International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Afterlives of the Californian Ideology: Tech Movements, Pioneer Communities, and Imaginaries of Digital Futures

International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Afterlives of the Californian Ideology: Tech Movements, Pioneer Communities, and Imaginaries of Digital Futures

Hangar One at Moffett Field 1963 via Wikimedia Commons (public domain)

It was some 30 years ago that Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron coined the term “Californian Ideology”: At the intersection of hippiedom and yuppie entrepreneurship, they argued, a vision for recreating the world with digital technologies arose. But what has happened since? Has the rise of a more global Internet eclipsed the centrality of California? Are emerging technologies repeating the same patterns of political economy as earlier ones, or have they required the crafting of new ideologies entirely?   

This Special Section on Afterlives of the Californian Ideology: Tech Movements, Pioneer Communities, and Imaginaries of Digital Futures, guest edited by Andreas Hepp, Anne Schmitz, and Nathan Schneider, reflects on the “afterlives” of this Californian Ideology—an ideology that emerged in and through tech movements and pioneer communities. 

The Special Section’s contributions include case studies from Asia, Europe, South America, and the United States and address recent manifestations of the Californian Ideology by looking at Ethereum blockchain communities, tech communities of crafting and repairing, the “mindset” of the Maker movement, early civic hacking in South Korea, contemporary imaginaries of autonomous driving, and the micropolitics of everyday online life. The issue concludes with an interview with Richard Barbrook, who looks back at the polemic he and Andy Cameron wrote, along with the limits of critiquing ideology alone.

These articles reveal that the Californian Ideology remains alive and well, manifesting in many afterlives, which span diverse geographies and technological substrates. Even among efforts to challenge and supplant the dominance of Silicon Valley, Californian habits of mind continue to persist, even if in new forms and disguises. 

We invite you to read these articles that published in the International Journal of Communication on June 22, 2023. Please log into ijoc.org to read the papers of interest. We look forward to your feedback! 
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Afterlives of the Californian Ideology: Tech Movements, Pioneer Communities, and Imaginaries of Digital Futures—Introduction
Andreas Hepp, Anne Schmitz, Nathan Schneider 

Building Blockchain Frontiers: Ethereum as an Extension of the Californian Ideology
Ann Brody, Tamara Kneese, Julie Frizzo-Barker

More-Than-Tech Communities: Alternative Imaginaries Within Hacking and Crafting 
Fredy Mora-Gámez, Sarah R. Davies

Local Ambivalences Toward the Maker Ideology: Makerspaces, the Maker Mindset, and the Maker Movement
Andreas Hepp, Anne Schmitz

Negotiating Silicon Valley Ideologies, Contesting “American” Civic Hacking: The Early Civic Hackers in South Korea and Their Struggle
Danbi Yoo

Deepest Mediatization? Inventing the Autonomous Vehicle
James Miller

Homesteading on a Superhighway: The Californian Ideology and Everyday Politics 
Nathan Schneider

“Polemic Becomes Canon”: An Interview With Richard Barbrook on the Californian Ideology
Nathan Schneider
___________________________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor 
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Chi Zhang, Managing Editor, Special Sections
Andreas Hepp, Anne Schmitz, Nathan Schneider, Guest Editors

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.

International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Worker Resistance in Digital Capitalism

International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Worker Resistance in Digital Capitalism

“fighting for rights in the gig economy” by Davide Alberani (CC BY-SA 2.0)

After years of enthusiasm, the political promises of a long wave of worker struggles within and against the digital economy must be evaluated critically. Local manifestations of worker resistance show the multiple tactics and sources of solidarity that underpin a renewed challenge to the power of global digital capital.  

Guest-edited by Julie Chen, Alessandro Delfanti, and Michelle Phan, this Special Section on Worker Resistance in Digital Capitalism aims to provide a better understanding of collective action in the global digital economy.  

This Special Section features studies from Brazil, India, Indonesia, United Kingdom, the United States, and the Philippines tracking the challenges and conditions of possibility for worker organizing. The authors examine both mundane and novel tactics adopted by workers for labor action, solidarity building, and construction of alternatives to digital capitalism’s power. Be it in food delivery, video production, care, or legal work, these struggles cannot be separated from their local specificities. Structural constraints encountered by workers include postcolonial conditions, local economic regimes, global divisions of labor, institutional privileges or barriers, and the identity of the workers themselves.

