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(Now Closed) Call For Papers: The Chinese Internet in the Global South: Flows, Frictions, and Futures

Smartphones, Mobile Apps, Artificial Intelligence, Cloud Computing, Internet of Things (IoT), 5G, Blockchain, Metaverse – The Chinese Internet has evolved into a multilayered stack of digital technologies and devices with embedded protocols, cultures, and norms, used by billions of people around the globe.  The Global South is where Made-in-China digital technology meets the world, reconfiguring how billions live and China’s own relationship with the world.

The Digital Asia Hub and Chiang Mai University welcome you to the 20th Chinese Internet Research Conference (CIRC) – The Chinese Internet in the Global South: Flows, Frictions, and Futures. The conference will take place from 12-14 July 2023 at the Faculty of Mass Communication, Chiang Mai University, in a hybrid format, with in-person attendance and some online participation. The conference invites scholars from across disciplines to zoom in on the Global South as a geographic and epistemological site of inquiry, with a focus on South and Southeast Asia (but also including other developing regions of Asia, Africa, and Latin America), to study the influence of the Chinese Internet. We invite papers and panel discussions touching on digital culture, innovation, surveillance, geopolitics, public infrastructure, digital rights, and more.

 

Flows

Chinese smartphone manufacturers make up close to ⅓ of the global market share (and a dominant share in Southeast and South Asia). Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, and ByteDance, along with dozens of smaller companies, have invested several billions in local tech startups in India, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia. TikTok, the world’s fastest growing social media platform, counts Indonesia, Brazil, and West Asia as central to its global success. Huawei is nearly universally present in the Global South, growing from a telecom supplier to a digital transformation partner. Within the past decade Chinese technologies, along with a supply chain of capital and people, are deeply embedded in the Global South, reconfiguring the dynamics of economies and societies.

We invite papers and panels that examine the influence of the Chinese Internet in the Global South, especially highlighting the interplay and bi-directional linkages between local innovation and startup ecosystems, how they may compare with their Western peers, and how Western or other technology companies are learning from China’s approach. Papers can also train a focus on the reconfiguring of socio-political landscapes through providing digital surveillance tools or advancing Beijing’s discourse power (话语权).

 

Frictions and Futures

China has permeated public consciousness globally and brings new frictions as political rhetoric around China affects how Made-in-China digital technologies are perceived and consumed. India became the first country in the world to ban and block WeChat and TikTok alongside hundreds of other Chinese apps, having found them to “violate Indian sovereignty and security.” How countries in the Global South interpret and act against perceived influence of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) deserves more study to help shed light on non-Western attitudes towards Chinese technology. Several countries, notably Thailand, Indonesia, Myanmar, and Vietnam, are introducing new laws and rules to more closely control the national Internet, regulate international platforms, and spur local innovation. Inquiry around how governments may be mirroring and building on the “China model” is timely as governments around the world are actively regulating digital spaces and data flows, another example of the multi-directional flows of knowledge and practices.

The globalisation of the Chinese Internet also includes values, norms, and legal frameworks for governing digital spaces. The landscape within the PRC is presently in a period of significant flux. The Data Security Law (数据安全法), the Personal Information Protection Law (个人信息保护法), and a more empowered “super regulator” the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), are reconfiguring the Chinese Internet. How these new changes affect global data flows, governance norms and rules, and even the culture of innovation in China need to be better understood to determine what the future of the Chinese Internet in the Global South will look like.

We invite papers and panels that shed light on these frictions and the multidirectional nature of laws, values, and norms for digital spaces between China and the Global South. These papers may study the changes within the PRC and chart possibilities of how they may influence the globalisation of the Chinese Internet with Global South countries.

 

Submission Guidelines

Abstract and panel proposals should be submitted by 28 February 2023. All submissions should be written in English. 

  • Abstract: Individual or co-authored abstracts should be 300-500 words, excluding the title page and references. The title page should include the title of the paper, the name of the author/co-authors, academic/professional affiliation(s), and email address(es). The abstract should include central arguments and a substantive summary. 

  • Panel proposal: Panel proposals are limited to 1,000 words, excluding the title page, references, and appendices.

The organizing committee will inform applicants of its decision by 3 April 2023. Full versions of the accepted papers are to be submitted by 1 June 2023. Papers should not exceed 8,000 words, including notes, references, and appendices, and should be uploaded to the submission system or sent to the organizer via email.

For further inquiries, please contact: circ2023@digitalasiahub.org.

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