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Bücher und Buch-Herausgaben:

H. Tellioglu, L. Nathan, M. Teli (Hrg.):
"Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Communities & Technologies - Transforming Communities";
ACM Digital Library, ACM New York, NY, USA, 2019, ISBN: 978-1-4503-7162-9; 375 S.



Kurzfassung englisch:
It is our sincere pleasure to welcome you to the 9th International Conference on Communities and Technologies - C&T 2019 - Transforming Communities. The biennial Communities and Technologies (C&T) conference is committed to supporting scholarly debate and disseminating research on the complex connections between communities - both physical and virtual - and information and communication technologies. This year´s conference continues the series´ tradition of being truly international in both participation and organizational structure.
Communities are defined in many ways, often in relation to ancestry, culture, ethnicity, geography, interests, practices, religion, threats, or other categories of social connection. The concept represents both inclusion and exclusion along with other paradoxes of human relationships. Conservative alliances may use the trope of national or local communities to respond to external threats. Progressive groups may focus on communities to contain and contrast the alienation of extreme individualization. Regardless of catalyst, the ingroup/outgroup narratives of any community can hide internal inequalities. In addition, some communities find their commonality in a desire to harm others. Communities can be damaging.

The capacity of the term, its breadth of use, highlights the draw of social life: the myriad forms of human solidarity, the capacity to recognize other human beings as like us, the possibility for mobilization in defense of or to strengthen the communities with which a sense of belonging exists. Indeed, vibrant communities are not fixed entities, rather they are constantly made and remade everyday through people interacting across cultural, economic, environmental, political, and technological dimensions.

C&T's 2019 theme, "Transforming Communities", embraces such a nuanced and dynamic view of communities. We recognize how communities are rooted in the construction of solidarities and mutual recognition at the same time there is tension and desire for change. We welcome scholarly contributions that pay particular attention to the roles of technology, and technology design, in the making, un-making, and re-making of communities.

C&T focuses on the notion of communities as social entities comprised of people who share something in common; this common element may be geography, needs, goals, interests, practices, organizations, enemies, or other bases for social connection. Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), the design of new ICTs, and the (re)design of older technologies can support community formation and development by facilitating communication and coordination among members, as well as enable and empower communities to work towards their goals. We must also acknowledge that ICTs are used in processes that degrade communities and community life; some ICTs could actually be antithetical to healthy communities; and some communities actively work towards oppressing others through their use of ICTs. For these reasons we value critiques of existing systems, approaches, communities, policies, and trajectories.

Communities may transform through efforts to secure a more equitable society, a healthy and diverse environment for future generations. However, transformation may lead to other types of outcomes, unforeseen or unacknowledged. The theme of transforming communities raises a number of questions, issues, possibilities and tensions and we encourage submissions to engage with both the intended and unintended effects of Communities & Technology.

Schlagworte:
cmmunities, technologies, case studies, innovation, social sciences, engineering


Elektronische Version der Publikation:
https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3328320


Erstellt aus der Publikationsdatenbank der Technischen Universität Wien.