Peer
production and collaborative forms of technological design – such as those
based on commons-oriented approaches – have at their core a critical stance
towards the technoscientific landscape, an approach shared with Science and
Technology Studies (STS) as a theoretical archipelago that has produced a
significant wealth of knowledge that points out the social constructive and
performative character of technoscience.
In recent
time, the increasing prominence of critical approaches – e.g. feminist and postcolonial
STS – and the intersections with surrounding fields – e.g. participatory
design, information science, and critical technical practice – have stressed
the politically engaged character of STS, emphasizing its “activist interest”
(Sismondo, 2008). Such growing interest in collaborative modes of practicing
STS has suggested the emergence of a “collaborative turn” in STS (Farías,
2017). Such novel approaches allow researchers and practitioners to understand
and experience STS as a “practice” as well as a theoretical perspective, an
approach that can be fruitful and inspiring also to investigate, design, and
advocate for commons-based and oriented forms of production and experiences.
This
special issue focuses on such collaborative orientation of STS by exploring its
interplay with the field of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) when
focusing on the commons and peer production. This relationship entails diverse
forms of meeting such as the disciplinary intersection of STS with design
studies and information science; the epistemological meeting between STS and
critical perspectives; the making of new alliances between researchers,
activists and local population; the convergence of institutional interests and
research practices to promote alternative sociotechnical infrastructures based
on the commons. At the same time such hybrid collaborations pose novel and
interesting challenges such as the institutional constraints in the form of
disciplinary boundaries that persist in today’s academia and the demand to
engage in unconventional ways of publishing that are mostly disregarded by
current evaluation practices.
This call
seeks interdisciplinary contributions that explore the politics in and of the
relationship between STS and ICT, from experiences of local and commons
activism to large-scale examples of alternative sociotechnical infrastructures.
Topics relevant for this call may include:
- ICT, labor, and precariousness
- Hacktivism, community networks, and alternative Internet
- Datification and alternative data politics
- Post-colonial and anti-colonial computing
- Feminist interventions in ICT
- Commons, peer production, and platform cooperativism
- Interplay between publics, researchers, and institutions e.g. citizen science
- Interventionist methodologies
This
special issue aims at promoting interdisciplinary encounters in order to foster
the politically engaged, commons-oriented, STS agenda in the relationship with
ICT.
IMPORTANT
DATES
15 March
2019: Submission of a 250-500 words abstract
30 March
2019: Notification of relevance
1 July
2019: Submission of full papers
15 October
2019: Reviews to authors
15 December
2019: Submission of revised papers
March 2020:
Foreseen publication
SUBMISSION
INSTRUCTIONS
Abstracts
should be of 250-500 words, while peer reviewed papers should be no more than
8,000 words.
These
should be sent directly to the editors at
infrastructuringcommons@peerproduction.net
All peer
reviewed papers will be reviewed according to Journal of Peer Production guidelines.
EDITORS
Mariacristina
Sciannamblo, Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute
Maurizio
Teli, Aalborg University
Peter Lyle,
Aarhus University
Chris
Csíkszentmihályi, Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario