Dialogues on Digital Society
Dialogues on Digital Society is an international, interdisciplinary journal engaging with emerging and field-changing thinking about the intersections of digital technologies, human experience, and societies. It publishes cutting-edge articles and review forums that critique or expand current thinking on questions of digitisation and set the agenda for future research.
The journal operates with open peer commentary, encouraging a dialogue between authors and a set of reviewers in order to foster critical dialogue to expand the field of inquiry.
The primary aim of Dialogues in Digital Society is to stimulate open and critical debate on emerging issues and theories relating to our understanding of digital societies. The focus is centred on how best to make sense of how digital technologies and infrastructures are reshaping social, cultural, political and economic life and setting the agenda for ground-breaking future research.
Interdisciplinary in scope, and working across bodies of knowledge and a diverse range of approaches, the journal will foster the intellectual exchange of ideas through open peer commentary. Each issue will contain article forums that consist of a lead article, several commentary responses from a range of contributors, and an author response. The review forums will use the same open peer format to explore books and other cultural artefacts (ie. artworks, games, films…) that make important contributions to understanding digital societies. By providing an avenue for emerging ideas and fostering critical engagement, the journal will provide a focal point for dialogue and debate about the relationship between the digital and society.
Kylie Jarrett | University College Dublin, Ireland |
Rob Kitchin | Maynooth University, Ireland |
Sarah Pink | University of Sydney, Australia |
Jing Hiah | Erasmus University Rotterdam,Netherlands |
Catherine Knight Steele | University of Maryland - College Park, USA |
Louise Amoore | Durham University, UK |
Payal Arora | Utrecht University, The Netherlands |
David Beer | University of York, UK |
Paško Bilic | Institute for Development and International Relations, Croatia |
Manuela Bojadžijev | Humboldt-University Berlin, Germany |
Taina Bucher | University of Oslo, Norway |
Ergin Bulut | Goldsmiths, University of London, UK |
Wendy Hui Kyong Chun | Simon Fraser University, Canada |
Marika Cifor | University of Washington, USA |
Donatella Della Ratta | John Cabot University, Rome |
Paul Dourish | University of California-Irvine, USA |
Eran Fisher | Open University of Israel, Israel |
Kruskaya Hidalgo Cordero | Observatorio de Plataformas, USA |
Brian Jordan Jefferson | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA |
Helen Kennedy | University of Sheffield, UK |
Jian Lin | Chinese University of Hong Kong, China |
Deborah Lupton | University of New South Wales, Australia |
Sophia Maalsen | University of Sydney, Australia |
Phoebe Moore | University of Essex, UK |
Job Mwaura | University of Witwatersrand, South Africa |
Susanna Paasonen | University of Turku, Finland |
Seeta Peña Gangadharan | London School of Economics and Political Science, UK |
Sung-Yueh Perng | National Yang-Ming University, Taiwan |
Jernej Prodnik | University of Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Gayatri Jai Singh Rathore | Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France |
Raquel Recuero | Universidade Federal de Pelotas, Brazil |
Paola Ricaurte Quijano | Tecnológico de Monterrey, México |
Sebastian Sevignani | Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany |
Cheryll Soriano | De La Salle University, Philippines |
Aditie Surie | Indian Institute for Human Settlements, India |
Julia Velkova | Linkoping University, Sweden |
Jill Walker Rettberg | University of Bergen, Norway |
Ben Williamson | University of Edinburgh, UK |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.