[CITASA] Call for papers of the Internet Policy Review Special issue on 'Doing internet governance: practices, controversies, infrastructures, and institutions¹

BL
Becky Lentz
Thu, Jan 14, 2016 5:06 PM

Special issue on 'Doing internet governance: practices, controversies,
infrastructures, and institutions¹

Call for papers of the Internet Policy Review

TOPIC & RELEVANCEInternet governance is gaining attention in the
post-Snowden era, which increased distrust of formal government
institutions and their Œdangerous liaisons¹ with the private sector.
User-driven, technology-embedded, decentralised approaches keep on seeing
the light: in contracts, currency, privacy protection, just to name a few.
Politics and traditional purveyors of authority negotiate ways of
readjusting to the changing environment. Thus, investigating the
³ordering² (Flyverbom, 2011) and governing processes as they relate to the
network of networks is both timely and important.

Traditionally, when talking about Internet Governance researchers and
practitioners refer to the new organisations and institutions that have
been explicitly established to regulate, discuss, and negotiate issues of
internet governance (e.g. ICANN, WSIS, IGF). Recently, authors have
criticised this institutional focus, arguing the need for a more
comprehensive conceptualisation of internet governance (DeNardis, 2012;
Eeten/Mueller, 2013; Musiani, 2014; Hofmann et al., 2014). Among these
recent developments, a small set of publications has drawn on perspectives
from Science and Technology Studies (STS) to rethink and substantiate
questions of ordering and governing the net. These contributions highlight
the day-to-day, mundane practices that constitute internet governance,
take into account the plurality and ŒŒnetworkedness¹¹ of devices and
arrangements involved, and investigate the invisibility, pervasiveness,
and apparent agency of the digital infrastructure itself (Musiani, 2014).
Internet governance, in this view, is not only negotiated in dedicated
institutions; the doing of internet governance more broadly consists in
practices and controversies of the design, regulation, and use of material
infrastructures. In this way, STS-informed perspectives are increasingly
instrumental for challenging and expanding our understanding and for
informing our examination of ordering and governing processes in the
digital realm.

SCOPE OF THE SPECIAL ISSUEThis special issue seeks to nurture this nascent
interest by pioneering a conversation on the governance of digitally
networked environments from an STS-informed perspective and, more broadly,
from perspectives that highlight the role of design, infrastructures, and
informal communities of practice in governance.
First, this issue will touch upon how the norms shaping the provision,
design and usage of the internet are negotiated, de- and re-stabilised,
and subject to controversies. Second, it will open up new, STS-informed
perspectives on digital uses and practices, delving into the variety of
ways in which they may be an integral part of today¹s internet governance
-- not only because such practices reflect belonging and commitment to a
community, but because they allow issues of sovereignty, autonomy and
liberty to come into play. Finally, expanding the notion of governance in
internet governance through the conceptual tool-set of STS may open this
field to meaningful contributions from scholars studying constitutional
aspects of technology design and use, which are typically excluded from
traditional internet governance literature.

FOCUS OF THE PAPERSWe invite papers that share a strong conceptual
interest in understanding processes of ordering and governing the internet
as a core infrastructure of our daily lives. More focused paper topics may
include, but in no way are limited to, the following:

  • Internet governance theory: how can STS inform theoretical perspectives
    on internet governance?

  • Controversies: how do socio-technical internet-related controversies
    reveal tensions and critical junctures of internet politics?

  • Privatisation: what are the practices of internet governance
    privatisation? What does it mean for the internet as a socio-technical
    phenomenon?

  • Unintended consequences: what are the examples of unintended
    consequences of technology regulation and design that affect the openness,
    security, and stability of the internet?

  • Re-intermediation and delegation: what are the forms of
    re-intermediation of the ³decentralised² system that is the internet? How
    can we study them?

  • Participatory governance: how can STS help unpack the practices of
    ³multistakeholderism² and their potential effects (or lack thereof)?

  • Infrastructures and architectures as governance arrangements: how can
    STS-informed approaches help us unveil the power and control structures
    embedded in internet architecture?

Submissions must be in clearly-written English. The Internet Policy Review
is an open access, short-form journal. Full papers are requested to be
around 30,000 characters (5,000 words) in length, to encourage concise and
parsimonious discussion of core issues.

SPECIAL ISSUE EDITORS

  • Dmitry Epstein, Department of Communication, University of Illinois at
    Chicago (dmitry@uic.edu)
  • Christian Katzenbach, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and
    Society (katzenbach@hiig.de)
  • Francesca Musiani, Institute for Communication Sciences,
    CNRS/Paris-Sorbonne/UPMC; Internet Policy Review academic editor
    (francesca.musiani@cnrs.fr)

IMPORTANT DATES12 November 2015: Release of the Call for papers
25 January 2016: Deadline for expression of interest and abstract
submissions (500 word abstracts) via the form on the IPR website.

15 February: Feedback / Invitation to submit full text submissions
25 April: Full text submissions deadline. All details on text submissions
can be found under: http://policyreview.info/authors
13 June: Comprehensive peer review and feedback
11 July: Re-submission deadline
5 September: Publication of the special issue

--
Francesca Musiani (ph.d.)

