[Air-L] Call for Papers: Oregon Surveillance Studies Workshop 2023
Bryce Newell
bcnewell at uoregon.edu
Tue Jun 27 09:30:33 PDT 2023
Dear colleagues,
This is a final reminder that abstracts (paper proposals) for the Surveillance Studies Network's (SSN) 2023 Oregon Surveillance Studies Workshop are due by end of day on June 30th.
From: Bryce Newell
Sent: Monday, May 1, 2023 10:50 AM
To: AoIR-L Listserv <air-l at listserv.aoir.org>
Subject: Call for Papers: Oregon Surveillance Studies Workshop 2023
Dear colleagues,
We are excited to announce the Call for Proposals for a Surveillance Studies Network (SSN) conference to be held in Eugene, Oregon (USA) in October 2023. The conference theme is focused on the intersections between media, information, and surveillance. This is a designed to be a smaller conference than the flagship biannual SSN conference, and will be based around a paper-workshop model in which sessions are devoted to feedback of single draft papers, much like the Privacy Law Scholars Conference (PLSC) model. We anticipate having some limited options for remote/hybrid sessions in addition to the in-person conference.
The submission for paper proposals (abstracts) is June 30, 2023. More details and an online CFP can be found at https://blogs.uoregon.edu/ssnoregon2023/
The CFP follows:
***
Oregon Surveillance Studies Workshop 2023
October 13-14, 2023 | University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon (USA)
Conference Theme: Media, Information, and Surveillance
Organized by the Surveillance Studies Network (SSN)<https://www.surveillance-studies.net> and hosted by the University of Oregon's School of Journalism and Communication (SOJC)<https://journalism.uoregon.edu/>, with additional support from Oregon State University's School of Communication<https://liberalarts.oregonstate.edu/soc>.
Conference website: https://blogs.uoregon.edu/ssnoregon2023/
Conference Co-Chairs:
* Bryce Newell - University of Oregon
* Joshua Reeves - Oregon State University
Theme:
The 2023 Oregon Surveillance Studies Workshop welcomes proposals from scholars across disciplines to workshop works-in-progress papers that focus on issues of surveillance and/in society, with a particular emphasis on scholarship that brings media, communication, or information studies perspectives to these issues. Our broad theme is focused on the interconnections between "Media, Information, and Surveillance." Proposals that align with the theme of the conference will receive some priority in the selection process. By framing the conference theme around issues of media, information, and surveillance, we hope to foster connections and dialogue about how approaching and understanding emerging surveillance practices and technologies from media studies, communication theory, information science, and critical data studies perspectives can provide new insights or open new directions for surveillance studies research. For example: How can theories, concepts, and approaches from media studies and the information sciences inform how we conceptualize, study, and regulate emerging forms of data-intensive surveillance?
More details:
Over twenty years ago, in 2002, Gary Marx presented his ideas about "the new surveillance" (Marx 2002) in the first issue of Surveillance & Society. Examining the evolution of surveillance practices and their increasing reliance on information technologies, Marx argued that the defining feature of this new surveillance was "the use of technical means to extract or create personal data" (Marx 2002: 12). Much has changed in the intervening years, both in terms of technology and surveillance practices, but this definition continues to apply to new forms of data-intensive surveillance today. At the same time, the transdisciplinary field of surveillance studies has matured over the past two decades, bringing together scholars from a variety of academic disciplines interested in conducting research at the intersections of surveillance and society. The purpose of this workshop is to bring together scholars from the fields of media studies, communication, the information sciences, critical data studies, and related fields to explore how theories, concepts, and ideas from these fields can inform transdisciplinary research and scholarship into the realities, social implications, and regulation of new and emerging surveillance and data-intensive technologies in society.
The Oregon Surveillance Studies Workshop is a discussion-based conference in which each session is dedicated to discussing and providing feedback on a single draft paper. Designated discussants briefly present the paper and provide comments and feedback, after which the author may respond (but does not present or summarize their paper), and then the room is opened for broad discussion amongst, and feedback from, everyone else in attendance. Because of this format, participants are expected to have read papers before the sessions and to actively provide constructive feedback. As such, conference participants have ample opportunities to engage and contribute to the sessions even if they do not workshop a paper (for example, as a discussant who provides commentary and feedback).
