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[Commlist] CFA: Disability, Technology and Digital Inclusion in Southeast Asia
Fri Jan 05 17:22:43 GMT 2024
*CFA: Disability, Technology and Digital Inclusion in Southeast Asia *
Organizers: Kuansong Victor ZHUANG, Gerard GOGGIN, Jennifer SMITH-MERRY
Sponsored by:
Centre for Disability Research and Policy, University of Sydney
Sydney Southeast Asia Centre, University of Sydney
Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University
Asian Communication Research Centre, Nanyang Technological University
Online only
8 March 2024, 11am to 6pm AEST
Asia has been widely noted as the world’s largest market in digital
technology. While researchers have focused on the efforts of Japan,
South Korea, and China, Southeast Asia has been on the rise for the past
5-10 years, especially attracting attention with the prominence of
digital platform companies such as Gojek (headquartered in Indonesia)
and Grab (Singapore HQ). These digital platform companies have
established a foothold not only in their home countries (Indonesia and
Malaysia) but also expanded across the region. Such extensive
digitalization of society is mirrored by a longer historical trajectory
of Southeast Asian countries adopting the smart and technology as
enablers for economic growth of development, for instance in Singapore
(Goggin and Zhuang 2022) and Malaysia (Bunnell 2015, 2004), just to name
two.
We juxtapose this with the emergence of disability as an area of
considerable research, social, and policy importance across Southeast
Asia, underpinned by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities, and regional initiatives like the Incheon
Strategy and the ASEAN Enabling Masterplan. Notably, the third
Asian-Pacific Decade of Persons with Disabilities 2023-2032 was convened
in Indonesia and culminated in the Jakarta Declaration. Across Southeast
Asia, we see vibrant disabled communities and research appearing, as
well as various government attempts at achieving disability inclusion.
In particular, the ASEAN Enabling Masterplan puts forth key
recommendations to support the development of inclusive ICTs. AEC 12
highlights the importance of “Promot[ing] smart city projects that have
inclusive infrastructure and technologies that are accessible to urban
dwellers with disabilities”, while AEC 13 notes the need to “Encourage
inclusive ICT by improving its accessibility and usability for persons
with disabilities and by upgrading digital skill sets of developers and
users to have a more digitally empowered and connected ASEAN people and
stakeholders” (ASEAN 2019). Accordingly, digital inclusion for people
with disability is a high priority area for policymakers, industry,
technology designs, institutions (such as education, law, and others),
and civil society organizations, even as digital forms of governance are
increasingly prevalent.
We bring together these developments – the extensive digitalization of
society and the use of technology in all aspects of life (especially
with disability), the embrace of disability rights globally, and the
pursuit of digital inclusion by Southeast Asian nation states – into
productive conversation. While digital technology is a crucial area for
realizing goals of social and economic participation as well as rights,
the practices of digital inclusion are however not uniformly spread
among people with disability across the region; what some have described
as digital divides and digital inequalities (Goggin 2017; Dobransky and
Hargittai 2016; Hargittai and Hsieh 2013). There have been estimated to
be more than 90 million people in Southeast Asia with disability, and
for many, assistive technology is a key part of their lives.
Importantly, many disabled people are not able to fully participate in
society on an equal basis with others and the WHO has called for
government action and research to promote inclusion.
Importantly, research focused on the intersections of technology,
digital inclusion, and disability across Southeast Asia is very much
nascent. Research and policy frameworks, exemplars, and models relating
to disability and digital inclusion still largely derive from a small
set of influential jurisdictions, including the US, UK, and Europe.
In this call for abstracts, we invite research across disciplines that
builds on disability studies’ core principles. Submissions may either
focus on Southeast Asia as a region, and/or specific Southeast Asian
nation-states. Submissions may consider focusing on addressing (but not
limited to) any of the following themes and issues:
·Digital Citizenship
·Digital Inclusion
·Digital Justice
·Digital Governance
·Digital Inequalities
·Digital Transactions
·Assistive Technology
·Political Economy of technology and disability
Instructions:
·Email a 300-word abstract, excluding references to
(victor.zhuang /at/ ntu.edu.sg) <mailto:(victor.zhuang /at/ ntu.edu.sg)> by *_2 Feb
2024_* with the subject line “Disability, Technology and Digital
Inclusion in Southeast Asia”
·Any queries should also be directed to (victor.zhuang /at/ ntu.edu.sg)
<mailto:(victor.zhuang /at/ ntu.edu.sg)>
·Please also state if you have any accessibility requirements.
·The conference will be zoom only.
·Select presentations will be invited to submit full papers after the
conference for a journal special issue (TBC).
This event is funded and supported by the SSEAC Collaborative Research
Grant, /Disability and Digital Inclusion in Southeast Asia/.
References
ASEAN. 2019. /ASEAN Enabling Masterplan 2025: Mainstreaming the Rights
of Persons with Disabilities/. Jakarta: ASEAN Secretariat.
Bunnell, Tim. 2004. /Malaysia, modernity and the multimedia super
corridor: A critical geography of intelligent landscapes/. Routledge.
---. 2015. "Smart city returns." /Dialogues in Human Geography/ 5 (1):
45-48.
Dobransky, Kerry, and Eszter Hargittai. 2016. "Unrealized potential:
Exploring the digital disability divide." /Poetics/ 58: 18-28.
Goggin, Gerard. 2017. "Disability and digital inequalities: Rethinking
digital divides with disability theory." In /Theorizing Digital
Divides/, edited by Massimo Ragnedda and Glenn W. Muschert, 63-74. New
York: Routledge.
Goggin, Gerard, and Kuansong Victor Zhuang. 2022. "Disability as Smart
Equality: Inclusive Technology in a Digitally Advanced Nation." In
/Digital Inclusion: Enhancing Vulnerable People’s Social Inclusion and
Welfare?/, edited by Panayiota Tsatsou, 257-275. London: Palgrave.
Hargittai, Eszter, and Yu-li Patrick Hsieh. 2013. "Digital Inequality."
In /The Oxford Handbook of Internet Studies/, edited by William H
Dutton, 129-150. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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