Hello all,

Along with Heather Horst, we are putting together a special issue of New Media 
and Society on Mobile Communication and the Developing World. The Call for 
Papers is reproduced below.

Rich L.

The Ning address is: 
http://mobilesociety.ning.com/profiles/blogs/special-issue-of-new-media-and

Call for papers

Special issue of New Media and Society:
Mobile Communication and the Developing World

Rich Ling & Heather A. Horst, guest editors
We are seeking papers for a special edition of the journal New Media & Society 
focusing on mobile communication and media, and its impact on the developing 
world. We are interested in papers that empirically describe the use of mobile 
practices as well as the convergence of mobile and other platforms in the 
developing world (e.g. Africa, Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe or other 
locations in the "global south"). Successful papers will examine the 
integration and use of mobile communication technology and its implications 
(both positive and negative) in individuals' lives. We are seeking papers that 
investigate the global as well as the local appropriations of mobile media use 
and its relationship to social change and/or development. Papers might address 
issues such as:

*       What are the social, cultural, gender related and political dimensions 
of mobile communication in the developing world?
*       What are the determinants, obstacles and implications of the adoption 
and use of mobile communications?
*       What are the dimensions of inequalities and how does mobile 
communication address these inequalities?
*       How does mobile communication facilitate activities such as care 
giving, coordination, social cohesion, money transfer, commerce, locally and 
globally?
Submissions may be in the form of empirical research studies or theory-building 
papers and should be 5000 - 7000 words (in English). Papers must reflect new 
scholarship and not have been previously published (it is possible to submit 
revised conference papers). Authors interested in submitting to the special 
issue should send their 200-word abstract to either guest editor (Rich Ling or 
Heather Horst) on or before 1 March 2009.  A sub-set of these abstracts will be 
selected for further development. Papers based on the abstracts that have been 
accepted for further consideration, will be due on 15 July 2009. Authors of 
papers selected for formal review may be invited to participate in a 
Pre-Conference Workshop at Association of Internet Research meetings on 7 
October 2009 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin USA.

About the editors of this NM&S special issue:

Rich Ling ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) is a 
sociologist at Telenor's research institute located near Oslo, Norway, and a 
guest Professor at the IT University of Copenhagen. He has also been the Pohs 
visiting professor of communication studies at the University of Michigan. He 
is the author of the recently published book New Tech, New Ties: How Mobile 
communication is reshaping social cohesion as well as The Mobile Connection: 
The cell phone's impact on society, and along with Scott Campbell he is the 
editor of The Reconstruction of Space and Time Through Mobile Communication 
Practices. For the past fifteen years, he has worked in the research arm of 
Telenor and has been active in researching issues associated with new 
information communication technology and society with a particular focus on 
mobile telephony.

Heather A. Horst ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) is a sociocultural 
anthropologist at the Humanities Research Institute at the University of 
California, Irvine. She is the co-author (with Daniel
Miller) of The Cell Phone: An Anthropology of Communication that examines the 
implications of mobile phones for development in Jamaica and is co-author with 
Mizuko Ito, et al. of a forthcoming book published by MIT Press, entitled 
Hanging Out, Messing Around and Geeking Out: Living and Learning with New Media 
 She received her Ph. D. in Social Anthropology from University College London. 
Before joining UCHRI, she worked as a research fellow at the University of the 
West Indies and University College London and a postdoctoral scholar at 
University of Southern California, and University of California, Berkeley where 
her focus has been on the appropriation of new media and communication 
technologies in Jamaica and the United States.




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