European Communication Research and Education Association
Ethical Space: The International Journal of Communication Ethics
Deadline: October 15, 2025
Ethical Space: The International Journal of Communication Ethics, welcomes papers on the ethics of generative artificial intelligence and related topics in communication practice. How do we sort the competing claims and concerns made for AI tools, including problems of bias, accuracy and hallucination, concerns over how it changes professional work or even displaces it, questions of transparency, control or ownership of content? How do these stack up against the opportunities that AI affords to make work more efficient, less prone to error or enabling professionals to extend their work? What ethical or regulatory boundary rails need to be put in place or what literacy is needed among both professionals and audiences? Underneath these questions are broader questions around these synthetic media, such as human autonomy or editorial independence and AI’s invisible role in shaping how knowledge is both produced and understood.
Please send us an expression of interest in the first instance. From the expressions, we will invite authors to submit full papers for the editors’ consideration. Acceptance will be on the basis of peer review of the full papers. We are looking for papers in two areas:
1) critical-theoretical contributions on principles relating to the ethical use of AI in communication. This can include conceptual work on problems and issues, work on codes of ethics or other normative proposals, explorations of underlying ideas, analysis of the political economy of AI or similar approaches. This work may be empirical, but the focus should be on contributing to the analytical toolkit on AI
2) contributions on the use of AI in media and other communication practices. This can include analysis of media practice, case studies of good practice, reflections from practitioners on challenges and opportunities and the like.
We welcome work by scholars, research students and communication professionals. The deadline for expressions of interest is 15 October 2025. Full papers will be due in March 2026 and publication will be in July 2026.
Expressions of interest should be 250 words and discuss, argument, approach and (where appropriate) the methods used.
Papers in Ethical Space are usually 5000 words, excluding references.
More on the journal at https://ethicalspace.pubpub.org
Please contact the special issue editors, Donald Matheson and Stephen J.A. Ward, with any questions.
donald.matheson@canterbury.ac.nz
stephen.ward@bellaliant.net
Mobile Media & Communication (Special issue)
Deadline: November 1, 2025
Dear colleagues,
We invite you to submit papers for the Special Issue: Messaging Applications and Global Cultures of Mobility in the journal Mobile Media & Communication, an international and interdisciplinary journal dedicated to publishing academic research analyzing the intersection of communication and mobility.
This special issue, edited by Rose Marie Santini (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro), James Fitzgerald (Dublin City University), Rosana Pinheiro-Machado (University College Dublin), and Débora Salles (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro), seeks papers that critically analyze the intersections between messaging applications and practices of mobility in both local and global contexts.
Once conceived as simple alternatives to SMS, messaging applications have transformed into multimedia ecosystems central to contemporary life, with uses ranging from real-time tracking to political and economic organization across different cultural contexts. While much of the academic literature emphasizes their risks—such as disinformation, surveillance, and illicit activities—it is equally important to examine their productive potential, from reducing social isolation to integrating businesses and increasing the visibility of marginalized groups. This special issue thus aims to bring together contributions that deepen the understanding of these multiple dynamics and their local and global impacts.
The CFP encourages regional and interdisciplinary contributions from scholars at all career stages, to investigate how and why messaging applications intersect with mobility, while analyzing their impacts on individuals, politics, culture, and society. We welcome single-platform case studies as well as comparative analyses of two or more applications, with a special emphasis on contributions from the Global South to ensure geographical and conceptual diversity.
We are particularly interested in articles that address topics such as:
Important dates:
Submission of extended abstracts (500–700 words): November 1, 2025
Notification of accepted abstracts: November 15, 2025
Submission of first full drafts (8,000 words): March 15, 2026
Submission of second drafts: July 15, 2026
Final acceptance: November 15, 2026
Please submit abstracts by November 1, 2025 to:
marie.santini@eco.ufrj.br and james.fitzgerald@dcu.ie
Further information is available at:
https://journals.sagepub.com/page/mmc/messagingapplications
October 29, 2025
The Urbanism/Geography/Architecture Scholarly Interest Group at the Society of Cinema and Media Studies (SCMS) invites you to its first virtual event of the 2025-2026 cycle!
