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[Commlist] New Special Issue of Internet Policy Review on "Transnational materialities"
Tue Jul 30 19:14:25 GMT 2019
Volume 8, Issue 2
Transnational materialities
José van Dijck, Utrecht University, Netherlands
Bernhard Rieder, New Media and Digital Culture, University of Amsterdam,
Netherlands
Abstract
This special issue of Internet Policy Review is the second to bring
together the best policy-oriented papers presented at the annual
conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (AoIR). The
conference in Montréal, in October 2018, was organised around the theme
of "Transnational materialities". As explained in the editorial to this
issue, the contributions map the larger debate on internet governance
research in terms of perspectives rather than disciplines. The eleven
papers in this issue span a wide range of topics, including normative
perspectives on how platforms shape democracy, conceptual perspectives
on how to think platform power, and social and legal views on
data-driven governance.
Papers in this Special Issue
Editorial: The recursivity of internet governance research, By José van
Dijck & Bernhard Rieder
Making data colonialism liveable: how might data’s social order be
regulated? By Nick Couldry & Ulises Mejias
Mediated democracy – Linking digital technology to political agency, By
Jeanette Hofmann
Technology, autonomy, and manipulation, By Daniel Susser, Beate Roessler
& Helen Nissenbaum
Reframing platform power, By José van Dijck, David Nieborg & Thomas Poell
The platform governance triangle: conceptualising the informal
regulation of online content, By Robert Gorwa
Citizen or consumer? Contrasting Australia and Europe’s data protection
policies, By James Meese, Punit Jagasia & James Arvanitakis
How US-made rules shape internet governance in China, By Natasha Tusikov
Zombie contracts, dark patterns of design, and ‘documentisation’, By
Kristin B. Cornelius
The ‘golden view’: data-driven governance in the scoring society, By
Lina Dencik, Joanna Redden, Arne Hintz & Harry Warne
The algorithmic dance: YouTube’s Adpocalypse and the gatekeeping of
cultural content on digital platforms, By Sangeet Kumar
A guideline for understanding and measuring algorithmic governance in
everyday life, By Michael Latzer & Noemi Festic
To access the special issue, visit:
https://policyreview.info/articles/analysis/transnational-materialities
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