Call for papers

Infrastructures and Inequalities: Media industries, digital cultures and politics
21-22 October 2019, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

Joint Conference of three ECREA Sections:



Confirmed keynote speakers:

In a turn to ‘infrastructuralism’ (Peters 2015), media and communication scholars are increasingly attentive to the materialities and politics of the technological, organisational and cultural infrastructures that underpin media today. Platforms, data centres, software, but also new forms of organising cultural production and labour, shape the politics of digital cultures and transform the media industries. Digital and media infrastructures have become elemental to everyday life. They are significant in reproducing existing social and cultural inequalities, as well as creating new power struggles. As digital/media infrastructures unfold in everyday life, they bring challenges across multiple domains, from the foundations of social justice to the industrial structures underpinning our everyday interactions with media and communication systems. This conference aims to address the politics and inequalities that emerge, as technological and media industries adopt, dismantle and transform infrastructures to channel and process communication flows. Media infrastructures (broadly) operate under different and uneven conditions that configure media labour, media production, and the politics of communication and access (Starosielski and Parks 2015). This conference seeks to examine digital/media infrastructures and inequalities from an inter- and multi-disciplinary perspective, inviting papers to interrogate the significance of the ‘infrastructural turn’ in media and communication studies to our understanding of media industries, democracy and digital cultures.



During this joint-ECREA section conference, we aim to engage with questions concerning inequalities and the infrastructures of digital culture, media industries and (digital) democracy through addressing topics such as (but not limited to):

  • The value, significance and relevance of infrastructure studies to media industry studies, the study of media and democracy, as well as digital culture
  • The industries and labour that operate and control specific technological media infrastructures, such as data centres, cloud computing, cable/satellite networks, content delivery networks
  • The politics and power dynamics of digital/media infrastructures
  • The significance of digital/media infrastructures in everyday life, especially related to the reproduction of social inequalities
  • The impact of digital/media infrastructures on culture, society, politics and democracy
  • The impact of digital/media infrastructures on media labour and cultural production
  • The organisational and cultural infrastructures of the media industries
  • Experiences and affective relationships that emerge in connection with media infrastructures
  • Forms of logistical media
  • Temporalities of media infrastructures
  • Emerging questions for the foundations of social justice in the digital media infrastructural turn

Submission details

  • Please submit a 300-word abstract for individual proposals.
  • Panel proposals should include a 300-word panel rationale plus individual 200 word abstracts from a minimum of four speakers.
  • Deadline for submission is 1 June 2019.
  • Notifications of acceptance will be issued by 30 June 2019.

Registration and Fees

Registration opens on the 1st of July 2019 and closes on the 15th of September 2019.

  • Early bird and ECREA-members fee: €85 (until 12th August)
  • Early bird reduced student fee (for students who are also ECREA members): €50 (until 12 August)
  • Full fees and non-ECREA members: €120 (to be paid until the 15th of September)
  • Student, non-ECREA member fee: €60 (to be paid until the 15th of September)

For information about ECREA membership, please check this link.

For more information and enquiries, contact:

Scientific Committee:

  • Ysabel Gerrard, University of Sheffield, UK
  • Catherine Johnson, University of Huddersfield, UK
  • Ana Jorge, Research Centre for Communication and Culture, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal
  • Anne Kaun, Södertörn University, Sweden
  • Maria Michalis, University of Westminster, UK
  • Christina Neumayer, IT-University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Sander de Ridder, University of Ghent, Belgium
  • Emiliano Treré, University of Cardiff, UK
  • Julia Velkova, Consumer Society Research Centre, University of Helsinki, Finland