-----Original Message-----
From: Susan B. Kretchmer [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 3:45 PM
To: Chris Coward
Subject: Invitation to Participate in Digital Divide Research Preconference at 
ICA 2014/Seattle Conference

Hi Chris,

I am writing to invite and encourage the participation of you and the members 
of the TASCHA group in the meeting described in the Call for Participation 
below.  Your work is exemplary and we hope your team will contribute their 
unique insights and expertise to the interdisciplinary dialogue.  Could you 
please share the CFP with your entire TASCHA group, including your global 
network of research partners, as well as with anyone else you know of who might 
be interested in joining us?  

Many, many thanks for your consideration about participating and your help in 
sharing the CFP.

Regards,

Susan

Susan B. Kretchmer
Johns Hopkins University
and
President, Partnership for Progress on the Digital Divide 


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CFP: Digital Divide Research Preconference at ICA 2014/Seattle Conference


** Please pass this message on to colleagues, networks, and lists to whom it 
would be of interest.  Thank you! **


Communication and “The Good Life” Around the World After Two Decades of the 
Digital Divide

Partnership for Progress on the Digital Divide (PPDD) Preconference 
International Communication Association (ICA) 2014 Conference Seattle, 
Washington, USA Thursday, 22 May 2014 
http://www.icahdq.org/conf/2014/aroundtheworldcfp.asp

Call for Participation

This interdisciplinary Preconference, sponsored by Partnership for Progress on 
the Digital Divide (PPDD) explores the nexus of the International Communication 
Association (ICA) Conference Theme of “The Good Life” and the issues of digital 
inclusion/exclusion for those who do not share the advantages of continuous 
connectivity.  The PPDD Preconference is co-sponsored by the ICA Communication 
and Technology Division, the ICA Communication Law and Policy Division, and the 
ICA Mass Communication Division.

2014 marks the 20th anniversary of the recognition of the digital divide 
through social scientific research.  As the Internet became commonplace in the 
1990s, officials in the Clinton Administration wondered if there should be 
concern about equity of access to computers and the Information Superhighway.  
As a result, based on the analysis of Census data about computer/modem 
ownership and usage collected in 1994, the newly created National 
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) prepared and released 
in 1995 the landmark report entitled "Falling Through the Net: A Survey of the 
'Have Nots' in Rural and Urban America."  From there, the discussion of the 
inequalities of online access as a new aspect of the larger issues of wealth 
and poverty began and the "Digital Divide” became a major focus in countries 
around the world.

Recent research from scholars in, for example, the U.S., U.K., and Canada 
indicates that nearly 20 years later, even in the most highly developed 
countries around the world, as much as 20% of the population does not benefit 
from even minimal access to the Internet.  And, that lack of consistent, 
quality access to emergent communication technologies is antithetical to the 
nature of a “good life” amidst the transformative changes enjoyed by members of 
the wired population; those who are offline are alienated from the benefits of 
the “new opportunities to communicate and interact . . . new experiences, 
behaviors, and habits . . . [and the ability to] engage with others or receive 
information” suggested by the ICA Conference Theme.  Thus, this Preconference 
responds to ICA’s call to consider “what a ‘good life’ might look like in a 
contemporary, digital, and networked society, and what new challenges we might 
face in attaining it” to include all members of society.

In the search for equity in access to “the good life” in the digital age, 
scholarly research has played a key role in the public discourse on the issues 
of the digital divide as well as in the decision-making by policymakers and 
practitioners as they work to craft solutions to this pressing societal 
concern.  As the digital divide persists past its 20th anniversary, this 
Preconference provides an extended, in-depth opportunity to consider the 
current state and future possibilities for research that informs issues related 
to the digital divide around the world.  Further, the Preconference works to 
identify new areas of necessary, productive research focus to foster greater 
understanding and enlighten practice and policy going forward so that all 
global citizens can create their own “good life” in the digital, networked age.

After a brief welcome and summary introduction to the status of the digital 
divide around the world, the Preconference schedule features three 75-minute 
breakout time periods with multiple simultaneous sessions focusing on the 
status of communication, an inclusive “good life”, and digital divide research 
in various regions of the world.  Involving scholars at all stages of their 
careers, these sessions will include research from any discipline and any 
theoretical and methodological approach that contributes to exploring the 
issues surrounding the digital divide.  In addition, there will be a luncheon 
keynote.

The final session of the Preconference is a highly interactive, lively 
brainstorming and collaborative thinking dialogue among all presenters and 
other attendees to create partnerships and inspire new ideas for the third 
decade of digital divide research.  All participants in the Preconference will 
have the opportunity to provide in advance position papers that will be made 
available prior to the Preconference and permanently archived via an e-book on 
the PPDD website.

Please join us to share your insights and expertise.

How to Participate

*** Submit an Abstract to Present Your Work During the Preconference
Deadline: 20 January 2014
Notification of Acceptance: 1 February 2014

Submissions are welcome from scholars at all stages of their careers, from any 
theoretical and methodological approach, and across multiple disciplines 
engaged in research that informs issues related to the digital divide, 
including, but not limited to:
- gaps in access and connectivity
- digital inclusion
- digital exclusion
- digital (dis)engagement
- challenges and opportunities
- social and cultural aspects of the divide
- the skills and digital/information literacy needed to interpret, understand, 
and navigate information presented online
- the impact of socioeconomic factors on user behavior
- the role of motivation
- differences in patterns of usage
- characteristics and conceptualizations of non-users
- how people use the Internet to create content
- different forms of capital and power relationships
- the impact of new and evolving technologies
- the mobile divide
- the interplay of influence with mobile technologies
- socioeconomic and cultural effects
- community informatics
- social informatics
- international development
- education
- health
- politics and civic engagement
- telecommunication policy
- the application of research to communities, practice, and public and private 
sector initiatives

If desired, each author may submit one sole authored work and one or more 
co-authored works, but each individual can only make one presentation at the 
Preconference so additional submissions would have to be presented by another 
member of the co-authorship team.

