International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR)
Conference, June 25-29, 2013, Dublin (Ireland)
Crises, 'Creative Destruction' and the Global Power and Communication Orders
http://www.iamcr2013dublin.com

Communication Policy and Technology (CP&T) section

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Communication Policy and Technology (CP&T) Section of the International 
Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR) invites submissions 
for the IAMCR 2013 conference to be held from June 25-29, 2013 in Dublin City 
University in Dublin (Ireland). The deadline for submissions of extended 
abstracts and panel proposals is January 28, 2013.

The conference will be held under the general theme: Crises, 'Creative 
Destruction' and the Global Power and Communication Orders. The overall 
conference theme engages with the concepts of crisis and ‘creative 
destruction’, associated with periods of intensified flux, change and 
all-round, multi-dimensional processes of innovation. The theme invites 
reflections on whether or how the current deep economic/financial crisis and 
its attendant gales of ‘creative destruction’ may promote fundamental or 
multiple shifts in the geo-political and communication orders globally. The 
theme can also be linked to the ways in which users, civil society, states and 
markets creatively adapt their practices, strategies and tactics in the wake of 
a crisis, which is often accompanied by the emergence of new values and 
subsequently new policy frameworks.

The Communication Policy and Technology section invites contributions to this 
overall theme that link and integrate the different levels of policy, industry, 
civil society and user practices in relation to possible shifts in local, 
national, regional and global power relations and communication technologies. 
The latter fits within a framework of the techno-dialectic of changes taking 
place in communication and media production, diffusion and consumption, on 
micro, meso, and macro levels. Some claim that we are living in an Internet Age 
where mediated communication systems generate major opportunities for 
citizens/consumers/users to become and subsequently stay empowered. However, in 
times of crisis and techno-economic turnarounds there is also often more 
pressure for industries and governments to develop ever deeper forms of 
corporate and political control and surveillance, today through communication 
systems. While the proclaimed goals of power holders in such an insecure 
societal and economic context is to more effectively and efficiently interact 
with and serve their consumers and/or citizens, in reality we seem to be moving 
ever faster to a dystopian closed and highly monitored information and 
communication environment in which citizens/users are in fact disempowered. The 
question is to what extent and how researchers and civil society in the media 
and communications field can formulate answers on the levels of user 
empowerment and capabilities, technological (re)design, transparency, 
governance and market restructuring to counter and resist this trend.

Starting from the remit of the Communication Policy and Technology section, we 
invite submissions that take a closer look at these and related issues. In 
addition to our open call for papers, the CP&T section invites papers and panel 
proposals addressing the following particular themes that are relevant to the 
section, organised by a focus on governance, practices, and technology:

1 - Policy and governance
- Governance and control through technological infrastructures and algorithms
- Self- and co-regulation for privacy and trust in new media and ICT
- Transparency of government and open data in the post-Wikileaks age
- Big data, datamining, social sorting, and Internet governance
- Civic/internet liberties in relation to hacktivism and peer-to-peer file 
sharing
- Social, economic and legal issues related to (new) regulatory initiatives 
worldwide on privacy and data protection (e.g. Privacy Impact Assessments)
- Social innovation opportunities and policy
- Internet and communication systems: challenges for national and international 
communication policies (Theme for joint session with International 
Communication section)

2 - Practices
- User (dis)empowerment and mediation 
- Tactics and strategies of resistance and protest in technology design and use
- Multi-stakeholder approach in media literacy and digital literacy
- Mediated forms of mutual cooperation outside of the capitalist regime of 
production and consumption
- Reconfiguring trust and identity in virtual communities and user-generated 
content (DIY)
- Privacy, surveillance and the commodification of personal data
- Social and policy consequences of digital marketing techniques (e.g. 
behavioural targeting, social advertising)
- Tensions between content producers (including users and ‘produsers’) and 
content distributors
- Practices of end-user programming and implications for empowerment

3 - Technology 
- Construction of technology: privacy-by-design versus surveillance-by-design
- Political economy of social media
- Design and use of Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PET) / Transparency 
Enhancing Technologies (TET) / Privacy Feedback and Awareness tools (PFA)
- Changing policies, value networks and user practices in digital audio-visual 
systems
- Creativity, transparency and control through autonomous systems and 
ubiquitous computing (RFID, sensors,...)
- Privacy and surveillance through social, local and mobile marketing 
techniques (SoLoMo)
- Linking (constructive) technology assessment (STS) with requirement 
engineering (computer science)
- Technologies for data inference, profiling, and prediction of user behaviour

The CP&T Section will look for opportunities for hosting joint sessions with 
other sections and/or working groups.

