Digital Publics and Counterpublics in Africa
9 September 2016, 16:00 - 10 September 2016, 17:00
Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, Cambridge, CB3 9DT [ Apologies for late notification but one might be able to register on the day of the workshop]

Conveners
Stephanie Diepeveen (University of Cambridge)
George H. Karekwaivanane (University of Edinburgh)
Sharath Srinivasan (University of Cambridge)
Summary
Over the last decade Africa has been experiencing what has commonly been referred to as a 'digital revolution', driven, in no small measure, by the rapid spread of mobile telephony. While digital technologies have enabled individuals to connect instantaneously and mobilise on a hitherto unimaginable scale, the manner and extent to which such mobilisation is fostering new trajectories of political change is under-researched. In addition, the seemingly unmediated nature of digital communications, coupled with notions such as 'cyberspace' and 'virtual reality', mistakenly distract us from the material infrastructure, capital investment and institutional control that make digital communications possible. In short, the same enabling technologies for 'digital publics' can, in the control of powerful actors - from national security agencies to telecommunications and internet giants - be directed at purposes and logics that are quite at odds with the political agency and power of citizens coming together.
Many east African countries, understood broadly, have been at the forefront of Africa's digital transformation, and the time is ripe to bring together scholarship on this region. The Digital Publics and Counterpublics Workshop, jointly hosted by the Centre of Governance and Human Rights, and CRASSH, will critically explore the ways that new digital technologies are progressively being incorporated in everyday practices in east Africa and the socio-political impacts this has had. This workshop will involve presentations by scholars in the disciplines of political science, media studies, history and anthropology who have increasingly sought to bring thinking on the public sphere to bear upon social and political processes in Africa.
Some of the questions we hope to engage with in the course of the workshop include: What kinds of publics and counterpublics are being convoked by means of digital media, and how do they relate to older publics that were convened by print media or radio? How are digital technologies altering existing forms of social exchange and belonging, and to what extent are they creating possibilities for changes to how people imagine community and forms of belonging? What are the transnational dimensions of digital communications, how are they made possible and made useful by foreign corporate actors and security agencies?
This workshop is aimed at furthering the study of digital media and everyday politics in Africa through interdisciplinary discussion. Thus, it is structured to promote discussion, and it is expected that participants will actively engage with the papers being presented.
Sponsors
Supported by the Centre for Research in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences (CRASSH) and the Centre of Governance and Human Rights (CGHR).
Administrative assistance: conferences@crassh.cam.ac.uk
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