fyi
Barry Wellman
S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology, FRSC NetLab Director
Department of Sociology University of Toronto
725 Spadina Avenue, Room 388 Toronto Canada M5S 2J4
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman fax:+1-416-978-3963
Updating history: http://chass.utoronto.ca/oldnew/cybertimes.php
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 31 Jul 2008 17:53:05 +0200
From: NABETH Thierry Thierry.NABETH@insead.edu
To: wellman@chass.utoronto.ca
Subject: CFP: Identity in the Information Society; Special Issue: Social
Web and Identity
Hello,
For your information. (see the CFP bellow).
Best regards,
thierry
Thierry Nabeth
Research Fellow,
INSEAD / CALT (the Centre for Advanced Learning Technologies)
http://www.calt.insead.edu/ http://www.calt.insead.edu/
Tel: 33 1 6072 4312
Mob: 33 6 3092 0639
Fax: 33 1 6074 5550
http://www.calt.insead.edu/?thierry.nabeth
http://www.calt.insead.edu/?thierry.nabeth
CALL FOR PAPERS:
Identity in the Information Society
Special Issue on Social Web and Identity
Edited by Springer
Guest Editor: Thierry Nabeth, INSEAD, France
Call for papers
The social web refers to an important constituent of the latest Internet
revolution (also termed Web 2.0), which is the result of the
transformation of the Internet from an information space into a social
space. In this new context, passive users have become full actors in a
participatory ecosystem in which everybody contributes to the creation
and exchange of knowledge using a variety of new tools and processes
(social networking, blogs, wikis, social bookmarking, voting and opinion
systems, etc.). Key to this social process is the development the online
identity of the participants that consists of a patchwork of information
of diverse origins and quality and which includes both the information
explicitly provided by the users (in their home pages, social networking
profile), information that can be inferred from their actions (people
can express their opinion, and leave traces that are easily available),
or generated by others explicitly (for instance when they provide an
opinion) or implicitly (when people "vote with their feet" in favour of
something or someone).
In this new world, identity correlates to reputation and trust, and the
construction of a good identity will translate into successful online
experience: "socially proclaimed" experts are more heeded online, and
impact on the beliefs of others; the vendors with the best reputation
make more sales; the participants of dating sites (or more prosaically
of a job search site) who project the best image attract more dates (or
have more appointments), etc. But also, people with weak or inadequate
identity, are excluded, or simply ignored. In short, a situation not so
different from what exists in the off-line world.
This online Identity is also less and less "virtual" in its
consequences, with people spending an increasing amount of their time
online, and this activity becoming an increasingly important part of
their real life, when it is not "colliding" directly with their off-line
life (for instance people have been fired for posting on a blog).
Topics:
Given the growing importance of this online identity, we would like in
this special issue of JIDIS to investigate the identity aspects related
to this social web.
In particular we would like to explore certain topics that have raised
questions related to identity in the context of the social web such as:
How these Identities are constructed and in particular what
are the different components of these Identities? Who is in control?
What are the mechanisms / technologies that intervene in the
construction of these Identities (such as Web 2.0 technologies, social
translucence), and other services that have appeared (Examples: Social
aggregators, eraser services, etc.)?
How reliable are these online identities? Are some systems
more reliable than others (Wikis, reputation systems, dating systems)?
What about the value of "gigantic" personal social networks (contests)?
Identity and privacy. For instance some of these systems may
"feel" secure but actually expose more information than people think.
Identity and control of the online Identity? How to deal
with persistence and erasability and how to correct it?
Identity in different Web 2.0 collaborative contexts such as
Blog, Wikis, reputation systems, Online social networking, etc.
Identity and OSN (Online social networking). Facebook, LinkedIn, Bebo,
MySpace, etc.
Identity and Wikis. (such as Wikipedia, anonymity and dynamic of
contribution)
Identity in 3D Virtual worlds (such as Second Life)
Online / social identity, social digital traces and
profiling. Social attention. Displaying and navigating social
information (profiles, networks & traces). Mining social information
(profiles, networks & traces).
Exploiting social identities. Personalisation making use of
social profiles, Viral marketing, etc.
Issues with online identities in the social web. Social
spamming, Quechuping, people defining other's identity, blurring between
the private sphere and the public sphere
In all the above topics, we are seeking analysis and theorisation of the
new developments and not simply descriptions. As a multidisciplinary
journal, Identity in the Information Society, also requires
transparency, clarity and accessibility in each contribution, so that
different disciplines can benefit from each other's specialist concerns
and methods.
Important Dates:
Submission of full papers - 31 October 2008
Review returned - 7 February 2009
Submission of revised papers - 17 April 2009
Final decision by editors - May 2009
Contact and additional information
Identity in the Information Society
http://www.springer.com/computer/programming/journal/12394
Guest Editor (Social Web and Identity): Thierry Nabeth, INSEAD, France
Thierry.NABETH@insead.edu mailto:Thierry.NABETH@insead.edu
See also:
http://www.calt.insead.edu/?Cfp%20Social%20Web%20and%20Identity