Submission information

The CP&T section welcomes proposals for papers bearing on the above or related 
issues by submitting an extended abstract (maximum 1,000 words). Abstracts 
should state the title, the methods or approach used, and briefly introduce the 
theoretical framework and empirical research on which the paper will be based. 
The scholarly presentation of accepted submissions can take place in several 
types of sessions: paper presentation sessions (i.e. 4-5 presenters each with 
12-15 minutes, requiring full paper submitted on time) and high intensity 
sessions (i.e. 6-8 presenters each with 5-7 minutes). While, IAMCR accepts 
presentations and papers in English, French and Spanish, it is requested that 
extended abstracts and panel proposals, if at all possible, be submitted in 
English to facilitate the reviewing process. 

Proposals for panels are also welcome. A proposal should have four to five 
papers and should provide: (1) a panel title, (2) a framing text and (3) short 
abstracts for all the papers with paper titles and authors. The framing text 
(maximum 500 words) should contain the overall idea and goal of the panel, and 
how it responds to the CP&T section call. A panel chair and a discussant should 
also be proposed. The 500 word panel framing text and the individual paper 
abstracts need to be submitted separately, but please be sure to add the panel 
name to each of the individual paper abstracts! They will be reviewed and based 
on this review we will accept, accept with revisions, or decline the panel.

Submission of extended abstracts, panel proposals and (if accepted) full papers 
can only be done online via IAMCR’s Open Conference System (OCS) at 
http://iamcr-ocs.org from 15 November 2012 to 28 January 2013 (midnight GMT). 
Submissions only sent via e-mail will not be reviewed.

It is expected that, normally, only one abstract will be submitted per person 
for consideration by the Conference. However, under no circumstances should 
there be more than two abstracts bearing the name of the same applicant either 
individually or as part of any group of authors to a single IAMCR conference in 
general. Please note also that the same abstract or another version with minor 
variations in title or content must not be submitted to other IAMCR Sections or 
Working Groups for consideration, after an initial submission. Such submissions 
will be deemed to be in breach of the conference guidelines and will be 
automatically rejected by the Open Conference System (OCS), by the Head or by 
the Conference Programme Reviewer. Such applicants risk being removed entirely 
from the conference programme.

The deadlines are: 
- January 28, 2013 (midnight GMT): Submission of extended abstracts and panels 
via OCS (submissions will be assessed by double blind review)
- February 28, 2013: Announcement of acceptances
- May 28, 2013: Full papers due via OCS (around 7,500 words, excluding notes 
and references). There is no second round of reviewing for acceptance.

If a proposal is accepted, the presenter must also register for conference 
participation in order to be included in the final conference programme of the 
Section. A CP&T best paper award will be made to one of the paper presenters, 
based on the full papers submitted in time.

Additional questions about the CP&T sessions (submission, themes, panels etc.) 
at the IAMCR 2013 conference can be addressed to Bart Cammaerts (b.cammaerts 
[AT] lse.ac.uk) and Jo Pierson (jo.pierson [AT] vub.ac.be). For further 
information on the conference (registration, theme, location, etc.), please 
consult the conference website <http://iamcr2013dublin.com> or contact the 
Local Organizing Committee (LOC) by email at <info [AT] iamcr2013dublin.com>.

Section Chair:  Jo Pierson  /  Vice-Chairs: Bart Cammaerts and Aphra Kerr


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Jo Pierson (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels (VUB)
iMinds - Digital Society
Studies on Media, Information and Telecommunication (SMIT)
Pleinlaan 2 / B-1050 Brussels / Belgium
T: + 32 (0)2 629 2412
F: +32 (0)2 629 1700
E: jo.pier...@vub.ac.be
Office: 0C.005
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