[SIGCIS-Members] SIGCIS 2025 (Online conference) CFP: deadline extended - July 14, 2025

Ekaterina Babintseva ebabints at purdue.edu
Wed Jul 2 00:20:20 PDT 2025


Dear SIGCIS Community,

The deadline for our Call for Participation for the 16th Annual Conference of the Special Interest Group for Computing, Information, and Society (September 25-27, 2025)  has been extended to July 14, 2025.

We would like to emphasize that in line with the SIGCIS tradition of opting for a virtual format every other year to increase the conference accessibility, this year's meeting will be held entirely  online.

The theme of this year's meeting is "Power Surge,"<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1plGw7dI_bUWUxNW295A0IrdeBMggoZ-qRI2hPAKPrEM/edit?tab=t.0> and we are delighted to announce Lily Geismer (Claremont McKenna College) as our keynote speaker.

Proposals for papers, panels, graduate student WIP papers (new this year!), or other forms of participation are due July 14 (11:59pm AoE) at https://forms.gle/R63W9xYzAepkCwB98<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfHHJCRPIpIYQxCRHsK36NadIe57Lu7lTuUY5BG7jyB9117sA/viewform>.

See below or follow this link<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1plGw7dI_bUWUxNW295A0IrdeBMggoZ-qRI2hPAKPrEM/edit?tab=t.0> for the full CFP. Please reach out if you have any questions, and please spread the word!

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SIGCIS 2025: Power Surge
September 25-27 2025 | Online via Zoom

The Special Interest Group for Computing, Information, and Society (SIGCIS)
welcomes submissions to their 16th Annual Conference
meetings.sigcis.org<https://meetings.sigcis.org/>

Proposal Due Date: July 14 30, 2025 | Submit Here<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfHHJCRPIpIYQxCRHsK36NadIe57Lu7lTuUY5BG7jyB9117sA/viewform?usp=send_form>

Keynote Speaker
Lily Geismer<https://www.cmc.edu/academic/faculty/profile/lily-geismer>
Professor of History,
Claremont McKenna College

Call for Participation:

>From the rapid uptake of commercial AI tools in the workplace to the increasingly dominant role the tech industry is playing in politics, the combustible confluence of technology, power, money, and politics is moving fast and things are breaking. Scholars and practitioners know to be wary of cycles of hype and fear around new technologies. But to many, what’s happening today feels like a definitive break from the past, akin to an unexpected power spike that exceeds the normal operating voltage of a circuit. For SIGCIS 2025, we ask: What are the stakes of studying the history of computing at a time when technology's perceived excesses are unraveling political institutions, legal doctrines, and professional norms? When technology works as intended for some and "glitches" for others (Benjamin 2019), when political agency is superseded by the technologists' visions of autonomy (Marx 2010), and when labor is devalued in the name of machine productivity (Bix 2000), we assert that locating this moment within the longer history of computing can help us grapple with the contemporary politics of power.

The 16th annual conference of the Special Interest Group for Computing, Information, and Society (SIGCIS) employs a broad definition of the history of the politics of computing to facilitate a timely discussion of the relationship between political power and digital technologies. What role does the tech industry play in engineering political, cultural, and economic orders? How do the changes in systems of government funding and patronage steer the goals, tasks, and values of professional and research communities in computer science and engineering? How do political and economic ideologies create demand for certain technologies and shape their adoption? Whether one sees this moment as a breaking point or as a fundamental continuity, this year's theme "Power Surge" also connotes the potential for resistance and response to excesses of computing’s technologies, institutions, corporate actors, and legal doctrines. What modes of effective push-back does the history of computing present to us?

