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[Commlist] CfP GIG-ARTS 2025: The Rise of Digital Sovereignty: Ambiguities and Challenges
Mon Nov 11 11:56:49 GMT 2024
*9**th** GIG-ARTS Conference | **26-27 May 2025 Salerno*
*The Rise of Digital Sovereignty: Ambiguities and Challenges*
*Deadline for abstract submissions: 31 January 2025*
The European Multidisciplinary Conference on Global Internet Governance
Actors, Regulations, Transactions and Strategies (GIG-ARTS) gathers
scholars and practitioners in an annual conference to debate the latest
research on governing the global internet. Each conference highlights a
main theme while also welcoming contributions on other aspects of global
internet governance.
Earlier GIG-ARTS meetings have addressed themes such as “Global Internet
Governance as a Diplomacy Issue” (Paris, 2017), “Overcoming Inequalities
in Internet Governance” (Cardiff, 2018), “Europe as a Global Player in
Internet Governance” (Salerno, 2019), “Online Information Governance”
(Vienna, 2021), “Global Internet Governance and International Human
Rights” (Nicosia, 2022), and “The Governance of Cybersecurity:
Resilience, Human Rights and Democracy” (Padua, 2023), “Thirty Years of
Multistakeholderism in Internet Governance: Assessments and Prospects”
(The Hague 2024).
*GIG-ARTS 2025*
The Ninth GIG-ARTS Conference, to be held at the University of Salerno
on 26-27 May 2025, takes as its main theme “The Rise of Digital
Sovereignty: Ambiguities and Challenges.”
The concept of digital sovereignty has gained increasing attention and
importance in recent years, driven by a complex array of political and
economic motivations, geopolitical tensions, and technological
developments. The idea of state sovereignty, once largely limited to
territorial boundaries, is now being reimagined and redefined within the
context of the digital age. National governments and non-state actors
alike are struggling with the need to exert control over data, digital
infrastructures, and technological ecosystems, while simultaneously
navigating the challenges posed by the global nature of the internet and
the influence of digital corporations.
The increasing centrality of digital infrastructure in economic
development, national security, and societal well-being has led many
governments to reassess their role in regulating and controlling digital
networks. This reassessment has been especially prominent in the face of
growing reliance on foreign technology providers, concerns over data
privacy, and disruptions of global supply chains. Nations like China,
Russia, and the European Union have developed policies aimed at
asserting their digital sovereignty, each motivated by distinct yet
interrelated factors, including national security, economic
protectionism, and the safeguarding of fundamental rights. Digital
sovereignty is thus positioned as both a response to external
vulnerabilities and an assertion of strategic autonomy in an
increasingly digital world. Also in the United States of America, the
traditional model of internet governance based on private sector
leadership, business self-regulation, and global economic competition
has been called into question by recent policy initiatives, such as the
Huawei ban, restrictions on Chinese apps, the CLOUD Act, and the Chips
and Science Act.
Furthermore, many digital sovereignty conceptualizations go beyond a
state-centric framework. One prominent perspective focuses on digital
sovereignty from a grassroots point of view, which emphasizes the
capacity of local communities, indigenous groups, civil society, and
individuals to control their digital futures. These perspectives
advocate for decentralized and community-driven approaches to digital
governance, challenging both state and corporate dominance.
Additionally, there are emerging discussions around corporate digital
sovereignty as the tech giants' ability to become autonomous in their
productive cycle (managing their own cables, data servers, storage farms
etc.), or more broadly their ability to operate across borders, shaping
global digital ecosystems and influencing governance decisions in ways
that rival or even surpass state authorities. Finally, there are
interpretations of digital sovereignty in terms of the sovereignty of
cyberspace in itself, meant as self-governance by native digital
institutions representing the so-called Internet Community.
The pursuit of digital sovereignty generates significant tensions,
particularly between the desire for national control and the need for
international and multistakeholder cooperation, and despite its growing
prominence, digital sovereignty remains a deeply contested concept.
As a result, digital sovereignty is marked by several ambiguities and
contradictions, which reflect the complexity of regulating the digital
world. One prominent contradiction lies in the interplay between
national autonomy and the extraterritorial projection of power. While
governments seek to assert control over their digital landscapes, they
also engage in actions that extend their influence beyond national
borders, such as imposing data localization rules that have far-reaching
implications for international businesses, or enacting digital policies
that affect global internet governance. Additionally, digital
sovereignty presents a paradox between constitutionalism and
authoritarianism. On the one hand, some countries advocate for digital
sovereignty as a necessary condition to constitutionalize the digital
realm, ensuring that fundamental rights such as privacy and freedom of
expression are upheld. On the other hand, the same concept can be used
to justify authoritarian practices, such as state censorship,
surveillance, and the restriction of access to information.
This conference aims to foster a critical dialogue on the rise of
digital sovereignty, addressing its motivations, ambiguities, and
contradictions. We invite papers that provide both theoretical insights
and empirical analyses, drawing from a wide range of disciplines,
including political science, law, economics, communication, science and
technology studies. Participants will have the opportunity to engage in
discussions that explore the future of digital sovereignty and its role
in shaping the global digital order.