The conference will take place over two days and will include both physical and virtual attendance options. We anticipate hosting several sessions of the conference as dedicated or hybrid virtual sessions designed to allow scholars who are not able to easily travel to Oregon the opportunity to participate in at least some of the discussions at the conference. However, not all of the physical sessions of the conference will be streamed virtually, so virtual attendance is likely to provide a much more limited array of attendance options than in-person attendance. Applicants must designate on their initial application whether they are available to attend in person or only remotely. The in-person conference will include face-to-face roundtable discussions on both days of the conference as well as several meals and extended breaks to allow for networking and informal discussions to take place between participants. We anticipate being able to workshop at least 24 papers in person, with several more offered in a virtual format.
Dates and deadlines:
* Abstract submission deadline: June 30, 2023
* Acceptance/rejection decisions back to authors: July 22, 2023
* Registration (early bird) deadline: August 18, 2023
* Author/Discussant/Commenter final registration deadline: Sept. 16, 2023
* Full drafts of accepted papers due: Sept. 16, 2023 (full drafts not submitted by this date will be withdrawn from the program)*
* Conference dates: October 12-13, 2023
*Important note about full drafts: Proposals will be accepted on the basis of abstracts, but full drafts of accepted papers must be submitted in time for discussants and other participants to read and prepare comments as noted below. If authors of accepted abstracts do not submit a full draft paper by the Sept. 16 deadline, their paper will be removed from the program and will not be workshopped at the conference.
Submission instructions:
Authors should submit an abstract as part of their application to have their research workshopped at the conference. Your abstracts should be in English and be between 500 and 700 words. You should clearly and concisely link your ideas and research to existing scholarly literature (and fully reference cited literature in a references section following your abstract). Abstracts should identify the theories, concepts, methods, and conclusions of your paper, and should also demonstrate your awareness and understanding of the existing relevant literature and explain how your work relates to, informs, or diverges from the existing body of knowledge. If you wish to cite your own work in your abstract, you should refer to your work in the third person - for example, "As Newell and Reeves (2023) argued," instead of something like "in our prior work...."
Note: Abstracts which reveal the identity of the author(s), are not accompanied by full references to prior work (those cited in the abstract), or which are significantly below 500 words or above 700 words will be rejected without review.
Finally, please remember that substantially completed full drafts (which need not be polished but should be complete enough for meaningful discussion and feedback during the conference) will be required for all accepted proposals.
Please indicate in your abstract/application whether you anticipate being available to attend the conference in person or whether you intend to participate remotely. (Note that there will be more limited opportunities for remote participation.)
You should submit<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ssnoregon2023> your abstracts through EasyChair<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ssnoregon2023> (link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ssnoregon2023).
Questions?
Please direct any of your questions to the conference co-chairs, Bryce Newell (bcnewell at uoregon.edu<mailto:bcnewell at uoregon.edu>) and Joshua Reeves (reevejos at oregonstate.edu<mailto:reevejos at oregonstate.edu>). Please put "SSN Oregon 2023" in the subject line of your email. Please also check the conference website for additional information as the conference dates get closer: https://blogs.uoregon.edu/ssnoregon2023/
Our Sponsors:
Surveillance Studies Network (SSN)<https://www.surveillance-studies.net>
University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication (SOJC)<https://journalism.uoregon.edu/>
Oregon State University School of Communication<https://liberalarts.oregonstate.edu/soc>
***
Bryce C. Newell, PhD, JD
Assistant Professor, School of Journalism and Communication<https://journalism.uoregon.edu/>, University of Oregon
Researcher, Utrecht University School of Law<https://www.uu.nl/en/organisation/utrecht-university-school-of-law>
Co-Director of the Surveillance Studies Network (SSN)<https://www.surveillance-studies.net/> & Dialogue Editor of Surveillance & Society<https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/surveillance-and-society>
New papers:
Surveillance as Information Practice<https://asistdl.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/asi.24734> (JASIST 2023)
New books:
Police Visibility: Privacy, Surveillance, and the False Promise of Body-Worn Cameras<https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520382909/police-visibility> (University of California Press, 2021)
Police on Camera: Surveillance, Privacy, and Accountability<https://www.routledge.com/Police-on-Camera-Surveillance-Privacy-and-Accountability/Newell/p/book/9781138342439> (Routledge, 2021)
www.bcnewell.com<http://www.bcnewell.com/> | Google Scholar<https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=7kICf7kAAAAJ> | @newmedialaw<http://twitter.com/newmedialaw>
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