About this Research Topic
This special issue aims to understand the ways in which blockchains may (or may not) contribute to positive social and ecological change in the Global South, and if so, in what forms. We wish to bring technologists and designers into conversation with international development practitioners and theorists, political geographers and social anthropologists. We invite research papers and case studies which shed light on the specific ethical, political and socio-technical issues inherent in positioning blockchains as solutions for development and ecological challenges. We particularly welcome papers with interdisciplinary perspectives, those which explore specific lived realities, contexts and cases, rather than expectations and ideas, and those which contextualize blockchain within a wider field of data-driven innovation.
We invite papers around these themes:
• Actors: human and non-human agents; platform builders/ entrepreneurs; regulators; NGOs and donors; beneficiaries; data regulators; new types of institutions and ways of governing;
• Concepts: value and valuation; disintermediation; trust; distributed ledgers, formal and informal exchange, conditionality;
• Spaces and places: The material and conceptual geographies of blockchains (North, South, global, local); spatial concepts (supply chains, distributed, direct); virtual places (such as interfaces); technological and material infrastructure;
• Power and accountability: economic, cultural and political relationships and responsibilities between actors in development and sustainability that might be understood in new ways though blockchains.
Articles published within this Research Topic in 2019 are eligible for the $10,000 “Yun Family Frontiers in Blockchain Prize".
For more details, please see our blog post here:
https://blog.frontiersin.org/2018/12/12/frontiers-in-blockchain-introduces-new-journal-wide-10000-best-paper-prize/
Keywords: blockchain, sustainable development, supply chains, Global South, international development, anthropology, geography, politics
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.