Digital Futures: Contesting Power and Visions (Part I)

Thursday, 10 July 2025: 13:00-14:45
Location: SJES005 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
RC07 Futures Research (host committee)
RC10 Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management
RC14 Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture
RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology
WG10 Digital Sociology

Language: English, French and Spanish

Digital formations from Internet and social media to Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, and robotics are profoundly reshaping the world, exacerbating inequalities, allowing unprecedented surveillance, and disrupting old models of mass communication, deliberative publics, election campaigns, identity, work, and social struggles. The observation that the new digital technologies have global reach, but are not globally uniform, calls for international and interregional research dialogue and comparisons. Diverse social actors cooperate, compete, or are in conflict over the social shaping of digital formations. Outcomes vary according to differential access to resources, political-legal frameworks, and creative agency. Papers are welcome that address questions such as: Who contests the power of oligopolistic corporate players? How are regulatory agencies intervening (or failing)? How do approaches in the US, Europe, China, India, and elsewhere differ? Who captures the benefits of productivity gains, who loses out, and on what factors does this depend on? What kind of social actors emerge to challenge current trends, expose preventable implications, and produce alternative visions? What role can social science play in discovering the leverage that exists to counter hegemonic trends, or how such leverage could be created? - ISA Research Committees Futures Research (RC07), Participation, Organizational Democracy and Self-Management (RC10), Sociology of Communication, Knowledge and Culture (RC14), Sociology of Science and Technology (RC23), and Working Group Digital Society (WG10) are planning one or more Joint Sessions on contesting power and vision in the formation of digital futures.
Session Organizer:
Markus S. SCHULZ, Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, Mexico
Oral Presentations
Imagining Beyond the Artificial Intelligentsia
Ruha BENJAMIN, Princeton University, USA
Platform Politics: Corporate Power, Grassroots Movements and the Sharing Economy
Luke YATES, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
Israel’s AI Powered Weaponry: A Joint Production of Empire
Andy CLARNO, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Asserting “Digital Sovereignty” to Rein in Platform Power? European Regulatory Instruments and Their Limitations
Benjamin LOVELUCK, Université Paris Panthéon Assas, France; Clément LE LUDEC, France
Towards Future Livespaces: Visions on the Power of AI to Antecipate
Emilia ARAUJO, University of Minho, Portugal; Cristina URZE, Universidade Nova Lisboa, Portugal