[Air-L] 4th International Data Power Conference, June 22nd - June 24th 2022
Helen Kennedy
h.kennedy at sheffield.ac.uk
Mon Oct 18 11:01:29 PDT 2021
Dialogues in Data Power, 4th International Data Power Conference, June 22nd
- June 24th 2022
Online and in person in three locations: the University of Sheffield,
Carleton University and the University of Bremen
A three-day in person and online international conference organized by Data
Power teams at The University of Sheffield in the UK, Carleton University
in Canada and the University of Bremen in Germany.
*Abstract Deadline:* 15th January 2022
*Conference Dates:* 22nd to 24th of June 2022
*Venues:* It will be possible to participate in the conference online or in
person. Conference activities will be hosted for one day in each of these
locations:
- Department of Sociological Studies and Information School in
Sheffield, UK
- School of Journalism and Communication in Ottawa, Canada
- Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research (ZeMKI) and
- Institute for Information Management (ifib) in Bremen, Germany.
*Call for abstracts:*
The Data Power Conference hosts critical reflections on data’s power and
the social, political, economic and cultural consequences of data’s
increasing presence in our lives, workplaces, and societies. The most
recent conference in 2019 focused on the specific theme of global
in/security. The 4th Data Power Conference, in June 2022, returns to some
of the fundamental questions that underpinned the founding of the
conference. It is conceived as a series of dialogues, dialogues *about*
overarching concerns and *with* disciplines and stakeholders working with
and on data. In particular, the conference will reflect on:
- How can stakeholders be engaged in critical conversations about data
power?
- What constitute rigorous methods when it comes to researching data
power?
- To what extent does critical data power research need to focus on
specific instances of data power in action? What contributions can more
generalised critiques make to our field?
To facilitate dialogues across disciplines and with stakeholders, we
welcome papers from interdisciplinary teams including disciplines
incorporating aspects of data science, and papers which incorporate
non-academic collaborators from a range of sectors.
As always, the Data Power Conference remains concerned with in/equalities,
discrimination, questions of justice, rights and freedoms, and agency and
resistance. We welcome papers that engage with these matters.
There will be a keynote speaker on each of the three conference days,
details to be confirmed.
*Information on abstracts & papers*
- Whilst we welcome papers and session proposals of all kinds, please
note that this conference focuses on critical questions about data’s power
and also papers that are critical and/or reflective with regards to the
social and cultural consequences of the rise of data's power.
- A 250-300 word abstract is required.
- The deadline for abstracts is 15th January 2022.
- Information about how to submit an abstract will be available here
soon: http://datapowerconference.org/data-power-2022/about/.
*Information on conference organisation*
- It will be possible to participate fully remotely in the conference,
but it will also be possible to participate in-person in one of the three
locations in which the conference has already taken place – Sheffield/UK,
Ottawa/Canada and Bremen/Germany – as these will each host a local session
on one of the conference days.
- The conference will seek to be accessible across time zones, with
sessions 9am to 12pm CET and 6pm to 9pm CET on each of the three days.
- There will be a modest conference fee to cover running costs, with
reductions for students and people participating online.
*Data Power Conference Management Team*
Jo Bates, University of Sheffield
Monika Halkort, Lebanese American University
Juliane Jarke, University of Bremen
Helen Kennedy, University of Sheffield
Tracey Lauriault, Carleton University
*Data Power Conference Committee*
Ysabel Gerrard, University of Sheffield
Andreas Hepp, University of Bremen
Leif Kramp, University of Bremen
Merlyna Lim, Carleton University
--
Helen Kennedy, she/her, Professor of Digital Society, @hmtk, Living With
Data <https://livingwithdata.org/>
*RECENT PUBLICATIONS: *
Context and prior awareness matter in public concern about data uses
<https://livingwithdata.org/resources/living-with-data-survey-results/>
(2021, w/Mark Taylor, Susan Oman, Jo Bates, Itzelle Medina-Perea, Hannah
Ditchfield, Lulu Pinney)
Public perceptions of good data management: findings from a UK-based survey
<https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2053951720935616>, *Big Data
and Society* (2020, w/Todd Hartman, Robin Steedman & Rhia Jones)
*Data Visualization in Society
<https://www.aup.nl/en/book/9789463722902/data-visualization-in-society>*
(2020,
ed w/ Martin Engebretesen, Open Access with Amsterdam University Press)
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