<div dir="ltr"><div>Hi everyone, </div><div><br></div><div>We invite abstract submissions (250 words) to our 4S open panel on "Counting matters: The ontologies of (ac)counting with and beyond data.”
The panel will be hybrid, with options to join in-person in Toronto or
online. Please find the panel abstract below. </div><div><br></div><div>For accepted submissions, we aim to offer an opportunity to submit
extended abstracts (closer to the conference dates) for engaged feedback
with discussants. </div><div><br></div><div>----</div><div><div><b>[Panel: 213] Counting matters: The ontologies of (ac)counting with and beyond data<br></b></div><div><br></div><div>Techniques
and technologies of counting have roots in colonial practices that
aimed to ‘see’ populations in specific ways. Such acts of “seeing” were
never merely descriptive, whether undertaken by colonial states or
markets (Scott 1998; MacKenzie 2008; Fourcade and Healy 2017). Rather,
they actively shaped how populations were governed and valued. Even as
data-driven technologies and their processing capacities have evolved,
these histories continue to shape how states, markets, civil society,
and communities perceive citizens, workers, consumers, and themselves
(Sriraman 2018; Eubanks 2017; Noble 2018). Be it national citizenship
registries, Covid-19 dashboards, targeted advertising, or productivity
metrics, these contemporary projects are deemed apolitical and neutral
tools for impartial investigations and ‘evidence-based’ governance.
Crucially, this framing treats counting as descriptive rather than
constitutive, obscuring the logics (and politics) through which certain
realities are made to count over others. <br></div><div><br></div><div>Against
this backdrop, this panel invites critical explorations of contemporary
modes of (ac)counting with and beyond data. Here, we understand
counting as encompassing the norms and practices of enumeration through
which our worlds are made to count and data, as encompassing not only
datasets and metrics but also qualitative accounts, records, proxies,
and other material–discursive forms. Moving beyond dominant framings of
counting as problems of surveillance and control, we problematise
counting as world-making (Verran 2001) — what ways of being and becoming
are counted and accounted for? How are contemporary data-driven
technologies implicated in these processes, co-producing these
realities? We invite contributions, including empirical studies,
theoretical and methodological reflections that explore themes
including: How are data-driven practices and methods deployed to
enumerate various spheres of everyday life? What actors, institutions,
and relations are caught within and shaped by contemporary modes of
counting? What specific counts are produced, normalised, or overlooked
by these practices? And how do they (re)make the worlds they enumerate? <br><br></div><div><div>-----</div></div><div>Please share the call with students and colleagues who may be interested in the themes of this panel. </div><div><br><p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt">4S
2026 is happening in Toronto from Oct 7 - 10. The deadline for abstract
submission is April 30. More details on how to make a submission can be
found <a href="https://www.4sonline.org/call_for_submissions_toronto.php" target="_blank">here</a>. </p><p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt"><br></p><p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt">If you have any questions about the panel, please reach out to any one of us at:<br>Anushree Gupta, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, <a href="mailto:la20resch11008@iith.ac.in" target="_blank">la20resch11008@iith.ac.in</a> <br>Srravya Chandhiramowuli, University of Edinburgh, <a href="mailto:srravya.c@ed.ac.uk" target="_blank">srravya.c@ed.ac.uk </a><br>Janaki Srinivasan, University of Oxford, <a href="mailto:janaki.srinivasan@sant.ox.ac.uk" target="_blank">janaki.srinivasan@sant.ox.ac.uk</a></p><p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt"><br></p><p style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt">Very Best, </p><p style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt">Srravya, Anushree, and Janaki </p><div class="gmail-yj6qo"></div><div class="gmail-adL"><br><br></div></div></div></div>