[Air-L] inaugural issue of AoIR-JICES collaboration now out
Charles M. Ess
c.m.ess at media.uio.no
Mon Sep 27 22:19:25 PDT 2021
Dear AoIRists, cc. Simon Rogerson and contributors
On behalf of the contributors, I'm very pleased indeed to call your
attention to the recent publication of a special issue of the Journal of
Information, Communication and Ethics in Society (JICES):
<https://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/issn/1477-996X/vol/19/iss/3>
This is the inaugural (and Open Access) issue of a new collaboration
between AoIR and JICES, modeled after the now long-standing
collaboration between AoIR and the Information, Communication and
Society journal. It is made up of six contributions - five of which were
first gathered in ethics panels presented at AoIR 2020:
Bastiaan Vanacker, “Virtue Ethics, Situationism and Casuistry: Toward a
Digital Ethics Beyond Exemplars”
Morten Bay, “Four Challenges to Confucian Virtue Ethics in Technology.”
Chi Kwok and Ngai Keung Chan, “Toward a Political Theory of Data
Justice: A Public Good Perspective”
Katja Kaufmann, Tabea Bork-Hüffer, Niklas Gudowsky-Blatakes, Marjo
Rauhala and Martin Rutzinger, “Ethical Challenges of Researching
Emergent Socio-Material-Technological Phenomena: Insights from an
Interdisciplinary Mixed Methods Project Using Mobile Eye-Tracking”
Ylva Hård af Segerstad, “On the Complexities of Studying Sensitive
Communities Online as a Researcher-Participant,”
(The sixth, Nesibe Kantar and Terrell Ward Bynum, “Global ethics for the
digital age – flourishing ethics” begins with the long history of how
especially virtue ethics (VE) has come to take a central place in the
ethics of information and communication technologies. It begins the
collection as it sets the stage for Vanacker's and Bay's important
critiques of VE.)
This new collaboration and its first results thus expand the
characteristic foci on ethics in AoIR across and with new communities of
scholars and researchers: in particular, JICES is well known for its
foundational engagements with computer scientists and their colleagues
in related technical fields along with philosophers and others who take
up the multiple ethical, social, and political dimensions of ICTs. At
the same time, the JICES focus on communication is a natural bridge with
AoIR - and as the contributions from Ylva Hård af Segerstad and Katja
Kaufmann et al instantiate, our signature focus on internet research ethics.
Even better: plans are in the works for the next round and special issue.
Last but not least: many thanks indeed to Simon Rogerson, founding
editor of JICES, for his first suggesting this collaboration and for his
inspiration and hard work in pursuing it through this publication.
Happy reading and all best,
- charles
--
Professor Emeritus
University of Oslo
<http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/charlees/index.html>
Secretary, IFIP Working Group 9.8, Gender, Diversity, and ICT
<http://ifiptc9.org/9-8/>
Fellow, Siebold-Collegiums Institute for Advanced Studies,
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany
3rd edition of Digital Media Ethics now out:
<http://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509533428>
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