Reminder--call for papers for gret ABS issue on the dark web

BW
Barry Wellman
Wed, Nov 27, 2019 5:01 PM

Dear colleagues,

We'd like to send this reminder call as deadline is coming close by.
(plus Happy Thanksgiving to those in the U.S.!)

Reminder CFP: The American Behavioral Scientist Special Issue on Social
Platform Accountability in Global Perspectives (Deadline December 1, 2019)
Social Platform Accountability in Global Perspectives: Responsibility,
Manipulation, and Control in Digital Social Spaces
Guest Editors:
K. Hazel Kwon (Arizona State University), khkwon@asu.edu
W. Wayne Xu (University of Massachusetts at Amherst), weiaixu@umass.edu
Barry Wellman (NetLab Network),wellman@chass.utoronto.ca
Description:
The American Behavioral Scientist (ABS, Impact Factor: 1.79,
https://journals.sagepub.com/home/abs) invites submissions for a special
issue on Social Platform Accountability in Global Perspectives:
Responsibility, Manipulation, and Control in Digital Social Spaces.
Democratic potentials of social technologies have been under threat in
recent years, along with an expanding spread of manipulative and extreme
digital activities. Examples of such activities vary from self-motivated
sharing of radicalized content to coordinated propagation of
disinformation. Many countries have been struggling with the rise of these
activities within their own sociopolitical contexts, attesting to the
globally shared awareness of the lack of accountability and transparency
in the current digital environment.
This special issue calls for conceptual and empirical understandings of
social platform accountability in global perspectives. This issue broadly
defines a social platform as a digital social space where online users
interact with content and share their opinions or their own content with
other users. Examples of social platforms may include mainstream social
network sites, discussion forums like Reddit, online comment sections in
news sites, anonymous communities like 8chan, and sites hosted in the dark
web.
Conceptualizing social platform accountability requires understanding the
roles of various stakeholders (e.g., users, the tech industry, activists,
government, policymakers, etc.) as well as multifaceted related issues
(e.g., user responsibility, content moderation mechanisms, political
economic motivations underlying digital manipulation, ethical tensions
between responsible control and censorship, etc.). Furthermore,
sociopolitical contexts where society is situated may complicate the
process of rationalizing and normalizing discourses surrounding social
platform accountability within society.
Submission Topics:
This special issue invites scholarship that examines the causes and
conditions that compromise or strengthen the accountability of social
platforms. The special issue also seeks submissions from global scholars
whose work may promote a comparative understanding of the topic. It
welcomes various methodological approaches(qualitative, quantitative,
computational, etc.) and theoretical perspectives (empirical,
legal/ethical, historical, etc.).
Possible topics, but not limited to, may include:

  1. a case study of media manipulation or extreme content sharing, which
    addresses causes and conditions that deteriorate the accountability of
    social platforms;

  2. an international case study focusing on the national context that
    influences the politics of social platform accountability;

  3. a theoretical discussion and/or historical review of social platform
    accountability;

  4. a systematic assessment of content moderation mechanisms (algorithmic
    filtering, harnessing human labors, etc.) in digital social platforms;

  5. a discussion of legal, ethical, and/or regulatory frameworks pertinent
    with social platform accountability;

  6. a discussion of roles and/or interrelationships of different
    stakeholders (e.g., individual users, the tech industry, government, civil
    society, etc.) in making social platforms more accountable.
    Submission Guidelines:
    Submitted manuscripts must be in MS Word (.doc) format with a separate a
    title page that includes the title of the paper, full names, affiliations,
    email addresses, telephone numbers, complete addresses, and biographical
    sketches of all authors. Please send your submission via email to Hazel
    Kwon (khkwon@asu.edu)
    The main texts should remove any indicator of authorship, and thus be
    ready for a blind, peer-reviewed process.
    Manuscripts must adhere to the APA (6th ed.) style and should contain
    between 5,000 and 7,000 words, including a 250-word abstract with 5-6 key
    words, all references, and notes.
    Manuscripts must contain original material that has not been previously
    published elsewhere or is not currently under consideration by another
    journal.
    Submission Date:
    The manuscript should be submitted by December 1, 2019. The first round of
    peer-reviews and decisions will be sent out by March 1, 2020, and the
    revision (if needed) and a final decision will be made by August 1, 2020.
    This special issue is expected to be published online in October/November
    2020, with hard copy published by the end of 2020.
    Contact: If you have any question, please contact Hazel Kwon:
    khkwon@asu.edu

    Barry Wellman

    Step by step, link by link, putting it together--Streisand/Sondheim
    The earth to be spannd, connected by network--Walt Whitman
    It's Always Something--Roseanne Roseannadanna

          A day like all days, filled with those events
       that alter and illuminate our times--You Are There!
    

