_JDMP_Emerging_Debates_2022.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/66854/1/CfP_JDMP_Emerging_Debates_2022.pdf>
In its infancy, the internet was surrounded by discourse that promised
the democratization of access to information and freedom of speech.
However, commercialization soon revealed its limitations. Contrary to
the promise of openness and freedom of the internet, a handful of
companies act as gatekeepers in the circulation of information, with a
business model based on large-scale data collection (Snircek, 2018;
Gillespie, 2017; Cammaerts and Mansell, 2020) or the monopolization of
knowledge (Innis, 2006). According to McChesney (2013) capitalism
formatted the internet for corporations. Scholars refer to Platform
Society (van Dijck, Poell and De Waal, 2018), Platform Capitalism
(Snircek, 2018), Surveillance Capitalism (Zuboff, 2019),
‘platformization’ of the ecosystem (Frías Barroso et al., 2016),
‘digital monopolies’ (Valente, 2019) or ‘platform imperialism’ (Jin,
2015). Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft (GAFAM) have come
under intense criticism for their undue influence on the media,
economy,society and democracy (Birkinbine, Gómez and Wasko, 2017;
Winseck, 2020). The ‘platformization’ of the internet raises vital
policy issues around market dominance, accountability, regulation,
diversity, and ownership of data derived from people’s media use in both
public and private venues. Those concerns, in turn, have brought the
issue of communications policy back onto the political agenda in many
countries, including those in the Latin American region (Kitchin and
Lauriault 2018). Thus, this special issue aims to discuss policy and
regulation of internet platforms in Latin America. It addresses the
question of how the regional reflects global problems, while also asking
which are the regional specificities in the debate that reflect
regulatory traditions, market structures and institutional cultures,
among others. The approach of this special issue draws on the early
studies of the Latin American School of national communication policies
whose objectives were: democratization, cultural autonomy and
development (Solis, 2016; Altamirano, 2020; Gómez, 2022).
The economic and political power of internet platforms raise concerns in
Latin America among scholars, civil society organizations, traditional
players in the information and communication sector, as well as
governments and policy makers. Some scholars in the region have focused
on the liability of internet intermediaries (Levy and Aguerre, 2019,
CELE, 2018), freedom of expression in the digital context (Becerra and
Waisbord, 2021; Del Campo, 2019), the emergence and topics of regional
and local Internet Governance Forums (Aguerre and others, 2018), and
ownership concentration and regulation of the internet (Eptic v. 23 n.
1, 2021), to name a few. There is global concern over how to counter the
dominance of US corporations in the world communication system. The
European Union took a leading role and the governments of Australia, the
UK, Canada, and even the US, are
discussing regulatory intervention. Also, while the OECD members agreed
to implement a global 15% tax on multinationals (including big techs),
the dominant approach in Latin American countries is taxing foreign
digital service providers by extending the value added tax (VAT)
(Bizberge, 2021). Debates around the world, including the Latin American
region, involve power imbalance, ownership concentration, tensions
between the national and the global, digital sovereignty, the public
interest, cultural diversity and freedom of expression, the protection
of users and society, privacy, transparency and accountability, the
notion of communication commons, as well as the relationship between
legacy media, telecom players and big tech companies, among others.
This special issue focuses on the emerging discussions on internet
platforms and their economic and policy impact in Latin America- from a
regional or national perspective- or comparative studies between Latin
America and other regions. Reflecting the broad scope of issues arising
from the expansion of the internet and platforms, this call for papers
welcomes submissions in the following areas:
• digital sovereignty and digital infrastructures in the context of
regulation;
• freedom of expression and cultural diversity in the age of platforms;
• digital platforms, ownership concentration and regulation;
• internet, media, and communications commons in the regulation debates;
• transparency and accountability in relation to tech companies’ opacity;
• human rights in the context of digital infrastructure and systems.
We will also consider short reports/commentaries with a policy focus of
between 1,500–2,000 words, as well as books reviews.
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