Please join us on Wednesday, October 29th, for a virtual workshop with our special guests Chris Lukinbeal (University of Arizona) and Tara Plath (University of California, Santa Barbara).
The workshop will explore how mapping can be applied in media studies research. Together, we’ll consider how mapping opens up new perspectives on film, media, and space, and you’ll leave with fresh ideas for bringing spatial thinking and mapping techniques into your own work.
For more details and to register: https://luma.com/gw4t4yph
May 21-24, 2026
TU Braunschweig
Deadline: December 10, 2025
https://websci26.org/
Important Dates
About the Web Science Conference
Web Science is an interdisciplinary field dedicated to understanding the complex and multiple impacts of the Web on society and vice versa. The interdisciplinary field is well situated to address pressing issues of our time by incorporating various scientific approaches. We welcome quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods research, including techniques from the social sciences and computer science. In addition, we are interested in work exploring Web-based data collection, research ethics, and emerging methods. We also encourage studies that combine analyses of Web data and other types of data (e.g., from surveys or interviews) to help better understand user behavior online and offline.
Theme for Web Science 2026: Managing Risks in the Era of Generative AI - How 20 Years of Web Science Research Can Help
Web content is influencing human experiences more than ever before. The rapid deployment of artificial intelligence (including large language models) has created new risks for humans in the digital environment. These risks include customly crafted misinformation at scale, realistic AI-generated harmful content and deepfakes, as well as fraudulent activities and scams becoming more effective thanks to AI. Trust and community have been eroded during this current era of the Web, and researching means to manage these risks on the Web is as essential as ever. The Web Science community has looked at this complex socio-technical system for 20 years, exploring its structure, dynamics, and impact on society. This year’s conference especially encourages contributions investigating the risks for society on the web in the presence of artificial intelligence. Additionally, we welcome papers on a wide range of topics at the heart of Web Science.
In 2026, we will also be able to allocate a limited amount of funding for student travel provided by SIGWEB and WebIST.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
Understanding the Web
Making the Web Inclusive
The Web and Everyday Life
Doing Web Science
Format of the submissions Please upload your submissions via EasyChair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=websci26
There are two submission formats:
All papers should adopt the current ACM SIG Conference proceedings template (acmart.cls). Please submit papers as PDF files using the ACM template, either in Microsoft Word format (available at https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template under “Word Authors”) or with the ACM LaTeX template on the Overleaf platform, which is available at https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/association-for-computing-machinery-acm-sig-proceedings-template/bmvfhcdnxfty. In particular, please ensure that you are using the two-column version of the appropriate template. All contributions will be judged by the Program Committee by at least three referees based on rigorous peer review standards for quality and fit for the conference. Additionally, each paper will be assigned to a Senior Program Committee member to ensure review quality.
WebSci-2026 review is double-blind. Therefore, please anonymize your submission: do not put the author(s)’ names or affiliation(s) at the start of the paper, and do not include funding or other acknowledgments in papers submitted for review. References to the authors’ own prior relevant work should be included, but should not specify that this is the authors’ own work. It is up to the authors’ discretion how much to further modify the body of the paper to preserve anonymity. The requirement for anonymity does not extend outside the review process, e.g., the authors can decide how widely to distribute their papers over the Internet. Even in cases where the author’s identity is known to a reviewer, the double-blind process will serve as a symbolic reminder of the importance of evaluating the submitted work on its own merits without regard to the author’s reputation.
Authors who wish to opt out of publication proceedings will be given this option upon acceptance. This will encourage the participation of researchers from the social sciences who prefer to publish their work as journal articles. All authors of accepted papers (including those who opt out of proceedings) are expected to present their work at the conference.
ACM Publication Policies
By submitting your article to an ACM Publication, you acknowledge that you and your co-authors are subject to all ACM Publications Policies, including ACM’s new Policy on Research Involving Human Participants and Subjects. Alleged violations of this policy or any ACM Publications Policy will be investigated by ACM and may result in a full retraction of your paper, in addition to other potential penalties, as per ACM Publications Policy.
Please ensure that you and your co-authors obtain an ORCID ID to complete the publishing process for your accepted paper. ACM has been involved in ORCID from the start, and we have recently made a commitment to collect ORCID IDs from all of our published authors. The collection process started in 2022 and will be a requirement. We are committed to improving author discoverability, ensuring proper attribution, and contributing to ongoing community efforts around name normalization; your ORCID ID will help in these efforts.
