[CITASA] CITASA Papers @ ASA2009

KH
Keith Hampton
Thu, Apr 9, 2009 12:34 AM

The following is a list of papers that have been accepted for presentation during CITASA sessions at the 2009 ASA meeting. All CITASA sessions and events will be held on Saturday, Aug 8.  The ASA will post a preliminary version of the program, with times and rooms on the ASA website in late April.

CITASA Program Committee
Keith Hampton, University of Pennsylvania
Laura Robinson, University of California - Los Angeles
Steve Hoffman, University of Buffalo
Brian Loader, The University of York

Session 1: Laura Robinson, Santa Clara University

Title: Cultural Divergences and Convergences: Mediated Communication, Community, and Social Networks

Reframing Public Space Through Digital Mobilization: The Case of Flash Mobs

Virág Molnár

The Consumption of Online News at Work

Pablo J. Boczkowski

French Software Politics: The Freedom Discourse and Globalization from Below

Sara Schoonmaker

Convergence in E-Campaigning: Comparing the Use of Attacks on German and American Political Web Sites

Eva Johanna Schweitzer

The Flow of Mediated Culture: Trends of Supply and Demand 1960-2005

W. Russell Neuman

Session 2: Keith N. Hampton, University of Pennsylvania

Title: Sociology of Communications and IT

Gauging the Impact of e-Research in the Social Sciences

Ralph Schroeder, ; Eric T. Meyer, University of Oxford

Does Previous Technology Use Influence Later Opinions Linking Use to Work Experiences, Relationships, and Time?

Noelle A. Chesley, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Medical Conversations in Technology Enabled Communities: Perceived Benefits of Participation in Online Patient Communities

Gul Seckin,

Model Failure: Assemblages, Performances, and Uneasy Collaborations in Commercial Construction

Gina Neff, University of Washington; Brittany Fiore-Silfvast, University of Washington; Carrie Sturts Dossick, University of Washington

Core Discussion Networks, Internet and Mobile Phone Use: New Media are not Increasing Privatism in America

Keith N. Hampton, University of Pennsylvania; Laura Sessions, University of Pennsylvania; Eun Ja Her, University of Pennsylvania

Round tables (1-hour): Open Submission

Organizer: Steven G. Hoffman, SUNY Buffalo

Table 1: Communication and Information Technologies at the Producer-Consumer Nexus

A Tale of Two Newspaper Chains: Gannett, Knight Ridder, and the Crisis of American Newspapers
Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University
Analysing design activity in architect and user talk-in-interaction: a preliminary analysis
Rachael luck, University of Reading
Distributed Cognition and The Emerging Peer-to-Peer Production Model
Michael Restivo, Stony Brook University
Wikipedia: Community or a social movement?
Piotr Konieczny, University of Pittsburgh

Presider: Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University

Table 2: Communication and Information Technologies, Community, and Sexuality

Negotiating identities/remediating queering desires: Coming out and coming of age online
Mary L. Gray, Indiana University
Sociological Examination of People's Attitude Towards Online Dating
Xue Liu, Clemson University
The Amorous Migrant: Race, Interracial Desire and Relocation in Cyberspace
Nicholas Andrew Boston, Cambridge University/Lehman College of the City University of New York

Presider: TBA

Table 3: Communication Technologies and Network Formation

Events and Attendees in Two Countries: Factors Influencing the Size and Composition of Online Social Groups
Ryan M. Acton, University of California, Irvine

From each according to media? Testing Wellman's theory of networked individualism

 Bernard Hogan, University of Toronto

Order, Coordination and Uncertainty in Online Information Systems
Judd Antin, University of California Berkeley; Coye V. Cheshire, UC-Berkeley
The Composition of a Korean Immigrant Social Network
Sun Kyong Lee, Rutgers University

Presider: John P. Robinson, University of Maryland

Table 4: Computer Mediated Communication, Social Capital, and Symbolic Interaction

Dramaturgy, Technology and Public Health: Finding Sex Partners Online among Men who have Sex with Men
Anthony P. Lombardo, University of Toronto
eIntelligence: Social Intelligence in Computer-Mediated Communication
Simon Gottschalk, University of Nevada- Las Vegas How to Ground a Child in Cyberspace: Parents' Exploration of Norms and Rules
Mito Akiyoshi, Senshu University
Structured Talk and Web 2.0: Blogs and Community Formation
Kenneth M. Kambara, California Lutheran University

Presider: Simon Gottschalk, University of Nevada- Las Vegas

Table 5: New Technologies, Social Change and Knowledge

How the Internet Shrinks Knowledge By Extending It
James A. Evans, University of Chicago
Socializing the Mobile Phone: Young Urban Poor's Fascination at Play
Lip Soon Wong, Telenor Research and Innovation Center
The More Things Change, The More They Stay The Same: The Internet and Social Life
Craig Wiernik, Penn State University

Presider: TBA

Table 6: The Internet and Political Engagement I

Bringing the body back in: considering the role of the body in deliberative democracy
Amy Stuart, New School for Social Research ICANN and Internet Governance
Hangwoo Lee, Chungbuk National University
Social Capital and Political Mobilization in Online Community
jun young ah, yonsei university; Jeong-han Kang, Yonsei University
Vitalizing Donation Culture in Korea: Comparison of Strategies between Traditional Off-line and New Online Donations
Sun Hyoung Lee, Yonsei University

Presider: TBA

Table 7: The Internet and Political Engagement II

A Facilitator of Civic Engagement in Online Group Contexts
Ja Hyouk Koo, University of Virginia
Muslim resistance online: a diasporic Pakistani punk music subculture on the Internet
Dhiraj Murthy, University of Cambridge
Transylvania, the Internet, and the Strategic Construction of Ethnic/National Identity
J. Patrick Williams, Arkansas State University