Therefore, the Ninth GIG-ARTS Conference especially welcomes papers that
address the sorts of questions listed below. We aim to compile a
selection of contributions in a journal special issue and/or an edited
volume.
* Defining digital sovereignty: Conceptual frameworks and theories
* Comparative perspectives on digital sovereignty
* The economy of digital sovereignty: Protectionism vs. global digital
integration
* The geopolitics of digital sovereignty
* Digital sovereignty and digital constitutionalism
* Digital sovereignty and national security
* Motivations and implications of data localization, network
territorialization, and platform regulation
* Digital sovereignty and digital colonialism, authoritarianism, and
imperialism
* The role of international organizations (WTO, ITU, etc.) in digital
sovereignty
* Tech standardization and sovereignty: Competing global norms
* Global digital supply chains and strategic autonomy
* Cybersecurity, weaponization, and digital sovereignty
* Digital sovereignty and emerging technologies
* Digital sovereignty and environmental issues
* Digital sovereignty and Internet fragmentation
As always, alongside the main theme, the GIG-ARTS conference also
welcomes papers on other aspects of internet governance.
*
Submission information*
Authors are invited to submit their extended abstracts (no longer than
500 words), describing their research question(s), theoretical
framework, approach and methodology, expected findings or empirical
outcome. Submitted abstracts will be evaluated through a peer-review
process. Abstracts and authors’ information should be submitted through
https://conftool2025.gig-arts.eu/ <https://conftool2025.gig-arts.eu/>
*Key dates*
* Deadline for abstract submissions: 31 January 2025
* Notification to authors: 1 April 2025
* Deadline for author registration (at least one author must register
for a selected presentation to appear on the programme): 14 April 2025
* Programme publication: 20 April 2025
* Registration deadline: 15 May 2025
* Conference dates: 26-27 May 2025
*Co-Sponsors*
Internet & Communication Policy Center (ICPC)
https://www.internetpolicyresearch.eu/
<https://www.internetpolicyresearch.eu/>
Salerno Winter School on Internet Governance (SWING)
https://www.internetpolicyresearch.eu/swing-2025
<https://www.internetpolicyresearch.eu/swing-2025>
Digital Constitutionalism Network (DCN)
https://digitalconstitutionalism.org <https://digitalconstitutionalism.org/>
Italian Ministry of University and Research
Grant PRIN 2022KTTSBC - CUP Master D53D23007300006
Digital Sovereignty in Comparative Perspective: State Authority,
Corporate Power and Fundamental Rights in Cyberspace
*
Programme Committee*
Carolina Aguerre, Berna Akcali Gur, Francesco Amoretti, Luca Belli,
Dennis Broeders, Stanislav Budnitsky, Andrea Calderaro, Olga Cavalli,
Eduardo Celeste, Jean-Marie Chenou, Laura DeNardis, Dmitry Epstein,
Marianne Franklin, Iginio Gagliardone, Orsolya Gulyas, Blayne Haggart,
Sophie Hoogenboom, Min Jiang, Rikke Frank Joergensen, Hortense Jongen,
Matthias C.Kettemann, Nanette Levinson, Robin Mansell, Meryem Marzouki,
Francesca Musiani, Ricardo Nanni, Claudia Padovani, Clément Perarnaud,
Julia Pohle, Dennis Redeker, Michele Rioux, Jamal Shahin, Mauro
Santaniello, Katharine Sarikakis, Yves Schemeil, Jan Aart Scholte, Niels
ten Oever, Nadia Tjahja, Natasha Tusikov.
*Organizing Committee*
Chairs: Francesco Amoretti, Nicola Palladino, Mauro Santaniello
Local Team: Carlos Andrés Fonseca Diaz, Nascia Tatiana Fera, Armando
Antonio Ferrara, Gerardo Ferrentino, Serena Fraiese, Chiara Spiniello,
Grace X. Yang.
*Venue*
GIG-ARTS 2025 will be held at the University of Salerno, Campus of Fisciano.
*Conference Registration and Fees*
Registration fees for the Ninth GIG-ARTS Conference are 120€ for regular
participants and 60€ for students showing proof of status. Conference
fees (non-refundable) cover a participant kit as well as coffee breaks,
lunches, and reception. Registration deadline is 15 May 2025.
*
Communication Channels*
- Website: www.gig-arts.eu <http://www.gig-arts.eu/>
- Email for information: (events /at/ gig-arts.eu) <mailto:(events /at/ gig-arts.eu)>
- Submissions: https://conftool2025.gig-arts.eu/
<https://conftool2025.gig-arts.eu/>
- X/Twitter: @GigArtsEU - Hashtag: #GIGARTS25
- Mailing list for updates:
https://gig-arts.eu/mailman/listinfo/mailinglist_gig-arts.eu
<https://gig-arts.eu/mailman/listinfo/mailinglist_gig-arts.eu>
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