For guidelines on the use of generative AI tools, please refer to https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/frequently-asked-questions
Important update on ACM's new open access publishing model for 2026 ACM Conferences!
Starting January 1, 2026, ACM will fully transition to Open Access. All ACM publications, including those from ACM-sponsored conferences, will be 100% Open Access (https://www.acm.org/publications/openaccess).
Authors will have two primary options for publishing Open Access articles with ACM: the ACM Open institutional model or by paying Article Processing Charges (APCs). With over 1,800 institutions already part of ACM Open, the majority of ACM-sponsored conference papers will not require APCs from authors or conferences (currently, around 70-75%).
Authors from institutions not participating in ACM Open must pay an APC to publish their papers, unless they qualify for a financial or discretionary waiver. To find out whether an APC applies to your article, please consult the list of participating institutions in ACM Open and review the APC Waivers and Discounts Policy. Remember that waivers are rare and are granted based on specific criteria set by ACM.
Understanding that this change could present financial challenges, ACM has approved a temporary subsidy for 2026 to ease the transition and allow more time for institutions to join ACM Open. The subsidy will offer: $250 APC for ACM/SIG members $350 for non-members
This represents a 65% discount, funded directly by ACM. Authors are encouraged to help advocate for their institutions to join ACM Open during this transition period. You can find an FAQ here: Open Access Model for ACM and SIG Sponsored Conferences: Frequently Asked Questions, and more information here: Open Access Publication & ACM
Program Committee Chairs:
Gianluca Demartini (The University of Queensland, Australia) Stefan Dietze (Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf & GESIS, Germany) Jen Golbeck (University of Maryland, USA)
For any questions and queries regarding the paper submission, please contact the chairs at websci26@easychair.org.
April 1 - 3, 2026
Paris, Campus des Cordeliers
https://encore-network.org/call-for-papers/
Since its inception in 1956, the Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) has launched the careers of global stars such as ABBA and Celine Dion. Multicultural and multilingual, and unmatched in scale outside the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the ESC has become a fixture of the European public media landscape. In 2025, the contest reached 166 million television viewers and garnered 1.8 billion views across its social media platforms. As a ceremonial media event (Dayan & Katz, 1996), the ESC carries significant economic, political, and social implications.
On the eve of its 70th anniversary, the ESC is far from being an outdated or kitschy public spectacle. Instead, it crystallizes numerous complex issues. It serves as a platform where Europe and its neighbors express national identities and shared imaginaries, while also reflecting geopolitical rivalries—from East-West tensions during the Cold War to more recent conflicts such as Armenia/Azerbaijan, Ukraine/Russia, and Israel/Palestine. Positioned at the intersection of the cultural and media industries, the ESC raises questions about the construction of norms and the representation of certain populations. Finally, the ESC prompts critical inquiry into cultural legitimacy and its counterpoint—the eclecticism of taste—raising the question: what does it mean today to ‘love the Eurovision Song Contest’?
Studying the ESC thus entails exploring the intersections of identity, collective rituals, and social media participation, while also illuminating the complex political and social dynamics within the cultural and media industries. To what extent can the humanities and social sciences help us to illuminate, understand, and critically analyze the social, cultural, and political issues—both past and present—embodied in the ESC?
In recent years, a growing body of research has examined the ESC through a variety of disciplinary and methodological approaches. This body of work engages with multiple disciplinary perspectives, including explorations of national and cultural identities in Europe (Fricker & Gluhovic (eds.), 2013; Jordan, 2014; Neves, 2017; Panea, 2020; Venon, 2007), as well as approaches rooted in musicology and popular culture (Björnberg, 1987; Fornäs, 2017; Shuker, 2016; Raykoff, 2021; Tragaki (ed.), 2013), cultural sociology and fan studies (Le Guern, 2007; Vieira Lopes, 2023), cultural studies (Carniel, 2018; Coleman, 2008; Salgó, 2017), history (Vuletic, 2018), communication and media studies (Appiotti, Bolz, Boittiaux & Neuvillers, 2025; Pajala, 2011), education studies (Cremona, 2022), and gender studies (Baker, 2024; Imre, 2020; Lemish, 2004; Vänskä & Tuhkanen (eds.), 2007).
