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Call for Papers

"Information Rights as Human Rights"
Information Ethics Roundtable
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ (USA)
15-16 April 2011

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We live in an "information society." Information and information
technologies are increasingly essential to our social, economic, and
political interactions. Given this, serious reflection on information
ethics imperative. "Information ethics" studies the value questions
that arise in the creation, control, and access to information. The
Information Ethics Roundtable is a yearly conference, which brings
together researchers from disciplines such as philosophy, information
science, communications, public administration, anthropology and law
to discuss the ethical issues such as information privacy,
intellectual property, intellectual freedom, and censorship.

The focus of this year's roundtable is the relation between human
rights and information ethics. The Universal Declaration on Human
Rights lists a number of rights related to information (e.g.,
Articles 18, 19, 25, and 26). Such "information rights" include the
rights to create and communicate information (e.g., freedom of
expression, freedom of association), to control other's access to
information (e.g., privacy and intellectual property), and rights to
access information (e.g., freedom of thought, the right to read).
This conference will address several conceptual, empirical, and
ethical issues:

- What theoretical approaches to human rights could be most
  fruitfully applied to questions in information ethics?
- What are the human rights related to information?
- Are information rights best conceived merely as liberties, which
  obligate states to refrain from restricting freedoms, or as welfare
  rights, which obligate states to provide resources?
- Are information rights instrumental rights, that is, do they
  promote the fulfillment of other human rights?
- What challenges does cultural diversity pose to a human rights
  approach to information ethics?
- Is there empirical research (e.g., case studies, statistical
  analyses) relevant to understanding the relation between information
  ethics and human rights?
- What are the relationships and possible conflicts between
  information human rights (e.g., the right to intellectual property
  and the right to access information)?
- Do we have human rights to access particular information
  technologies, such as computers, cellphones, or the Internet?
- What are the drawbacks of taking a human rights approach to
  information ethics?

Submit an abstract of up to 500 words on any of the above or closely
related topics. E-mail contributions to <[email protected]>.
Include your full name, institutional affiliation and e-mail
address.                                 

Submission Deadline: December 15, 2010.
Acceptance Notification: January 1, 2011.

The roundtable is free and open to the public. 

Speakers confirmed so far:

Kit Wellman (Washington University in St. Louis, Philosophy)
Toni Samek (Alberta, Library and Information Studies)
Adam D. Moore (Washington, Philosophy and the iSchool)
David Cuillier (Arizona, Journalism)
Jeannine Relly (Arizona, Journalism)
Kay Mathiesen (Arizona, SIRLS)
Laura Lenhart (Arizona, SIRLS)

Workshop on Libraries and Human Rights:
Friday April 15, 2011
8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.  


Contact:

Kay Mathiesen
School of Information Resources and Library Science
University of Arizona
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://sites.google.com/site/informationethicsroundtable/
 
 
 
 
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