[Air-L] Deadline extended - JCEA special issue on Ethical Pluralism and Intercultural Information Ethics in Asian Contexts
Charles M. Ess
c.m.ess at media.uio.no
Mon Sep 21 00:52:27 PDT 2020
Dear AoIRists,
with the usual regrets for cross-postings and duplications, and request
to forward to potentially relevant mailing lists and interested colleagues.
Deadline extended - Special Issue: Ethical Pluralism and Intercultural
Information Ethics in Asian Contexts
Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia (JCEA), Vol 20, No 1 - Summer 2021
Invited editor: Charles M. Ess, University of Oslo (c.m.ess at media.uio.no)
The early 1990s and the Internet’s rise as an engine of globalization
forced a central task upon emerging Intercultural Information Ethics
(IIE): how to conceptualize and implement a global information and
computing ethics conjoining (quasi-) universal ethical norms and
principles with a robust defense of local, culturally variable
identities and practices? Discourses pitting a homogeneous imposition of
Western values and norms against resistance to such homogenization for
defending local cultural identities, but at the cost of potential
fragmentation and isolation, first forced these issues. Increasing
recognition of “computer-mediated colonization” – as Western-centric
cultural norms and communicative preferences, embedded in ICT design,
were imposed upon “target” cultures – made these concerns still more
urgent.
In response, ethical pluralisms (EPs), as conceptualizing
connections (such as shared norms) preserving irreducible local
differences, were developed and successfully implemented in both Western
and non-Western contexts. But Western-based EPs remain open to critique.
In Asia, EP is integral to conceptions of resonance and harmony in
Daoist, Confucian, Buddhist, and Islamic traditions. Furthermore,
Chinese and Indian technological innovation hubs have also emerged,
grounding further exploration of Asian-rooted conceptions of EP,
resonance, and harmony, which remain central to an IIE opposing
colonizing adaptation of Western values and norms in Non-western
cultures. These are especially critical vis-à-vis the ongoing
encroachment of advanced ICTs, e.g. AI, Big Data, the IoT, “surveillance
capitalism” and the Chinese Social Credit System, as increasingly
defining our cultural lives.
Our primary questions: what sorts of EP and similar notions of
resonance or harmony might help resolve these central problems in the
contemporary developments of (East) Asia? And: do earlier IIE traditions
and evaluation of “radical” technologies fruitfully respond to even
“more radical” emerging ICT challenges evoked by contemporary, far more
powerful ICTs?
This special issue of the JCEA invites papers that deal with
theoretical and practical dimensions of EP, notions of harmony and
resonance in contemporary Asian contexts, and/or traditional/recent
resonances of ICT-related challenges.
We are particularly interested in but not limited to:
· Critical evaluations and possible expansions of contemporary EP,
especially as oriented towards / grounded in (East) Asian contexts
· Concrete examples of EP in praxis – whether successful or not in
sustaining shared norms and irreducible local differences in (East)
Asian contexts
· Theoretical and practical explorations of (East) Asian relatives of
Western-centric pluralisms from Confucian, Buddhist, and other local
traditions – e.g., of resonance, harmony, etc. – that might offer
advantages over EP on both theoretical and practical grounds.
Please submit your 500-word abstract (maximum) in English to
c.m.ess at media.uio.no by October 15, 2020 (subject line should include
“JCEA Special Issue”).
Deadlines
Abstract Submission: October 15, 2020
Abstract Notification: November 15, 2020
Article Submission: December 31, 2020
Notification of Acceptance/Rejection: March 15, 2021
Final submission of revised papers: June 1, 2021
For more information about the JCEA, refer to https://jceasia.org/
Many thanks and best regards,
charles ess
--
Professor Emeritus
Department of Media and Communication
University of Oslo
<http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html>
Fellow, Siebold-Collegiums Institute for Advanced Studies,
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany
Co-chair & Editor, Internet Research Ethics 3.0
<https://aoir.org/reports/ethics3.pdf>
3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now out:
<http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428>
Postboks 1093
Blindern 0317
Oslo, Norway
c.m.ess at media.uio.no
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