Together, the contributions to this Special Section suggest that struggles in the digital economy are politically, economically, and culturally situated. Yet, multiple sources of solidarity have the potential to cross the differences described in the articles. 

We invite you to read these articles that published in the International Journal of Communication on June 6, 2023. Please log into ijoc.org to read the papers of interest. We look forward to your feedback! 
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Worker Resistance in Digital Capitalism—Introduction
Julie Chen, Alessandro Delfanti, Michelle Phan

Algorithmized Not Atomized: The Distributed Solidarity of Jakarta’s Gig Workers
Rida Qadri 

Communication and Work From Below: The Role of Communication in Organizing Delivery Platform Workers
Rafael Grohmann, Mateus Mendonça, Jamie Woodcock 

On the Shoulders of Automation: A Worker’s Inquiry Into the Hybrid Nature of the Legal Managed Services Industry (LPO/ALSP)
Sreyan Chatterjee

Solidarity and Resistance Meet Social Enterprise: The Social Logic of Alternative Cloudwork Platforms 
Cheryll Ruth Soriano

A Politics of Judgement?: Alienation and Platformized Creative Labor 
Michael L. Siciliano

Platform Counterpublics: Networked Gossip and Resistance Beyond Platforms 
Julia Ticona, M. Ryan Tsapatsaris
_______________________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor 
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Chi Zhang, Managing Editor, Special Sections
Julie Chen, Alessandro Delfanti, and Michelle Phan, Guest Editors

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 34 papers that published in May

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 34 papers that published in May

The International Journal of Communication is pleased to announce the publication of 34 papers in MAY 2023, which includes the “Special Section on Civic Participation in the Datafied Society.” To access these papers, Ctrl+Click on the titles below for direct hyperlinking or go to ijoc.org to read the Special Section.
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ARTICLES

Influence of Public Service Media Consumption on Citizens’ Perceptions of the Need for Public Media: The Moderating Role of Political Ideology
Marcela Campos Rueda  

The Ambivalent Governance of Platformed Chinese Feminism Under Censorship: Weibo, Xianzi, and Her Friends
Yijia Gu, Luke Heemsbergen 

Manufacturing Humanitarian Imagery: Explaining Norwegian Refugee Council’s Public Communication Strategies Toward the Syrian and Central African Crises
David Ongenaert, Stijn Joye, Øyvind Ihlen  

Subscribe Now: On the Effectiveness of Advertising Messages in Promoting Newspapers’ Online Subscriptions
Bartosz Wilczek, Ina Schulte-Uentrop, Neil Thurman

Uncovering Protest Paradigm Effect Processes: Representations and Perceptions of Media Protest Coverage Among Greek Youth
Alexandros Vlazakis, Aphrodite Baka  

When Distancing Fails—How Journalists’ Discursive and Mnemonic Techniques Facilitated the Rise of Trump and Trumpism
Jennifer R. Henrichsen 

Persuasive Communication Strategies in Breast Self-Awareness Messages: An International Perspective
Christine Skubisz

Bayesian Multilevel Modeling and Its Application in Comparative Journalism Studies
Chung-Hong Chan, Adrian Rauchfleisch

International News Media Coverage of Black Lives Matter: Evidence From Norway
Hilmar Mjelde 

Popes as Public Diplomats: A Longitudinal Analysis of the Vatican’s Foreign Engagement and Storytelling
Phillip Arceneaux

Reporting in the Age of Coronavirus: Alternating Between “Shoe-Leather” and “Slippers” Journalism
Mirjana Pantic

Media Parallelism Beyond the Political World: How Newspapers Push Economic Agendas Through Editorial Journalism
Deivison Henrique De Freitas Santos, Francisco Paulo Jamil Marques

Networked Platform Governance: The Construction of the Democratic Platform
Robyn Caplan

Understanding Fake News Corrective Action: A Mixed-Method Approach
Homero Gil de Zúñiga, Manuel Goyanes, Chris Skurka

Testing the Role of Inspirational and Crime News Use in Self-Report Empathic Concern and Helping
Chun Yang, Masahiro Yamamoto

