2019 CPRN – ICA Post-Conference

On May 29, 2019, we hosted a ICA Post-Conference titled “Privacy Research Across Cultural, Political, and Geographic Boundaries“.

Room 203 Car Barn
(Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, Georgetown University)
3520 Prospect St. NW, Washington, DC 20057

Hosted by Communication, Culture & Technology Program at Georgetown University
Sponsored by the CUMEN Research Project – NovaTris
Co-Sponsored by the ICA Communication and Technology Division

Organized by Kelly Quinn, Dmitry Epstein, and Carsten Wilhelm
on behalf of the Comparative Privacy Research Network

Programm

8:30-9:00 Welcome and opening remarks

  • Kelly Quinn, Dmitry Epstein, and Carsten Wilhelm on behalf of the Comparative Privacy Research Network
  • Michael Koliska on behalf of the Communication, Culture & Technology Program at Georgetown University

9:00-10:00 Qualifying privacy

Chaired by Carsten Wilhelm

  • Mediating ideas about privacy in the global world of practice by Rivka Ribak
  • Exploring Flemish Muslim children’s experiences and negotiation of offline and online group privacyby Ralf De Wolf, Stephanie Van Hove and Ben Robaeyst
  • Navigating in troubled water without a compass: How Danish citizens perceive of privacy online in a time with little or no trust in online service providers by Sander Andreas Schwartz, David Mathieu, Jannie Møller Hartley and Norbert Wildermuth
  • Information behaviour paradox: Privacy and perception of risk by Chang Lin, Jenna Jacobson and Rhonda McEwen

10:00-10:15 Break

10:15-11:00 Quantifying privacy

Chaired by Michael Koliska

  • Online privacy concerns, privacy behaviors, and online political expression in a networked authoritarian regime: The case of Russia by Erik Nisbet, Olga Kamenchuk and Aysenur Dal
  • Self-efficacy, risk perceived, trust, privacy worry and privacy protection in college students’ use of WeChat: An empirical analysis based on structural equation model by Jinghong Xu, Shiming Hu and Weipeng Hou
  • Digital surveillance and privacy behaviors among Muslim Americans by Elizabeth Stoycheff, Juan Liu, Kai Xu, and Kunto A. Wibowo

11:00-11:15 Break

11:15-12:00 Conceptualization and operationalisation of privacy

Chaired by Kelly Quinn

  • Cookies and consent: A Transatlantic story by Meg Jones
  • The spatial self and perceptions of geolocation privacy: An examination of the gap between user awareness and behavior by Carrie O’Connell, Kristina Sawyer, Unaiza Faiz, Maitrai Kansal and Manaswi Karra
  • Conceptualization and operationalization of privacy by Sandra Petronio and Jeffrey Child

12:00-13:00 Lunch break

13:00-13:30 Introduction to the Comparative Privacy Research Network

  • Opening remarks – Dmitry Epstein
  • Presentation about the Comparative National Election Project – Erik Nisbet
  • Presentation about cultural aspects of privacy research – Carsten Wilhelm
  • Presentation about territories of privacy – Kelly Quinn

13:30-14:30 Workshop on common frameworks

Led by Kelly Quinn, Dmitry Epstein, and Carsten Wilhelm

  • Small group discussions on core concepts for qualitative, quantitative, and HCI approaches to comparative analysis of privacy

14:30-14:45 Break

14:45-15:00 Data management requirements

  • Data management for collaborative and comparative studies by Diana Casteel

15:00-16:15 Discussion of operationalization of privacy

Led by Kelly Quinn, Dmitry Epstein, and Carsten Wilhelm

16:15-16:30 Wrap-up