Presider: TBA

The following is a list of papers that have been accepted for presentation during CITASA sessions at the 2009 ASA meeting. All CITASA sessions and events will be held on Saturday, Aug 8. The ASA will post a preliminary version of the program, with times and rooms on the ASA website in late April. CITASA Program Committee Keith Hampton, University of Pennsylvania Laura Robinson, University of California - Los Angeles Steve Hoffman, University of Buffalo Brian Loader, The University of York Session 1: Laura Robinson, Santa Clara University Title: Cultural Divergences and Convergences: Mediated Communication, Community, and Social Networks Reframing Public Space Through Digital Mobilization: The Case of Flash Mobs Virág Molnár The Consumption of Online News at Work Pablo J. Boczkowski French Software Politics: The Freedom Discourse and Globalization from Below Sara Schoonmaker Convergence in E-Campaigning: Comparing the Use of Attacks on German and American Political Web Sites Eva Johanna Schweitzer The Flow of Mediated Culture: Trends of Supply and Demand 1960-2005 W. Russell Neuman Session 2: Keith N. Hampton, University of Pennsylvania Title: Sociology of Communications and IT Gauging the Impact of e-Research in the Social Sciences Ralph Schroeder, ; Eric T. Meyer, University of Oxford Does Previous Technology Use Influence Later Opinions Linking Use to Work Experiences, Relationships, and Time? Noelle A. Chesley, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Medical Conversations in Technology Enabled Communities: Perceived Benefits of Participation in Online Patient Communities Gul Seckin, Model Failure: Assemblages, Performances, and Uneasy Collaborations in Commercial Construction Gina Neff, University of Washington; Brittany Fiore-Silfvast, University of Washington; Carrie Sturts Dossick, University of Washington Core Discussion Networks, Internet and Mobile Phone Use: New Media are not Increasing Privatism in America Keith N. Hampton, University of Pennsylvania; Laura Sessions, University of Pennsylvania; Eun Ja Her, University of Pennsylvania Round tables (1-hour): Open Submission Organizer: Steven G. Hoffman, SUNY Buffalo Table 1: Communication and Information Technologies at the Producer-Consumer Nexus A Tale of Two Newspaper Chains: Gannett, Knight Ridder, and the Crisis of American Newspapers Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University Analysing design activity in architect and user talk-in-interaction: a preliminary analysis Rachael luck, University of Reading Distributed Cognition and The Emerging Peer-to-Peer Production Model Michael Restivo, Stony Brook University Wikipedia: Community or a social movement? Piotr Konieczny, University of Pittsburgh Presider: Chris Rhomberg, Fordham University Table 2: Communication and Information Technologies, Community, and Sexuality Negotiating identities/remediating queering desires: Coming out and coming of age online Mary L. Gray, Indiana University Sociological Examination of People's Attitude Towards Online Dating Xue Liu, Clemson University The Amorous Migrant: Race, Interracial Desire and Relocation in Cyberspace Nicholas Andrew Boston, Cambridge University/Lehman College of the City University of New York Presider: TBA Table 3: Communication Technologies and Network Formation Events and Attendees in Two Countries: Factors Influencing the Size and Composition of Online Social Groups Ryan M. Acton, University of California, Irvine >From each according to media? Testing Wellman's theory of networked individualism Bernard Hogan, University of Toronto Order, Coordination and Uncertainty in Online Information Systems Judd Antin, University of California Berkeley; Coye V. Cheshire, UC-Berkeley The Composition of a Korean Immigrant Social Network Sun Kyong Lee, Rutgers University Presider: John P. Robinson, University of Maryland Table 4: Computer Mediated Communication, Social Capital, and Symbolic Interaction Dramaturgy, Technology and Public Health: Finding Sex Partners Online among Men who have Sex with Men Anthony P. Lombardo, University of Toronto eIntelligence: Social Intelligence in Computer-Mediated Communication Simon Gottschalk, University of Nevada- Las Vegas How to Ground a Child in Cyberspace: Parents' Exploration of Norms and Rules Mito Akiyoshi, Senshu University Structured Talk and Web 2.0: Blogs and Community Formation Kenneth M. Kambara, California Lutheran University Presider: Simon Gottschalk, University of Nevada- Las Vegas Table 5: New Technologies, Social Change and Knowledge How the Internet Shrinks Knowledge By Extending It James A. Evans, University of Chicago Socializing the Mobile Phone: Young Urban Poor's Fascination at Play Lip Soon Wong, Telenor Research and Innovation Center The More Things Change, The More They Stay The Same: The Internet and Social Life Craig Wiernik, Penn State University Presider: TBA Table 6: The Internet and Political Engagement I Bringing the body back in: considering the role of the body in deliberative democracy Amy Stuart, New School for Social Research ICANN and Internet Governance Hangwoo Lee, Chungbuk National University Social Capital and Political Mobilization in Online Community jun young ah, yonsei university; Jeong-han Kang, Yonsei University Vitalizing Donation Culture in Korea: Comparison of Strategies between Traditional Off-line and New Online Donations Sun Hyoung Lee, Yonsei University Presider: TBA Table 7: The Internet and Political Engagement II A Facilitator of Civic Engagement in Online Group Contexts Ja Hyouk Koo, University of Virginia Muslim resistance online: a diasporic Pakistani punk music subculture on the Internet Dhiraj Murthy, University of Cambridge Transylvania, the Internet, and the Strategic Construction of Ethnic/National Identity J. Patrick Williams, Arkansas State University Presider: TBA