thought this CfP would be interesting and maybe even useful in thinking about collaborative writing projects.

From: Carolyn Guertin <carolyn.guertin@gmail.com>
Subject: [MEA] CFP: New Media, Global Activism and Politics Vol. 20, no. 3 (August 2014)
Date: May 4, 2013 10:49:48 AM PDT
To: MEA@lists.ibiblio.org
Reply-To: MEA@lists.ibiblio.org

*Convergence*

The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies



Call for Papers



Special issue on:  New Media, Global Activism and Politics

Vol. 20, no. 3 (August 2014)



Guest editors:  Carolyn Guertin (University of North Texas at Dallas) and
Angi Buettner (Victoria University of Wellington)



*Deadline for refereed research articles:  *30 August 2013

Indignados. Arab Spring. #Occupy. The 99%. Idle No More. #Upsettler.
GlobalNoise. Strike Debt. These are just some of the new terms to emerge
from the global mass protests of the last two years. They are part of a sea
change as political engagement, citizen journalism and tactical media
evolve as tools of protest and communication. These terms mark only one
small part of a much larger shift in media production and distribution that
is the rise of user-generated content or social media. Within digital
culture, the creative act has become a form of activism carried out through
the repurposing of pre-existing materials and media for political
change—and it is a practice that has swayed policy, overturned governments
and politicized subcultures and peoples on a global scale.

In the 19th century, the crowd emerged as a new social force. It was a
force, it was argued, that shook the foundations of society and led
individuals to commit irrational acts. In the 21st century, we have seen
the power of crowds re-emerge as an ostensibly smarter and more nimble
cultural force empowered by mobile technologies, crowdsourcing
methodologies and networked systems.  How has activism changed as a result
of new technologies? How are new media enlisted to assist in the planning
and enactment of socio-political change? How are governments and political
candidates using social media? How has social media altered policies,
elections and the democratic process?



Topics might include:

-        Hacktivism

-        Wikileaks

-        Arab Spring

-        #occupy

-        Indignados

-        Idle No More

-        #upsettlers

-        Global Noise

       Strike Debt

-        Crowdsourcing

-        Lobbying

-        Flashmobs, smart mobs or network armies

-        Riot simulation or protest modeling

-        Microblogging as a form of protest

-        Protest apps, including geolocative ones

-        Eco-activism

-        Activism in education

-        Gaming and new media activism

-        New media and the environment

-        Politics and new media

-        Activist or protest art

-        Appropriation, subvertising, culture jamming or memes

-        Slacktivism

-        Clicktivism

-        Cyberfeminism

-        DIY culture

-        Prototyping

-        Global protest networks

-        Participatory culture

-        eDemocracy

-        Government sponsored social media

-        Public media initiatives

-        Elections and social media



*Queries may be directed to the guest editors, Carolyn Guertin at *
carolyn.guertin@gmail.com* or *Angi Buettner at Angi.Buettner@vuw.ac.nz



*Convergence* is published by Sage and all contributors must consult
the*guide to manuscript submission at:
*
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/journalsProdDesc.nav?prodId=Journal201774#tabview=manuscriptSubmission
* for details of house style.*
--
Carolyn Guertin, PhD
Languages and Communications, University of North Texas
author of *Digital Prohibition: Piracy and Authorship in New Media Art
*(Continuum,
2012)

Website: http://carolynguertin.com/
Email: carolyn.guertin@gmail.com
Skype: carolyn_guertin
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