Call for Papers
Digital Sovereignty - Interdisciplinary insights into digital technology and 
infrastructure, information privacy and digital security
Special Issue of eJournal of eDemocracy and Open Government (JeDEM)

In our technologically advanced, multiply connected and increasingly complex 
world digital space has become an economically, politically, and socially 
significant domain. As such it falls subject to competing interests of globally 
dispersed agents, which are exceedingly hard to reconcile, as they may differ 
immensely with respect to their underlying aims and values.
In response to the need to navigate this challenging and potentially hostile 
environment "digital sovereignty" has emerged as a key issue in recent research 
and policy development. The concept refers to the capacity for autonomous 
action within the digital sphere and connects three underlying and equally 
important dimensions of conscious and deliberate technology utilization: 1. 
Digital Technology and Infrastructure, 2. Information Privacy and 3. Digital 
Security.

As we rely more and more on digital technologies to facilitate work processes 
and support communication, we become increasingly dependent on digital 
infrastructures such as microchips, cloud services, and social media platforms. 
As a result, their design and structural requirements provide the framework 
within which various challenges to autonomous agency arise and need to be 
addressed. Some of these challenges are privacy related and concern the proper 
collection, storage, handling and dissemination of personal and personally 
relevant information. They require a purposeful and responsible approach to 
dealing with data and the development and implementation of appropriate data 
protection measures. Others relate to security in general. The security 
dimension has a much wider scope since security challenges can emerge on every 
level of technological infrastructure and are not limited to vulnerabilities 
that bear the risk of violating privacy. Network reliability and the integrity 
of operational processes can be equally at risk. As digital technologies are 
constantly evolving, resulting in ever more intricate threats to privacy and 
security, these critical foundations of digital autonomous agency need to be 
continuously monitored, assessed, and provided for.

With this special issue we want to contribute to this endeavor by inviting 
submissions focusing on (but in no way limited to) the following areas of 
interest:
Normative framework and conceptual foundations for digital sovereignty
Implications digital sovereignty measures (or lack thereof) have for 
functionality, economic viability, innovation, (international) cooperation, and 
sustainability of governmental, institutional, or economic processes.
Requirements of resilience-enhancing measures to increase the availability of 
systems.
Vulnerability of central systems as single points of failure.
Reliable assessment of privacy and security risks (Business Impact Analysis, 
Privacy Impact Analysis)
Requirements for and compatibility of realizing different security and/or 
privacy objectives.
Potentials and risks of digital sovereignty measures to influence and shape 
economic, political, and societal structures (Digital Humanism).
Normative requirements on privacy and security measures resulting from digital 
infrastructure being classified as public good.
Unintended effects the implementation of digital sovereignty measures might 
have.

We especially encourage submissions that draw on interdisciplinary perspectives 
and combine insights from such fields as political science, international 
relations, law, computer science, sociology, philosophy, and economics.
Submissions Guidelines - according to JeDem norms: 
https://www.jedem.org/index.php/jedem/announcement/view/61
The exstended submission deadline is December 31st, 2023. If you plan to 
submit, please contact Dr. Johanna Ullrich 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) or Prof. Edgar 
Weippl ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) from SBA 
Research, Vienna, Austria.

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