The Impact of Advertisers on Media and Journalism in Transitional Democracies: The Case of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq
Jiyan Faris, Pieter Maeseele, Kevin Smets

TikTok and COVID-19 Vaccine Misinformation: New Avenues for Misinformation Spread, Popular Infodemic Topics, and Dangerous Logical Fallacies
Morgan Lundy

Probing the Coping Processes Between Social Media (WhatsApp) Addiction and Mental Health During Social Distancing
Adil S. Al-Busaidi, Victoria Dauletova, Jean Claude Kwitonda


FEATURE

“Napalm Girl” at 50: On Photojournalism and the Ethics of Care
Meenakshi Gigi Durham


BOOK REVIEWS

Ralph Engelman and Carey Shenkman, A Century of Repression: The Espionage Act and Freedom of the Press
Renita Coleman

Heather Ford, Writing the Revolution: Wikipedia and the Survival of Facts in theDigital Age
Noah Zweig 

Nathaniel Tkacz, Being With Data: The Dashboarding of Everyday Life
Li Zeng 

Nicholas Mirzoeff, White Sight: Visual Politics and Practices of Whiteness
Frederick Brady Fletcher

Regina M. Marchi, Day of the Dead in the USA: The Migration and Transformation of a Cultural Phenomenon (rev. 2nd ed.)
Robert Heckert 

Chuyun Oh, K-pop Dance: Fandoming Yourself on Social Media
Jungmin Kwon

Karen Redrobe and Jeff Scheible (Eds.), Deep Mediations: Thinking Space in Cinema and Digital Cultures
James Gabrillo

Christina S. Beck (Ed.), Communication in the 2020s: Viewing Our World Through the Eyes of Communication Scholars
Yingfeng Zhang

_______________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Chi Zhang, Managing Editor, Special Sections

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.

International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Civic Participation in the Datafied Society

International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Civic Participation in the Datafied Society


How do we advance citizen participation in a world increasingly governed through data infrastructures?

As data systems are deployed for commercial and public services, citizens are profiled, categorized, and “scored” and their future behavior predicted. Yet they have few possibilities to understand and intervene into these processes. What, then, are the implications of the increasing rollout of algorithmic and data-based decision-making for active citizenship and participation? How can citizens intervene into the development and management of the data systems that increasingly organize society? How do we maintain and expand civic participation in a context of rapid technological change?

Building on the growing range of research in the fields of critical data studies and data justice, this Special Section on Civic Participation in the Datafied Society, guest-edited by Arne Hintz, Lina Dencik, Joanna Redden, and Emiliano Treré, explores new questions at the intersection of datafication and participation. Based on papers presented at the second international Data Justice conference organized by the Data Justice Lab, the Special Section brings together six exciting contributions that collectively investigate practices, structures, and constraints of civic engagement in a datafied society. From different disciplinary and geographic perspectives, they discuss the role of citizen voices in data governance; questions of data literacy and understanding; self-organized data audits and data production; participatory institutions, as well as the wider social and political context of participation. 

We invite you to read these articles that published in the International Journal of Communication on May 18, 2023. Please log into ijoc.org to read the papers of interest. We look forward to your feedback! 
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Civic Participation in the Datafied Society—Introduction
Arne Hintz, Lina Dencik, Joanna Redden, Emiliano Treré 

Participatory Governance in the Digital Age: From Input to Oversight 
Rikki Dean

Citizen Data Audits in the Contemporary Sensorium 
Katherine M. A. Reilly, Esteban Morales   

A Democratic Approach to Digital Rights: Comparing Perspectives on Digital Sovereignty on the City Level 
Paola Pierri, Elizabeth Calderón Lüning

Data Citizenship: Data Literacies to Challenge Power Imbalance Between Society and “Big Tech” 
Elinor Carmi, Simeon Yates

Another Infrastructure Is Possible: Grassroots Citizen Sensing and Environmental Data Justice in Colombia 
Carlos Barreneche, Andres Lombana-Bermudez

Understanding Civic Participation and Realizing Data Justice 
Natalie Fenton

____________________________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor 
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Chi Zhang, Managing Editor, Special Sections
Arne Hintz, Lina Dencik, Joanna Redden, and Emiliano Treré, Guest Editors