Please include the following information in your submission:
- Title of presentation
- Name(s), affiliation(s), and email address(es) of author(s)
- On co-authored submissions, the name, affiliation, and email address of the 
author who will be presenting the work at the Preconference
- A 1 page (250 words excluding notes and references) abstract in 12 pt. Times 
New Roman in Word doc/docx format
- For each author, a 100-word-maximum description of the author’s area(s) of 
research interest related to the digital divide in 12 pt. Times New Roman in a 
separate Word doc/docx format file

Please email your submission to the appropriate Sessions Organizer below based 
on where your research was conducted:

Eastern and Western Europe
Sessions Organizer: Ellen Helsper, London School of Economics and Political 
Science e.j.helsper (at) lse (dot) ac (dot) uk

Asia, Oceania, the Middle East, and Africa Sessions Organizer: Gerard Goggin, 
University of Sydney gerard.goggin (at) Sydney (dot) edu (dot) au

Canada
Sessions Organizer: Catherine Middleton, Ryerson University catherine.middleton 
(at) Ryerson (dot) ca

United States
Sessions Organizer: Susan B. Kretchmer, Johns Hopkins University and 
Partnership for Progress on the Digital Divide susankretchmer (at) yahoo (dot) 
com

Central and South America
Sessions Organizer: Laura Robinson, Santa Clara University laura (at) 
laurarobinson (dot) org

*** If Not Submitting Work for Presentation, Chair a Session During the 
Preconference
Deadline: 20 January 2014
Notification of Acceptance: 1 February 2014

If you are not submitting your work for presentation but would like to Chair a 
session, please email your request to the Sessions Organizer for the region of 
major interest to you from the list above.  Please include your name, 
affiliation, and email address as well as a 100-word-maximum description of 
your area(s) of research interest related to the digital divide in 12 pt. Times 
New Roman in a Word doc/docx format file.

*** Submit a Position Paper for Inclusion in the Preconference E-Book
Deadline: 15 March 2014

Presenters, session Chairs, and all others who will be attending the 
Preconference are invited to submit to [email protected] a 3-5 page (750-1250 
words excluding notes and references) position paper, in 12 pt. Times New Roman 
in Word doc/docx format, discussing:
- Your vision for the future of digital divide research;
- Your thoughts on what questions need to be asked and what research methods 
and critical perspectives should be used to answer them; and
- How that research can impact policymaking, practice, and the attainment of a 
“good life” going forward in your unique region of the world as well as 
globally.  

If you will not be presenting your work or Chairing a session but will be 
attending the Preconference and submitting a position paper by the March 15 
deadline, please email the Preconference Organizer, Susan Kretchmer 
(susankretchmer (at) yahoo (dot) com), by 20 January to indicate your intention 
so that we can anticipate your position paper and include you in all emailings 
of Preconference announcements.  In that email, please include your name, 
affiliation, and email address as well as a 100-word-maximum description of 
your area(s) of research interest related to the digital divide in 12 pt. Times 
New Roman in a Word doc/docx format file.

*** Join in the Dialogue at the Preconference Without Presenting, Chairing, or 
Submitting a Position Paper

If you would like to just attend the Preconference to join in the dialogue 
without any other involvement, please email the Preconference Organizer, Susan 
Kretchmer (susankretchmer (at) yahoo (dot) com), to indicate your intention so 
that we can include you in all emailings of Preconference announcements.

Please contact Susan (susankretchmer (at) yahoo (dot) com) for any other 
questions or further information.

About Partnership for Progress on the Digital Divide (PPDD) --

Continuing the work and collaborations that began under the auspices of the 
National Communication Association Task Force on the Digital Divide, and with 
former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Commerce Larry Irving as Honorary Director, 
PPDD is a not-for-profit organization that engages a broad diversity of 
individuals and organizations to spearhead a multi-associational, 
multi-disciplinary partnership between scholars, practitioners, and 
policymakers to make significant contributions in closing the digital divide 
and addressing the many other challenges and opportunities presented by the 
digital age.  PPDD reaches out beyond the communication discipline and academia 
to various other disciplines and groups in the U.S. and abroad who share 
interests, methods, and goals and want to work with PPDD to build on that 
common ground to find solutions to these pressing societal concerns.  For 
example, PPDD has been actively involved with government, policymakers, and 
practitioners across a broad range, including submitting a 
“friend-of-the-court” brief to the U.S. Supreme Court to counsel on a recent 
case of major import for Americans’ access to the Internet in public libraries 
and advising the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as it developed 
and now implements the National Broadband Plan mandated by Congress.

About the International Communication Association (ICA) --

ICA is an academic association for scholars interested in the study, teaching, 
and application of all aspects of human and mediated communication and is a 
truly international association with more than 4,800 members in 77 countries.  
Since 2003, ICA has been officially associated with the United Nations as a 
non-governmental association (NGO).

Further information about ICA is available at http://www.icahdq.org/ and 
complete details about ICA's 64th Annual Conference in Seattle, 22-26 May 2014, 
are available at http://www.icahdq.org/conf/index.asp. 

The ICA Communication and Technology Division 
(http://cat.icahdq.org/ohana/website/index.cfm?p=8354660), the ICA 
Communication Law and Policy Division 
(http://clap.icahdq.org/ohana/website/index.cfm?p=72631611), and the ICA Mass 
Communication Division 
(http://mass.icahdq.org/ohana/website/index.cfm?p=89243202) have joined with 
PPDD to be co-sponsors of the Preconference.




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