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  • 15.07.2026 21:10 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Digital Futures for Children centre

    The Digital Futures for Children centre is hiring a Research Officer for our project DigiPulse: Real-time Ecological Momentary Assessment of children’s smartphone engagement and mental health.

    The project is funded by the Huo Family Foundation and led by Professor Sonia Livingstone. Over the next three years, across Brazil, UK and Kenya, we are bringing together passive smartphone tracking, Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) and longitudinal surveys to measure 750 children, aged 10 to 17, to study how smartphone use impacts their mental health and wellbeing.  

    DigiPulse gathers a multidisciplinary, multi-country team of researchers and child rights advocates across the three project countries to deliver innovative methods and produce novel, comparable data, while employing a child rights approach to engage children in project design and analysis across the project lifecycle. We are now looking to expand our team. 

    Eligible candidates will:

    • Develop and refine the EMA instruments at the heart of the study
    • Shape our hypotheses and contribute to the research literature
    • Run participatory work directly with children and young people
    • Conduct the statistical analysis and help produce findings that partners across three continents will build on 

    Eligible candidates should have:

    • A completed PhD in a relevant field
    • Experience developing surveys or questionnaire instruments
    • Experience running longitudinal studies 
    • Hands-on experience with EMA, experience sampling or equivalent

    Apply here: https://jobs.lse.ac.uk/Vacancies/W/2504/0/471333/15539/research-officer-digipulse-digital-futures-for-children-centre/Referral

    Read more about the project here: https://www.digital-futures-for-children.net/our-work/Digipulse

    Closing date for applications: 22 July 2026

    Expected starting date: 1 September 2026

    If you have any questions please reach out to Project lead Dr Kim R. Sylwander k.g.ringmar-sylwander@lse.ac.uk

  • 15.07.2026 21:05 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    November 26-27, 2026

    University of Bucharest, Romania

    Deadline: July 31, 2026

    Venue: Department of Communication Studies, Faculty of Letters, University of Bucharest (RO sessions on-site; English track fully online, Friday; free of charge)

    Deadline for abstracts: 31 July 2026

    Notifications: 7 August 2026

    Submission: letters_commconf@litere.unibuc.ro

    You can find attached the CfP here.

    It’s a focused conference on how digital media, AI, archives, and platforms reshape communication, space, intimacy, death, and social life. English track is fully online, held on a Friday, free of charge. We welcome humanities and social sciences perspectives. Abstracts (250–500 words) by 31 July 2026.

  • 15.07.2026 21:01 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Alessandro D’Arma, Andrea Esser, Jeanette Steemers

    Screen Encounters with Britain explores how global streaming platforms are reshaping viewing patterns and audience encounters, using the circulation, consumption and reception of British films and TV shows in European markets as a case study.

    Focusing on young audiences in Denmark, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands, the book provides original audience insights drawing on a wide range of methods, including a survey, digital diaries and interviews and offers a critical perspective on the evolving nature of young audiences' engagement with longform screen content. The evidence presented points towards re-asserted Anglo-American dominance, driven by the power of large US-owned platforms and English as the language of advantage. Building on these findings, the book challenges established theory around the ‘home advantage’ of domestic media and rethinks linguistic and cultural proximity. 

    The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

    PURCHASE HERE

    DOWNLOAD HERE

  • 15.07.2026 20:52 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    September 15-17, 2026

    Hamburg, Germany 

    Dear colleagues,

    We are pleased to share that the preliminary programme for SEASON 2026 is now available. 

    SEASON (the Search Engines and Society Annual Conference) is an interdisciplinary conference series examining search engines as cultural, societal, political, and technical artefacts, and their role in everyday practices.

    On behalf of the Search Engines and Society Network, we invite you to join us for the 2026 edition, to be held at HAW Hamburg, Germany, from 15–17 September 2026.

    Following the success of SEASON 2025, which brought together an engaged and diverse international community of researchers, practitioners, and students, this year's edition continues SEASON's mission as a dedicated conference series for critical and interdisciplinary research on search engines and their societal implications. 