"SIGCIS 2025: Power Surge" invites scholars, museum and archive professionals, journalists, IT practitioners, artists, and independent researchers across the disciplinary spectrum to consider how the history of computing and information technology can offer fresh perspectives on tech policy and regulation, the institutional contexts in which computing technology is developed and deployed, and how computing technologies mediate the politics of everyday life. SIGCIS is welcoming of new directions in scholarship. We are particularly interested in submissions that bridge and engage with adjacent but often siloed fields that center the study of power, politics, and policy such as American Political Development (APD), global political economy, political theory, technology policy, and related fields; as well as broader analyses from the histories of technology, computing, information, and science; science and technology studies; oral history and archival studies; critical studies of big data and machine learning; studies of women, gender, and sexuality; studies of race, ethnicity, and postcoloniality; film, media, and game studies; software and code studies; network and internet histories; music, sound studies, and art history; or other adjacent domains. We maintain an inclusive atmosphere for scholarly inquiry supporting disciplinary interventions from beyond the traditional history of technology and promoting diversity in STEM.

Submission Format and Procedures:

SIGCIS welcomes proposals for individual 15-minute papers, 3-4 paper panel proposals, and non-traditional proposals such as roundtables, software demonstrations, art and music performances, hands-on workshops, etc. Participants are limited to one presenting role, but may take on additional roles as moderator, discussant, graduate student workshop mentor, or similar.

NEW THIS YEAR: WIP Workshops for graduate students! In addition to the open SIGCIS program, we invite graduate students to submit an abstract, following the submission guidelines below, for a closed works-in-progress (WIP) workshop, where accepted participants will receive feedback on their drafts from established scholars in the history of computing and adjacent fields. Workshops will take place on Saturday, September 27, the final day of the conference. Students who are accepted to the WIP Workshop must submit a full or excerpted draft of their paper/chapter (4000-8000 words, excluding references) by August 31, 2025 in order to be included in the final program. Drafts will be circulated to mentors in the weeks before the conference. We also invite mentor nominations (including self-nominations), and graduate students submitting WIP papers are especially encouraged to submit nominations.

Submissions are due July 14, 2025 here: https://forms.gle/R63W9xYzAepkCwB98<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfHHJCRPIpIYQxCRHsK36NadIe57Lu7lTuUY5BG7jyB9117sA/viewform>.

Submissions must include:

  *
An anonymized 300-350 word abstract, summary, or prospectus (as appropriate for the submission type). Full panel proposals should additionally include 200-250 word abstracts for each paper that will be part of the panel. If you are proposing a virtual performance, skill share, social activity, or other non-traditional event, please also tell us how much time you anticipate needing. Please do not include names or other identifying information in this file.
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A separate file of 100-150 word biographies with full name, affiliation, email, and presentation title for you and each other participant in your submission (if applicable).

If you are submitting a co-presented paper, pre-constituted panel, or other submission involving multiple participants, please only have one person submit for the group.

Questions about the submission process should be sent to sigcis.conference at gmail.com.


Virtual Logistics and Accessibility

In order to make SIGCIS as accessible as possible within the means of an all-volunteer organization, the SIGCIS Conference Committee has implemented these measures:

  *
SIGCIS is hosted online every other year, starting in 2021.
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Virtual SIGCIS conferences are not co-located or co-timed with our parent organization, SHOT, so as not to conflict with SHOT’s in-person conference.
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While our typical in-person format is a one-day, 3-stream conference, our virtual format is a multi-day, single stream event with time-zone-sensitive scheduling.
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The virtual conference has a sliding-scale registration fee, and membership in SHOT is not required to register.
  *
The submission form includes a field where you can list your time zone(s) and a field where you may make requests for accessibility accommodations.


SIGCIS meetings organizing committee
Morgan G. Ames<https://morganya.org/>, University of California, Berkeley (SIGCIS Vice-Chair of Meetings)
Xiaochang Li<https://comm.stanford.edu/people/xiaochang-li>, Stanford University
Ekaterina (Katya) Babintseva<https://www.cla.purdue.edu/directory/profiles/ekaterina-babintseva.html>, Purdue University
Gili Vidan<https://infosci.cornell.edu/content/vidan>, Cornell University
Colette Perold<https://www.colorado.edu/cmdi/people/media-studies/colette-perold>, University of Colorado, Boulder
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