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[Commlist] Cfp: The rise of Tech Occultism - Narratives of AI, Imaginaries, and Digital Cultures in Mobility Control
Fri Jan 31 19:05:22 GMT 2025
The rise of Tech Occultism - Narratives of AI, Imaginaries, and Digital
Cultures in Mobility Control
International Conference on Culture, Crime, and Global Challenges
16-17 April, 2025, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
We invite submissions for a pre-organized panel at the International
Conference on Culture, Crime, and Global Challengesthat critically
explores the narratives and imaginaries surrounding Artificial
Intelligence (AI) in mobility control, forced migration, and law
enforcement in the European context. This panel focuses on the
contextual assumptions and cultural frameworks that shape the use and
perception of AI technologies within the growing conservative political
climate, particularly in relation to migration and policing practices.
The selection of papersseeksto unpack how digital cultures, underpinned
by a “culture of fear” and the “cult of AI,” are constructed and
challenged through both policy and public discourse.
The panel, titled "Tech Occultism", critically explores the growing
mystification and fear surrounding AI in the contexts of migration
control, forced migration, and law enforcement. We investigate how AI
technologies are framed within a culture of fear,where its technological
powers are perceived as unpredictable and omnipotent, often seen as part
of a cult of AIthat promises solutions while also amplifying anxieties.
Drawing on key theoretical concepts such as Technopanic, Cybernetic
Totalism, and threat inflation, we examine how AI is increasingly
portrayed as a powerful, almost mystical force that shapes governance in
unseen and uncontrollable ways. This ‘sacred’ framing is connected to
Pasquale’s “unlawfulness by default”, which advocates for proactive
regulation of algorithmic systems to mitigate the risks associated with
their hidden and potentially harmful influence. The panel will unpack
how these narratives —emerging from a culture of fear and the cult-like
reverence of technology—reinforce and challenge digital governance
frameworks in the surveillance and policing of migrants, particularly in
an era of rising political conservatism.
Key themes for this panel include:
* The narratives around AI and migration control
* The “culture of fear” in digital governance
* The “cult of AI” in law enforcement cultures
* The impact of AI-driven digital cultures on human rights, privacy,
and exclusion
* Imaginaries of surveillance and control
* Resistance to AI in governance
We welcome interdisciplinary contributions from digital criminology,
Science and Technology Studies (STS), social anthropology, political
science, and cultural studies. Submissions should critically engage with
the cultural, political, and ethical dimensions of AI technologies,
offering insights into the imaginaries, assumptions, and contested
narratives surrounding digital governance.
Please send an abstract (max. 300 words) and a brief biography to
Veronika Nagy at (v.nagy /at/ uu.nl)<mailto:(v.nagy /at/ uu.nl)>by February 25, 2025.
We look forward to your contributions and to engaging in a dynamic
discussion on these critical issues at the conference!
See the Conference website here: International Conference on Culture,
Crime, and Global Challenges - News & Events - Utrecht
University<https://www.uu.nl/en/events/international-conference-on-culture-crime-and-global-challenges>
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