Assistant research professor (chargée de recherche), CNRS, ISCC
http://www.iscc.cnrs.fr/
Associate researcher, i3, CSI http://www.csi.ensmp.fr/, MINES ParisTech

co-chair, ESN-IAMCR http://iamcr.org/s-wg/cctmc/esn

academic editor, @PolicyR http://policyreview.info/

on the web http://www.csi.mines-paristech.fr/People/musiani/ | on
twitter https://twitter.com/franmusiani


Becky Lentz, PhD
Associate Professor of Communication Studies
Department of Art History/Communication Studies
McGill University
853 Sherbrooke Street West, Arts Building, W-265
Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 0G5
Phone 514.398.4995
Fax 514.398.8557
Email: becky.lentz@mcgill.ca
http://www.mcgill.ca/ahcs

Special issue on 'Doing internet governance: practices, controversies, infrastructures, and institutions¹ Call for papers of the Internet Policy Review TOPIC & RELEVANCEInternet governance is gaining attention in the post-Snowden era, which increased distrust of formal government institutions and their Œdangerous liaisons¹ with the private sector. User-driven, technology-embedded, decentralised approaches keep on seeing the light: in contracts, currency, privacy protection, just to name a few. Politics and traditional purveyors of authority negotiate ways of readjusting to the changing environment. Thus, investigating the ³ordering² (Flyverbom, 2011) and governing processes as they relate to the network of networks is both timely and important. Traditionally, when talking about Internet Governance researchers and practitioners refer to the new organisations and institutions that have been explicitly established to regulate, discuss, and negotiate issues of internet governance (e.g. ICANN, WSIS, IGF). Recently, authors have criticised this institutional focus, arguing the need for a more comprehensive conceptualisation of internet governance (DeNardis, 2012; Eeten/Mueller, 2013; Musiani, 2014; Hofmann et al., 2014). Among these recent developments, a small set of publications has drawn on perspectives from Science and Technology Studies (STS) to rethink and substantiate questions of ordering and governing the net. These contributions highlight the day-to-day, mundane practices that constitute internet governance, take into account the plurality and ŒŒnetworkedness¹¹ of devices and arrangements involved, and investigate the invisibility, pervasiveness, and apparent agency of the digital infrastructure itself (Musiani, 2014). Internet governance, in this view, is not only negotiated in dedicated institutions; the doing of internet governance more broadly consists in practices and controversies of the design, regulation, and use of material infrastructures. In this way, STS-informed perspectives are increasingly instrumental for challenging and expanding our understanding and for informing our examination of ordering and governing processes in the digital realm. SCOPE OF THE SPECIAL ISSUEThis special issue seeks to nurture this nascent interest by pioneering a conversation on the governance of digitally networked environments from an STS-informed perspective and, more broadly, from perspectives that highlight the role of design, infrastructures, and informal communities of practice in governance. First, this issue will touch upon how the norms shaping the provision, design and usage of the internet are negotiated, de- and re-stabilised, and subject to controversies. Second, it will open up new, STS-informed perspectives on digital uses and practices, delving into the variety of ways in which they may be an integral part of today¹s internet governance -- not only because such practices reflect belonging and commitment to a community, but because they allow issues of sovereignty, autonomy and liberty to come into play. Finally, expanding the notion of governance in internet governance through the conceptual tool-set of STS may open this field to meaningful contributions from scholars studying constitutional aspects of technology design and use, which are typically excluded from traditional internet governance literature. FOCUS OF THE PAPERSWe invite papers that share a strong conceptual interest in understanding processes of ordering and governing the internet as a core infrastructure of our daily lives. More focused paper topics may include, but in no way are limited to, the following: * Internet governance theory: how can STS inform theoretical perspectives on internet governance? * Controversies: how do socio-technical internet-related controversies reveal tensions and critical junctures of internet politics? * Privatisation: what are the practices of internet governance privatisation? What does it mean for the internet as a socio-technical phenomenon? * Unintended consequences: what are the examples of unintended consequences of technology regulation and design that affect the openness, security, and stability of the internet? * Re-intermediation and delegation: what are the forms of re-intermediation of the ³decentralised² system that is the internet? How can we study them? * Participatory governance: how can STS help unpack the practices of ³multistakeholderism² and their potential effects (or lack thereof)? * Infrastructures and architectures as governance arrangements: how can STS-informed approaches help us unveil the power and control structures embedded in internet architecture? Submissions must be in clearly-written English. The Internet Policy Review is an open access, short-form journal. Full papers are requested to be around 30,000 characters (5,000 words) in length, to encourage concise and parsimonious discussion of core issues. SPECIAL ISSUE EDITORS * Dmitry Epstein, Department of Communication, University of Illinois at Chicago (dmitry@uic.edu) * Christian Katzenbach, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (katzenbach@hiig.de) * Francesca Musiani, Institute for Communication Sciences, CNRS/Paris-Sorbonne/UPMC; Internet Policy Review academic editor (francesca.musiani@cnrs.fr) IMPORTANT DATES12 November 2015: Release of the Call for papers 25 January 2016: Deadline for expression of interest and abstract submissions (500 word abstracts) via the form on the IPR website. 15 February: Feedback / Invitation to submit full text submissions 25 April: Full text submissions deadline. All details on text submissions can be found under: http://policyreview.info/authors 13 June: Comprehensive peer review and feedback 11 July: Re-submission deadline 5 September: Publication of the special issue -- Francesca Musiani (ph.d.) Assistant research professor (chargée de recherche), CNRS, ISCC <http://www.iscc.cnrs.fr/> Associate researcher, i3, CSI <http://www.csi.ensmp.fr/>, MINES ParisTech co-chair, ESN-IAMCR <http://iamcr.org/s-wg/cctmc/esn> academic editor, @PolicyR <http://policyreview.info/> on the web <http://www.csi.mines-paristech.fr/People/musiani/> | on twitter <https://twitter.com/franmusiani> ---------------------- Becky Lentz, PhD Associate Professor of Communication Studies Department of Art History/Communication Studies McGill University 853 Sherbrooke Street West, Arts Building, W-265 Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 0G5 Phone 514.398.4995 Fax 514.398.8557 Email: becky.lentz@mcgill.ca http://www.mcgill.ca/ahcs