> CFP: Gender and the Information Society
> Feminist Media Studies 3(3) Criticism and Commentary
> Section
>
> Deadline: 23 May 2003
> Length: 1,000-1,500 words (5-6 pages typed,
> double-spaced)
>
> The World Summit on Information Society (WSIS)
> is holding its
> first
> meeting later this year in Geneva, with a follow-up
> conference in
> Tunisia
> in 2005. Working under the aegis of the United
> Nations, this global
> body
> seeks to address issues that are of immediate
> relevance to scholars in
> the
> field of communication: the 'new world order'
> created by global flows of
> information, the impact of IT on the first
> world-third world
> configuration,
> the information gap and its effects on practices of
> democratic
> governance
> and civil society formations, and numerous other
> related topics.
> Given this timely consideration of the role
> and place of IT in our
> lives, we now seek to identify the various ways in
> which gender is
> implicated in this brave new world, using the
> criticism and commentary
> section to highlight gender as a crucial variable in
> this debate. Too
> often discussions of such global topics are
> enveloped by wide-ranging
> and
> global policy concerns, where such a focus tends to
> ignore the real and
> material effects that policy has on the lives of
> women and men.
> Therefore,
> we want to highlight the ways in which gender is
> implicated in both
> information technology processes and in the access
> to and use of IT. In
> other words, through a focus on gender we want to
> render visible the
> opportunities and challenges afforded by the
> development of the
> Information
> Society and explore the ways in which the rhetoric
> of empowerment masks
> the
> perpetuation of existing gender hierarchies.
> We are seeking short papers which address any
> aspect of gender and
> ICTs, along the lines of our interest identified
> above. There are
> numerous
> examples from developing world countries that
> highlight the positive
> outcomes of information technology on individual
> women's lives. For
> instance, the Grameen Phone initiative in Bangladesh
> has offered new
> avenues of economic empowerment for rural women.
> Similarly,
> téléboutiques
> in Senegal and Morocco, and phone shops in Ghana
> have helped some women
> bridge the digital divide and participate more
> actively in
> male-dominated
> arenas of civil society. Notwithstanding the
> utopian vistas opened up
> by
> new information technologies, especially in the
> economic arena, there
> are
> numerous difficulties which the WSIS must also
> confront. These include
> the
> obstacles to women's access to ICTs, the specific
> ways in which women
> are
> mobilized within circuits of cyber-trafficking and
> pornography; and the
> impact of new information-gathering techniques on
> women's work (women's
> participation in data entry jobs, teleworking, the
> digital glass
> ceiling,
> etc.). Issues of universal and equitable access and
> the use of IT in
> public health, particularly around HIV/AIDS, gain
> new salience in
> discussions of democratic governance in the
> Information Society.
>
> The deadline for this call is 23 May, 2003 ? please
> submit your
> contributions by email attachment to both of us. If
> you would like to
> discuss submitting a contribution to this volume,
> please email us at:
>
> k.ross@???
> smoorti@???
>
> We look forward to receiving your essays in May.
> Please pass on this
> CFP
> to anyone you think might be interested in
> contributing. As always,
> please
> feel free to submit book or film reviews which you
> think would be of
> interest to the FMS readership. The following
> website contains the
> style
> guideline for Feminist Media Studies:
>
http://tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/r-authors/fmsauth.pdf
>
>
>
> Sujata Moorti
> Associate Professor
> Old Dominion University
> Norfolk, VA 23529
>
> 757.683.3823
>
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