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 33 papers that published in April

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 33 papers that published in April

The International Journal of Communication is pleased to announce the publication of 33 papers in APRIL 2023, which includes the “Special Section on Global Populism: Its Roots in Media and Religion.” To access these papers, Ctrl+Click on the titles below for direct hyperlinking or go to ijoc.org to read the Special Section.
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ARTICLES

Perceived Social Sanctions and Deindividuation: Understanding the Silencing Process on Social Media Platforms
Mustafa Oz, Esra Nur Oz Cetindere 

Doing “Reputation” in the Indian Context: An Employee Perspective
Avani Desai, Asha Kaul, Vidhi Chaudhri

Between the Homefront and Battleground, Between TV and Smartphone: Evaluating the Use of a Second Screen in the May 2021 Israel-Palestine Crisis
Vered Elishar Malka, Yaron Ariel, Dana Weimann-Saks

How Information Factors and Attitudes Relate to Symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: The Role of Uncertainty in the Case of Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
Zhiwen Xiao, Jaesub Lee

Exploring Resilience and Communicated Narrative Sense-Making in South Africans’ Stories of Apartheid
Haley Kranstuber Horstman, Athena Pedro, Tessa Goldschmidt, Olivia Watson, Maria Butauski

The Fabulous East: On Peripheral Media Capitals and the Streaming Fantasy Television Genre
Timothy Havens  

Clusters of Dark Patterns Across Popular Websites in New Zealand
Cherie Lacey, Alex Beattie, Tristam Sparks

Postmodern Without Modernization: Ages, Phases, and Stages of Political Communication and Digital Campaigns in Brazil (2010–2020)
Arthur Ituassu

I am an Influencer and I Approve This Message! Examining How Political Social Media Influencers Affect Political Interest, Political Trust, Political Efficacy, and Political Participation
Ben Wasike

Toward a Sociologically Enriched Understanding of Anti-Media Populism: The Case of Enough is Enough!
Torgeir Uberg Nærland 

Partners, Competitors, Frenemies: How Australian Advertising Professionals Understand the Market Power of Facebook and Google 
Samuel Kininmonth, Ramon Lobato

Social Audience and Emotional Bonding in Marvel’s Transmedia Phenomenon: An Exploration of Peruvian Digital Communities
Tomás Atarama-Rojas, Beatriz Feijoo 

Politicizing, Personalizing, and Mobilizing in Online Political Communication: Drivers and Killers of Users’ Engagement
Milica Vuckovic

Community Diversity Climate Impact on the Well-Being of Asian Americans Amid Anti-Asian Sentiment During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Role of Two-Way Symmetrical Communication by Local Governments
Jo-Yun Li, Weiting Tao, Yeunjae Lee

Are People Easily Duped by Disinformation? Experimental Evidence for Open Vigilance
Wuyao Ding, Yan Ge

What Leads to Audience Issue Fatigue? A Linkage Analysis Study on the Effects of News Coverage on Fatigue From Ongoing News Issues
Gwendolin Gurr, Julia Metag

Communication for Social Changemaking: A “New Spirit” in Media and Communication for Development and Social Change?
Jessica Noske-Turner


FEATURE

Building Legitimacy in the Absence of the State: Reflections on the Facebook Oversight Board
Monroe E. Price, Joshua M. Price


BOOK REVIEWS

Caty Borum, The Revolution Will Be Hilarious: Comedy for Social Change and CivicPower
Amy B. Becker 

Emily Hund, The Influencer Industry: The Quest for Authenticity on Social Media
Michael Skey

Sarah Sharma and Rianka Singh (Eds.), Re-Understanding Media: Feminist Extensions of Marshall McLuhan
Niall Stephens

Matthew E. Khan, Going Remote: How the Flexible Work Economy Can Improve Our Lives and Our Cities
Elizabeth R. Hornsby

Kevin Driscoll, The Modem World: A Prehistory of Social Media
Aaron Shaw 

David J. Park, Media Reform and the Climate Emergency: Rethinking Communication in the Struggle for a Sustainable Future
Henrik Bødker

_______________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Chi Zhang, Managing Editor, Special Sections

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.