[Air-L] call for papers - Information Ethics from a Marxian Perspective

Ricardo Pimenta ricardo.pimenta at gmail.com
Tue Jan 24 10:03:34 PST 2017


Dear all,

Sharing this CfP one more time.
Sorry for cross-posting,

--
Ricardo Pimenta
Tenured researcher at Brazilian Institute for Science and Technology
Information.


Call for PapersInformation Ethics from a Marxian Perspective

*Call for Papers for Vol. 27 (08/2017)*


   - Deadline for extended abstracts: *28th February 2017*
   - Notification of acceptance to authors: *15th April 2017*
   - Deadline for full articles: *30th June 2017*
   - Deadline for revised articles: *31st July 2016*
   - Publication: *August 2017*



With his concept of Sittlichkeit, Hegel posited that the manifestation of a
truly ethical life must be grounded in the concrete foundation of ethical
institutions. But for Hegel, the creation and support of such institutions
was not the task of philosophy. While Marx didn't specifically mention
Hegel's concept, he noted that bourgeois society would not have produced
(or could ever produce) such institutions. He also disagreed with Hegel
that philosophy should be separated from the creation and advocacy of
ethical institutions. On the contrary, Marx proposed a paradigm change that
instead gave primacy to praxis (the dialectical articulation of theory and
practice) over pure theory. After all, what is the purpose of ethics if not
to guide the process of human praxis? For Aristotle, the point of ethics as
a philosophical discipline is not only to know good but to do it. The same
could be said about Marxian ethics, implicit in the famous 11th thesis on
Feuerbach, which states "Philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the
world in various ways; the point is to change it." But in what sense should
this change take place? Toward the goal of eliminating the alienation,
exploitation, and reification of men and women as the only way to ensure,
theoretically and practically, the emergence of a real, true Sittlichkeit

Bearing this in mind, it is here posited that the question of information
ethics stands privileged as one of the most urgent theoretical and
practical questions of our time. Because capitalism continues to be, more
than ever, structured on foundations that enforce unequal access to
information and to the literacy skills needed to engage information, no
serious egalitarian knowledge of the world or critical worldview can yet be
formed. Information is yet the core element of power maintenance in a
bourgeois society, affecting scientific, industrial, financial, commercial,
political, military, and cultural sorts of information. As such, widespread
abuses are perpetuated through information control; lies, monopolies,
biased corporate and state-influenced media, ubiquitous spying by
governments on citizens and control of the means of production and
circulation of information. Nevertheless, the proliferation of the
Internet, with its tendency toward free information flows within both
commercial and public medias, furnishes vast opportunities for information
access through open search tools and unfettered communication channels,
allowing new means of overcoming alienation and exploitation.

We invite submissions related (but not limited) to the following issues:

   - Information ethics, imperialism and the digital divide.
   - Information ethics, class struggle and critical information literacy.
   - Information ethics and media corporations.
   - Exploitation of informational labour.
   - Knowledge organization, information and alienation.
   - Assigning value to information during its disposal or preservation
   processes.
   - Scientometrics, the promiscuity of scientific research within USA
   military-industrial complexes and the general political economy of
   scientific publishing.
   - Perceived Information society utopias vs global-wide growing material
   misery
   - The building of ethical regimes of information beyond capitalism.



Papers on these and related issues are welcome.

*Guest Editors:*

*Dr. Marco Schneider (Communicating Guest Editor)*
Tenured Researcher at Brazilian Institute for Information in Science and
Technology, IBICT. Professor, Information Science Graduation Program,
IBICT/Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, UFRJ and Communication
Department at Fluminense Federal University, UFF.
Email: marcoschneider at ibict.com
<http://www.i-r-i-e.net/marcoschneider@ibict.com>

*Dr. Ricardo M. Pimenta*
Tenured Researcher at Brazilian Institute for Information in Science and
Technology, IBICT. Professor, Information Science Graduation Program,
IBICT/Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, UFRJ.
Email: ricardopimenta at ibict.com
<http://www.i-r-i-e.net/ricardopimenta@ibict.com>


For further information, especially on how to submit a paper, please refer
to: *Information Ethics from a Marxian Perspective - Call for Papers*
cfp-pdf-fulltext
(30 KB) <http://www.i-r-i-e.net/inhalt/CFPs/cfp-IRIE-27-Marx-2016.pdf> (right
click and select "Save Target As")

*Prof. Dr. Ricardo M. Pimenta*
Pesquisador Adjunto I do Instituto Brasileiro de Informação em Ciência e
Tecnologia (IBICT)
http://www.ibict.br
Professor do Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciência da Informação
(PPGCI/IBICT-UFRJ)
http://ppgci.ufrj.br
Tel.: + 55 21 3873-9460



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