[Air-L] CFP: post-ICA Chinese Internet Research Conference 27-28 May 2020 at RMIT

Haiqing Yu hqyu2011 at gmail.com
Mon Oct 7 21:11:18 PDT 2019


ICA 2020 Gold Coast Post-Conference: Call for Papers



*The 18th Chinese Internet Research Conference (18th CIRC)*



*The Internationalisation of China’s Digital and Communication Industries*



27-28 May 2020

RMIT University

124 La Trobe St

Melbourne VIC 3004 Australia



Conference website:
https://www.rmit.edu.au/events/all-events/conferences/2020/may/chinese-internet-research-conference



*Free Registration: *

https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/the-18th-chinese-internet-research-conference-18th-circ-tickets-68656097235



*Preamble*



Organised by RMIT and QUT universities with sponsorship from Curtin and Deakin
Universities, the 18th CIRC focuses on the prospects for, and critiques of,
the internationalization of China’s digital and communication industries.
The two-day conference will be held at RMIT in Melbourne, 27-28 May 2020.



The post-ICA 2020 conference brings CIRC to the southern hemisphere for the
first time in its history since its inception in 2003. It will be jointly
hosted by media and/or communication studies programs and schools in some
of Australia’s most innovative universities. The conference will continue
the proud tradition of CIRC in stimulating international research into the
Internet and China within the broader field of media and communication
studies. It aims to create dialogues between conceptual and empirical
researchers; between academia, civil society, and industry. It focuses on
understanding the transformation of Chinese digital media, communication
and technologies and seeks to identify key new directions for research,
debate, policy and application, in the current global environment of
contestations and uncertainties. A particular goal of the conference is to
encourage collegial interaction between higher-degree students, early
career researchers and leading thinkers in this field. We will foreground
innovation in digital methods of research, transformative programs of
critical and creative inquiry, and the importance of dialogue between
government, industry and the academia.



The CFP invites papers and panels that examine the internationalization
mission and geopolitical implication of China’s global digital strategies,
their successes and challenges that are centered on and beyond the
Internet. It also welcomes papers that examine new dynamics and emerging
trends related to Chinese Internet and digital culture/economy/politics
from a comparative perspective—both historically and horizontally (with
other countries).



*Keynote speakers:*



Yu Hong, Professor of media and communication, Zhejiang University, China



Michael Keane, Professor of Chinese media, Curtin University, Australia





*The Conference Theme*



*“The Internationalisation of China’s Digital and Communication Industries”*

In anticipation of an Asian century (Khanna, 2019), Chinese technology has
become increasingly more assertive (Lee, 2018), approximating a tech cold
war. China’s internationalization strategies of their digital and
communication industries are systematic and comprehensive as evidenced by
their artificial intelligence ambitions and the “Digital Silk Road
Initiative” (Shen, 2018: Fung et al, 2018; Keane & Yu, 2019; Shi, 2018).
These policy interventions have helped advance Chinese tech, media, and
digital platforms “over the wall”, if more often through parallel platform
strategies, whether social media platforms (WeChat, Kuaishou,
Douyin/TikTok), E-commerce models and online payment (Alipay, AliExpress,
‘Taobao Village’), digital and mobile technology (Xiaomi, Huawei), or its
big data industry.

Yet, while promising a ‘fairer’ Internet and a ‘cyber community of shared
destiny’ (to use Chinese President Xi’s words), these policies promote the
interests of Chinese cyber sovereignty and an alternative cyber order
advanced by the Chinese Internet (Yang, 2003, 2012).  China’s expansion of
its digital footprint, advance in digital capacity and AI technology, and
soft power ambition have caused unease among international competitors and
are regarded as ‘threat’ by the US-led ‘Western’ alliance, as witnessed in
the Huawei 5G ban in the U.S and Australia, forced sale of the gay dating
app Grindr in the US, and accusation of TikTok violations of cultural norms
and regulatory policies in India, Malaysia, and the U.S.  Even as China’s
media content has flourished domestically and among the Chinese diasporas,
efforts to enter Western mainstream geo-cultural markets have proven
challenging if not impossible (Sun 2015), even with more genre-driven
fare (*The
Wandering Earth*) or the delayed “soft launch” of video portals (Lotz 2019)
like IQiyi into southeast Asian markets.

To this end, CIRC 2020 proposes to interrogate questions around, but *not
limited to*, the following categories:

·      China’s digital strategy and expansion in the Asia Pacific and along
the BRI, including its cybersecurity and legal frameworks;

·      The role of the Internet and digital technologies (artificial
intelligence, blockchain, big data, quantum, etc) in shaping and promoting
the Chinese version of a new cyber order and governance, both within and
outside China; and its national and global impact;

·      Chinese digital platforms, digital economy, and digital diplomacy in
the great power contest;

·      Chinese digital media and diasporic Chinese communities

·      Comparative studies between China and other nations on digital
economies, politics, policies, governance, platforms, activism and cultures



We also welcome proposals and abstracts that are not directly related to
the above-mentioned themes, such as:

·      Chinese digital lifestyles and youth sub-cultures

·      New forms of Internet communities or activism

·      Political economy of Chinese digital and communication industries



*Deadlines:*



Please send panel proposals, paper abstracts and enquiries to:
circ2020au at gmail.com



Panel proposals (max. 1500 words): Panels should consist of 4 abstracts. A
maximum of two sessions on the same topic (ie. 8 abstracts), submitted as
separate panels of 4 abstracts each, are permitted. The deadline for
submissions is *6pm, 10 January 2019* (Australian Eastern Time).



Individual paper abstracts (max. 300 words and a short bio of 100 words): *6pm,
10 January 2019* (Australian Eastern Time).



Full paper submission for participants in the Best Student Paper Award
(max. 8,000 words, including notes and references): *9am, Monday 30 March
2020* (Australian Eastern Time).



Full paper submission is NOT required except for Higher Degree Research
students who wish to be considered for the Best Student Paper Award.



*Key dates:*



·      10 January 2020: Paper and panel proposals due

·      14 February 2020: Notifications of acceptance

·      21 February 2020: Confirmation of attendance

·      21-25 May 2020: ICA (Gold Coast)

·      27-28 May 2020: CIRC (Melbourne)


Organising committee:

Haiqing Yu                 haiqing.yu at rmit.edu.au

Larissa Hjorth            larissa.hjorth at rmit.edu.au

Stuart Cunningham    s.cunningham at qut.edu.au

David Craig                davidcra at usc.edu

Michael Keane            m.keane at curtin.edu.au

Jian Xu                        j.xu at deakin.edu.au

Mathew Allen             matthew.allen at deakin.edu.au



More information about the Air-L mailing list