CfP: Internet, Politics, Policy 2010 Conference

Internet, Politics, Policy 2010 Conference

The Oxford Internet Institute (University of Oxford) is pleased to announce
that speakers for the 'Internet, Politics, Policy 2010' Conference (16-17
Sept 2010, Oxford, UK) will include:

Prof. Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan.
A leading scholar on voting, civic competence, parliamentary governance and
political communication, his research has clarified our understanding of how
information and institutions affect policy and politics, and how people make
decisions when they lack information.

Prof. Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.
A legal scholar specialising in the role of information in a networked
economy, his most recent book 'Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the
Digital Age' has received major attention worldwide.

Prof. Patrick Dunleavy, London School of Economics.
One of the UK's most important political scientists, and author of books in
the field such as 'Theories of the Democratic State' (with J.Dryzek), his
work with the LSE Public Policy Group includes detailed analyses of public
sector productivity, citizen redress, policy evaluation, and e-government.

The conference will subject the relationship between the Internet, Politics
and Policy to multi-disciplinary scrutiny. We welcome paper submissions that
report on innovative research into any aspect of the impact of the Internet
on public policy and / or politics. We also welcome suggestions from people
who would like to organise panel sessions.

Internet, Politics, Policy 2010: An Impact Assessment University of Oxford,
16-17 September 2010
http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/events/details.cfm?id=338

Abstract / Panel deadline: 15 March 2010
Contact:mailto:ipp2010 AT oii.ox.ac.uk

Poster deadline: 15 April 2010
Contact:mailto:ipp2010 AT oii.ox.ac.uk

£200 PRIZE for BEST POSTER!

The conference will be organised in twin tracks: the Politics track will
consider the use of the Internet by political organizations, examining the
impact on policy of (for example) online interest group activity and
political mobilization, e-voting, political parties and campaigning and
e-government. The Policy track will look at policy responses to
Internet-driven social change, including e-health, on-line education,
cybercrime, security, privacy and digital inclusion. Plenary sessions will
merge these tracks, investigating the intersection of policy and politics
and the Internet.

The conference is convened by the OII in partnership with the European
Consortium of Political Research (ECPR), the journal Policy and Internet,
and the Policy Studies Organization (PSO).

Policy and Internet:
http://www.psocommons.org/policyandinternet/