    The three-day programme features keynotes, paper presentations, posters, and interactive sessions, including: 

    - Political bias and elections

    - Everyday practice and communities

    - Literacy and education

    - AI overviews and trust

    - Health and high-stakes information

    - AI answers, podcasts, and behaviour

    - Methods and infrastructure

    - SEO, GEO, and visibility

    - Critical and theoretical perspectives

    The programme also includes a poster session, conference dinner, a SEASON community meeting, a film screening, and a dedicated workshop day on 17 September covering tools and methods for search engine research.

    Keynote speakers:

    - Prof. Dr. Thomas Höppner (Geradin Partners) : "Impact of Search Engines on Society: Lessons from Antitrust Cases"

    - Prof. Dr. Katrin Weller (GESIS: Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences & Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf) :"From Regulation to Research: Navigating the Digital Services Act's Article 40 in Search Studies"

    Now that the programme is out, registration is open, with early bird rates available until 1 August 2026 (€200 regular / €100 student). From 2 August 2026, standard rates apply (€250 regular / €150 student).

    Please find the full programme here: https://easychair.org/smart-program/SEASON2026/

    Register for SEASON 2026 via EasyChair: https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=season2026 

    SEASON 2026 Website: https://searchenginesandsociety.net/season-2026/

    We look forward to welcoming you in Hamburg.

    With best regards,

    The SEASON 2026 Organizing Team

  • 09.07.2026 21:10 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies (Special issue)

    Deadline: October 1, 2026

    Guest Editors: Yingwen Wang (London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, UK); Dr. Hui Lin (King’s College London, UK); Dr Zoetanya Sujon (London College of Communication, University of the Arts London, UK); Dr Rafal Zaborowski (King’s College London, UK)

    Full CFP: https://journals.sagepub.com/page/con/call-for-papers/algorithmic-sociality?_gl=1*1grcp7y*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTkxODIwMTg4Ny4xNzgzNDk4OTMz*_ga_60R758KFDG*czE3ODM0OTg5MzIkbzEkZzEkdDE3ODM0OTkwMzEkajU3JGwxJGgxMjE5MjI2ODMx

    Across the social media landscape, platform architectures are increasingly organised around algorithmic recommendation systems. Platforms such as TikTok, Douyin, Instagram, X, Spotify, YouTube, Tinder and Substack curate users’ experiences through algorithmic recommendations of content, people and cultural objects decoupled from users’ networks and explicit choices. This marks a significant departure from earlier forms of social media centred on self-presentation, the social graph, mutual following and networked publics (boyd, 2010). In recommendation-driven environments, encounters with unfamiliar others are generated, ranked and governed through platform systems, transforming the conditions under which social ties form and are maintained.

    This special issue proposes algorithmic sociality as a concept for understanding how recommendation systems reconfigure social relations. Building on scholarship on programmed sociality, the algorithmic self, platformed connection and the contested meaning of “the social” in social media, the issue asks what happens to social relations when the pathways through which others become visible, encounterable and consequential are algorithmically organised. Rather than treating recommendation systems only as content-filtering technologies or behavioural optimisation tools, the special issue approaches them as relational infrastructures that shape who meets whom, under what conditions, and with what social, cultural, economic and political consequences.

    The concept of algorithmic sociality also helps distinguish recommendation-driven human–human relations from the increasingly prominent discussion of artificial sociality, which often centres on human–machine attachment, AI agents, chatbots and synthetic companions. Algorithmic sociality foregrounds intersubjective relations between people, while examining how those relations are structured, filtered and made possible through platform logics, interface design, metrics, governance arrangements and monetisation systems. Recommendation systems do not replace the social other; they reorganise the conditions under which social others become visible and meaningful. As such, the special issue aims to expand existing debates on platforms, algorithms and sociality beyond questions of visibility and engagement.

    We invite contributions that test, refine, extend or critique algorithmic sociality across different platforms, national contexts, social groups and methodological traditions. The issue is particularly interested in work that moves beyond short-video platforms; examines underexplored platform ecologies such as music streaming, dating apps, newsletter networks, livestreaming, gaming, messaging or professional platforms; addresses creative production and media industries under recommender logics; or brings perspectives from the Global South and other non-dominant platform contexts. We strongly encourage submissions from early career researchers and researchers from historically underrepresented groups and regions, including ethnic minority, disabled, queer and Global South scholars.

