[acc-cca-l] CfP: "Technocoloniality: Global Inequalities Within Technological Models And Futures" Panel at 4S Conference, Toronto
Gustavo Ferreira
gustavo.ferreira at utoronto.ca
Tue Mar 24 14:29:20 MDT 2026
[△EXTERNAL]
Hello again,
I’m reinforcing our invitation to submit abstracts to our Open Panel at 4S Painel: Technocoloniality: Global Inequalities Within Technological Models And Futures.
Call for papers open March 3–April 30, 2026
Submissions to open panels should be presented in the form of abstracts of up to 250 words.
Notification of Acceptance: May 29, 2026
4S 2026 Conference: October 7-10, 2026
Link for more information here: https://www.4sonline.org/call_for_submissions_toronto.php
Painel: Technocoloniality: Global Inequalities Within Technological Models And Futures
Gustavo Ferreira - University of Toronto
Jose Claudio Castanheira - Universidade Federal Fluminense (Brazil)
Technologies respond to social needs that are not always born or perceived spontaneously, but are often created alongside the technology itself. Every technological innovation involves adaptation at various levels – cognitive, cultural, in terms of infrastructure, etc. – so that the social body understands its functioning and necessity.
When understood as systems, technologies present a complexity and pervasiveness capable of affecting various social contexts. However, a minor segment of society defines technological systems that favour its position of power, as their implementation reinforces or creates new forms of inequality. While technologies are socially constructed, the premise of large universal systems only deepens exclusion and imbalance between people, social groups, and countries. It is crucial to highlight the contradictory role that certain technologies play: designed, on the one hand, for the benefit of society, yet also generating and normalizing relations of inequality across class, gender, ethnicity, and age, among others.
As proposed by scholars of the Decolonial Turn, relations of inequality, oppression, and exclusion are a continuation of historical colonialism. The theme of technologies is increasingly unavoidable in discussions of power, sovereignty, and economic development, so this panel aims to broaden the debate by inviting the inclusion of frequently neglected themes on how peripheral societies negotiate, adhere to, or are forced to adhere to technological models, as if they were merely part of a “neutral” technical solution. The panel proposes the notion of technocoloniality as a fruitful basis for analyzing and debating the role of technologies on the demands for infrastructure and their global ecological impact, imaginaries of progress and the future from the periphery, the socio-historical and geopolitical struggles across social groups, the reconfiguration of production chains and the meaning of work, as well as contemporary subjectivity and sociability. We welcome proposals from communicative, historical, sociological, philosophical, and other perspectives.
Best,
Gustavo
--
Gustavo Ferreira (he/him)
Assistant Professor, Teaching Stream
Culture & Technology Concentration Coordinator
Faculty of Information
University of Toronto
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