Director, NetLab Network                  FRSC
Founder, International Network for Social Network Analysis
NETWORKED: The New Social Operating System  Lee Rainie & Barry Wellman
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman            http://amzn.to/zXZg39
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Wellman


Dear colleagues, We'd like to send this reminder call as deadline is coming close by. (plus Happy Thanksgiving to those in the U.S.!) Reminder CFP: The American Behavioral Scientist Special Issue on Social Platform Accountability in Global Perspectives (Deadline December 1, 2019) Social Platform Accountability in Global Perspectives: Responsibility, Manipulation, and Control in Digital Social Spaces Guest Editors: K. Hazel Kwon (Arizona State University), khkwon@asu.edu W. Wayne Xu (University of Massachusetts at Amherst), weiaixu@umass.edu Barry Wellman (NetLab Network),wellman@chass.utoronto.ca Description: The American Behavioral Scientist (ABS, Impact Factor: 1.79, https://journals.sagepub.com/home/abs) invites submissions for a special issue on Social Platform Accountability in Global Perspectives: Responsibility, Manipulation, and Control in Digital Social Spaces. Democratic potentials of social technologies have been under threat in recent years, along with an expanding spread of manipulative and extreme digital activities. Examples of such activities vary from self-motivated sharing of radicalized content to coordinated propagation of disinformation. Many countries have been struggling with the rise of these activities within their own sociopolitical contexts, attesting to the globally shared awareness of the lack of accountability and transparency in the current digital environment. This special issue calls for conceptual and empirical understandings of social platform accountability in global perspectives. This issue broadly defines a social platform as a digital social space where online users interact with content and share their opinions or their own content with other users. Examples of social platforms may include mainstream social network sites, discussion forums like Reddit, online comment sections in news sites, anonymous communities like 8chan, and sites hosted in the dark web. Conceptualizing social platform accountability requires understanding the roles of various stakeholders (e.g., users, the tech industry, activists, government, policymakers, etc.) as well as multifaceted related issues (e.g., user responsibility, content moderation mechanisms, political economic motivations underlying digital manipulation, ethical tensions between responsible control and censorship, etc.). Furthermore, sociopolitical contexts where society is situated may complicate the process of rationalizing and normalizing discourses surrounding social platform accountability within society. Submission Topics: This special issue invites scholarship that examines the causes and conditions that compromise or strengthen the accountability of social platforms. The special issue also seeks submissions from global scholars whose work may promote a comparative understanding of the topic. It welcomes various methodological approaches(qualitative, quantitative, computational, etc.) and theoretical perspectives (empirical, legal/ethical, historical, etc.). Possible topics, but not limited to, may include: 1) a case study of media manipulation or extreme content sharing, which addresses causes and conditions that deteriorate the accountability of social platforms; 2) an international case study focusing on the national context that influences the politics of social platform accountability; 3) a theoretical discussion and/or historical review of social platform accountability; 4) a systematic assessment of content moderation mechanisms (algorithmic filtering, harnessing human labors, etc.) in digital social platforms; 5) a discussion of legal, ethical, and/or regulatory frameworks pertinent with social platform accountability; 6) a discussion of roles and/or interrelationships of different stakeholders (e.g., individual users, the tech industry, government, civil society, etc.) in making social platforms more accountable. Submission Guidelines: Submitted manuscripts must be in MS Word (.doc) format with a separate a title page that includes the title of the paper, full names, affiliations, email addresses, telephone numbers, complete addresses, and biographical sketches of all authors. Please send your submission via email to Hazel Kwon (khkwon@asu.edu) The main texts should remove any indicator of authorship, and thus be ready for a blind, peer-reviewed process. Manuscripts must adhere to the APA (6th ed.) style and should contain between 5,000 and 7,000 words, including a 250-word abstract with 5-6 key words, all references, and notes. Manuscripts must contain original material that has not been previously published elsewhere or is not currently under consideration by another journal. Submission Date: The manuscript should be submitted by December 1, 2019. The first round of peer-reviews and decisions will be sent out by March 1, 2020, and the revision (if needed) and a final decision will be made by August 1, 2020. This special issue is expected to be published online in October/November 2020, with hard copy published by the end of 2020. Contact: If you have any question, please contact Hazel Kwon: khkwon@asu.edu Barry Wellman Step by step, link by link, putting it together--Streisand/Sondheim The earth to be spannd, connected by network--Walt Whitman It's Always Something--Roseanne Roseannadanna A day like all days, filled with those events that alter and illuminate our times--You Are There! _______________________________________________________________________ Director, NetLab Network FRSC Founder, International Network for Social Network Analysis NETWORKED: The New Social Operating System Lee Rainie & Barry Wellman http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman http://amzn.to/zXZg39 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Wellman _______________________________________________________________________