    Potential Topics:

    • The shift from social-graph-based to recommendation-driven platform architectures
    • Human-algorithm relations and their implications for human-human communication
    • Recommendation systems as relational infrastructure
    • Theoretical and conceptual approaches to algorithmic sociality, including programmed sociality, algorithmized selfhood and disconnected sociability
    • Opportunities and challenges that algorithms introduce to social relations, such as platform-bounded relationships, cross-platform friending and the organisation of social distance
    • The reconfiguration of content production, relational labour, distributed sociality and modular connection through algorithmic platforms
    • Algorithmic curation, optimization, recommendation bias, (in)visibility, unequal distribution and prioritization
    • The role of inequality, age, migration, gender, sexuality, class, race and other structural dimensions in shaping algorithmic sociality
    • The regulation of social behaviour on algorithmic platforms, including governance, moderation, surveillance and compliance
    • Affective, embodied and economic dimensions of algorithmically mediated connection
    • Comparative studies of TikTok/Douyin, Instagram, YouTube, X, Spotify, Tinder, Substack, WeChat, RedNote, Bilibili and other platforms
    • Global North/Global South comparisons and studies of non-Western or regionally specific platform ecosystems
    • Generative AI, conversational agents and emerging systems that extend or reconfigure algorithmic sociality beyond feed-based architectures

    Please submit an extended abstract of approximately 500 words, including references, together with a short author biography of approximately 100 words for each author.

    Abstracts should clearly identify the research question or problem, argument, theoretical framework, methodology or source materials, and the proposed article’s contribution to the special issue theme.

    Please send proposals to algorithmicsociality.cnmt28@gmail.comby 1st October 2026.

    Authors of accepted abstracts will be contacted on 1st November 2026 and invited to submit full manuscripts by 15th March 2027.

  • 09.07.2026 20:54 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Time, focus and community for your research on the societal impact of digital transformation

    A fellowship at the Center for Advanced Internet Studies (CAIS) provides the freedom to dedicate yourself to your research and the opportunity to join a vibrant interdisciplinary community. Step away from daily work routines to gain new perspectives and build lasting connections.

    As a fellow, you can spend either six or three months in Bochum, Germany. During this time, we will cover your sabbatical leave from work through financial compensation (e.g. for a teaching substitute) or provide grants of up to 2.000 € per month. In addition, we will provide a fully furnished apartment free of charge. You can invite guests for collaboration and receive financial support for research expenses. Private offices and meeting rooms with modern facilities offer optimal working conditions.

    The funding program is open to excellent scholars and practitioners, to all career stages, disciplines and areas of investigation, as well as to pure research and to projects that are more applied in orientation.

    You can apply for our regular open call, or for our special call “Futures of Work”.

    The next deadline for applications is 31 August 2026. The earliest possible starting date for new fellowships is October 2027. Please use the application form on our website.

    Find out more: https://cais-research.de/en/cais-college/fellowships/

    Further questions? Please contact esther.laufer@cais-research.de

  • 09.07.2026 20:50 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    ESSACHESS – Journal for Communication Studies (Special Issue, Vol. 19 No. 1 (37))

    https://essachess.com/3/index.php/jcs

    • Introduction - Media, Democracy, and Citizen Perspectives in Contemporary Europe

    Elisabetta RISI, Giulia FERRI, Andrea MICONI (Authors)

    Dossier

    • Democracy in Question, Media in Doubt: Citizen Perceptions of Media Autonomy in Slovenia

    Brankica PETKOVIĆ, Mojca PAJNIK (Author)

    • Journalists and Audiences in Portugal: Dissonant Perceptions

    Nuno Cintra TORRES, Tatiana CHERVYKOVA, Manuel José DAMÁSIO (Authors)

    • Digital Trust and Authority: Political Communication Practices and Participation Among Italian Citizens

    Elisabetta RISI, Giulia FERRI, Andrea MICONI (Authors)

    • “A Part of Me Will Always Be Suspicious”:Citizens, Media, and Democratic Trust in France

