Critical Interventions into Platformed Visual Misogyny: Methods, Concepts, and Cases

Critical Interventions into Platformed Visual Misogyny: Methods, Concepts, and Cases

This project will research online gendered hate such as digital sexisms and gender-based online violence. They are particularly interested in visual misogynistic practices that “fly under the radar”. These include content moderation of visual gender violence; visual performance of gender identities, i.e. stereotyping, diminishing, branding, reinforcing imaginaries; and the role of aesthetics and design in (re)generating gender violence (Özkula et al., 2024). The meeting at CAIS is intended to provide an opportunity to contrast and combine our collective methods and develop a methodology that better captures the complexity and diversity of cases of Platformed Visual Misogyny through comparative and multi-modal approaches (for which the groundwork has been laid in Özkula, Prieto-Blanco, Tan, & Mdege, 2024).

Rethinking Party Politics: The Impact of AI on Governance, Membership, and Leadership

Rethinking Party Politics: The Impact of AI on Governance, Membership, and Leadership

How is artificial intelligence reshaping the way political parties operate, engage with citizens, and lead in democratic systems? Our working group, Rethinking Party Politics: The Impact of AI on Governance, Membership, and Leadership, tackles this critical question. We bring together leading scholars in party politics, AI ethics, and democracy studies to explore AI’s transformative influence on political strategy, grassroots mobilization, and decision-making processes. Through interdisciplinary dialogue, expert presentations, and hands-on scenario planning, we’ll investigate how AI impacts political parties using Katz and Mair’s (1993) three-level framework: the party in public office, the party on the ground, and the party central office. Despite the rapid growth of research on AI and democracy, few studies have focused on its impact on political parties key actors in representative systems. By addressing this gap, we aim to make a significant contribution to understanding the future of political organizations in the age of AI, inspiring further scholarship.

Doing Digital Industrial Policy. Europe in a Geo-Tech World

Doing Digital Industrial Policy. Europe in a Geo-Tech World

Our working group aims to bring together a variety of leading scholars from different disciplines and countries to study how industrial policy is actually done in Europe and beyond, and what the specific role of technology is therein. This promises not only to significantly advance the existing and rapidly growing literature on industrial policy and digital policy-making. It will also have practical relevance for the effectiveness and legitimacy of industrial and digital policy.

Generative Imageries: Challenges and potentials of AI-generated images

Generative Imageries: Challenges and potentials of AI-generated images

The discourse on artificial intelligence (AI) is heavily focussed on text-to-text generators such as chat GPT. Less attention is paid to generative visual communication, which is currently gaining in popularity: AI images can be generated effortlessly with tools such as Stable Diffusion and are already being used in many contexts without their origin being obvious to the viewer. These images have the potential to fundamentally change the production, use and reception of images. The planned working group aims to close this gap and examine the topic of AI-generated images in a multidisciplinary way. In five workshops (three face-to-face, two virtual), we will analyse the characteristics and challenges of generative images (object-centred perspective), the production and presentation contexts (communicator-centred perspective) and the reception and media competence of users (reception- and usage-oriented perspective). The results will be presented in scientific publications and at a specialist conference. In addition, we are drawing up guidelines on the ethical use of generative images and are endeavouring to perpetuate the collaboration and obtain further funding.

Working Group on Digital Sovereignty

Working Group on Digital Sovereignty

Since the 1990s, politicians, policymakers, scholars, technical experts and representatives of the private sector and civil society have been discussing and struggling over the role of the state in the global governance of digital networks. During the early 2000s, and...