    Morgane LE GUYADER, Inna LYUBAREVA, Romain BILLOT (Authors)

    • Assemblages of Trust: A Discursive-Material Analysis of Czech Citizens’ Perceptions of Media and Democracy

    Karolína ŠIMKOVÀ, Jeffrey WIMMER (Authors)

    • Mediated Contact with Politicians and Citizens’ Experiences of Democracy

    Kristiina RAUD, Alessandro NANÌ (Authors)

    • Exploring the Whole Picture: A Contemporary Perspective on Democracy, Societal Change, and Europe`s Information Environments

    Maren BEAUFORT (Authors)

    (About MeDeMAP, see https://www.medemap.eu/)

    Varia

    • Critical Minds, Tolerant Voices: Media and Information Literacy as a Tool against Hate Speech

    Reem AL-ZOU’BI (Author)

    • Les dynamiques de contre-pouvoir dans le discours contestataire numérique des étudiants en médecine au Maroc : cas des contestations de 2023

    Anas MOUTIA (Author)

    • Effect of Information Quality, Ease of Use, and Digital Public Communication on Local Taxpayer Compliancewith Trustin Government as Mediator

    Rangga Galura GUMELAR, Iman MUKHROMAN, Daffa Leroy GALURA GUMELAR (Authors)

    Research notes/Book reviews

    • La spiritualité numérique, la sacralité de l’IA et la vie religieuse dans le métavers: hypostases du nouveau matérialisme religieux

    Nicu GAVRILUTA (Author)

  • 03.07.2026 11:37 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline: August 31, 2026

    The ICA Communication History Division Book Award, sponsored and managed by the Division, invites nominations for academic books in media and communication history published in 2024, 2025, or 2026. Books should align with one or more of the scopes of the Division. Only ICA members may submit nominations, and books nominated by Communication History Division members will be given priority. Books can be single-authored or co-authored, while edited books are not eligible. Submissions open on 5 June 2026 and close on 31 August 2026.

    Specific rules need to be followed to nominate a book. All information can be found here: https://www.icahistory.org/awards.html

  • 02.07.2026 14:10 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Women*in AI, Humanities, & Social Sciences (WAIHSS) is a global initiative created by and for women* across the humanities and social sciences whose research focuses on artificial intelligence.

    The initiative launched on June 23 and is organised by Nadja Schaetz, Sejin Paik, Anna Schjøtt, and Dieuwertje Luitse. As female scholars we firsthand witness the enduring barriers that limit equal participation in academia and are increasingly concerned about the sweeping cuts to education and scholarship funding that compound them. In response, WAIHSS aims to facilitate community building to counteract these developments by creating a platform and support structure dedicated to female social sciences and humanities scholars researching AI.

    Creating space for critical research into AI from a multitude of perspectives is particularly crucial now, as AI development remains male-dominated and academic freedom is increasingly under threat. 

    We are launching this fall with an online launch event on September 1, followed by an online dialogue series and our first hybrid event -- a preconference workshop at the Association of Internet Researchers 2026.

    Visit our website, www.waihss.com or follow us on LinkedIn, to learn more about the initiative and our upcoming events. Here you can also find out more about how you as an individual scholar or institution can join us in this work and become part of the WAIHSS community.

    * WAIHSS uses self-identification as a guiding principle. We honor each person's understanding of their own gender identity. We recognize that gender exists on a spectrum and that the barriers WAIHSS addresses affect people across diverse identities. We welcome all individuals who feel aligned with our mission and community.

  • 02.07.2026 14:07 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, Mervi Pantti & Olga Dovbysh

    Emerald, 2026

    Developing a critical understanding of the environmental responsibility and accountability of digital platforms, Platforms and the Planet focuses on the environmental responsibility of the so-called Big Tech, their digital media platforms and their role in the sustainability transition as a discursive, material, and ethical question.

    Bringing together a multidisciplinary group of authors, this edited collection is compelling reading for a wide range of researchers and students both in the fields of media and communication studies, digital sociology, and other fields of critical technology studies and environmental studies.

    https://bookstore.emerald.com/platforms-and-the-planet-hb-9781836621737.html

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