The conference “Eurovision Song Contest and the Humanities and Social Sciences” seeks to build upon the collective initiatives that have helped establish an interdisciplinary state of the art in ESC research (Raykoff & Tobin, (eds.), 2007; Fricker & Gluhovic, (eds.), 2013; Dubin, Vuletic & Obregón, (eds.), 2023). Adopting an interdisciplinary and critical perspective, the conference aims to explore and interrogate emerging approaches and studies related to the contest and its multiple dimensions.
The discussions at this conference will be structured around the following central research questions:
This conference also aims to underscore the importance of diverse perspectives, disciplines, and research traditions, recognizing that only an interdisciplinary and intercultural approach to the ESC can fully capture and update the current state of scholarship on the subject. As such, paper proposals are welcome from a wide range of disciplines and methodologies, including but not limited to: anthropology, communication studies, cultural studies, law, economics, gender studies, tourism studies, aesthetics, geography, history, fan studies, musicology, narratology, performance and theater studies, political science, linguistics, semiotics, and sociology. In particular, papers are expected to include:
To this end, we propose several thematic areas for consideration. These are not exhaustive and are intended as a guiding framework to assist in the drafting of paper proposals.
1. As stated above, we are interested in the epistemologies and methodologies employed in conducting field research on the ESC:
2. The role of the ESC as a mirror reflecting socio-cultural and political issues, tensions, and debates—an aspect that has drawn increasing scholarly attention in recent years—also deserves to be critically examined.
This line of research invites submissions that explore—whether through monographic case studies or comparative analyses—the understanding of one or more types of social actors gravitating around the ESC, such as:
4. The forms and formats of the ESC could also serve as a focal point for discussion at the conference, particularly in relation to the following aspects:
5. We also believe that the links between the ESC and the territories provide a valuable gateway for dialogue on the following approaches and themes:
In all cases, fieldwork, corpus-based studies, and reflexive approaches to the ESC’s epistemological and methodological frameworks will be central to our discussions.
Aligned with the founding of the Eurovision Research Network (“Europe and the ‘New’ Europe Research Network,” 2009 in Fricker, Gluhovic, 2013: 3; 6), this conference aims to serve as a catalyst for the formation of an international scholarly network exploring the ESC through interdisciplinary and cross-thematic perspectives.
In a second phase, a collection of double-blind peer-reviewed articles in English is planned for publication in a specialized academic volume.
Calendar
Submission guidelines
Proposals should be sent by October 15, 2025 to the following email address : escconference.paris@gmail.com
Please submit paper proposals in French or English as follows :
As a reminder, paper proposals are expected to include:
All information related to this call for papers and the international conference is also available on https://encore-network.org.
References
Appiotti, S., Bolz, L., Boittiaux, J., & Neuvillers, M.-C. (8 avril 2025). Mutations de la couverture médiatique du concours Eurovision de la chanson en France (analyse exploratoire de la presse écrite et de la télévision 1998–2024). Presentation at the seminar “Penser l’Eurovision”.
Baker, C. (2016). The ‘gay Olympics’? The Eurovision Song Contest and the politics of LGBT/European belonging. European Journal of International Relations, 23(1), 97–121. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354066116633278
Baker, C. (2024). Lion of Love: Representations of Russian Homosexuality and Homophobia in Netflix’s Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga. Historical Reflections, 50(2), 61–76.
Baker, C., Atkinson, D., Grabher, B., & Howcroft, M. (2025). Bridging the ‘sport/culture silo’: the Eurovision Song Contest and its lessons for sporting and cultural mega-events. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1080/10286632.2025.2521115
Ballarini, L., & Ségur, C. (eds.). (2017). Devenir public. Modalités et enjeux (Série « Media critic »). Éditions Mare et Martin.
Björnberg, A. (1987). En liten sång som alla andra : Melodifestivalen 1959–1983 [A Little Song Like All the Others: Melodifestivalen 1959–1983] [Doctoral thesis, University of Göteborg].
Carniel, J. (2018). Understanding the Eurovision Song Contest in multicultural Australia. Palgrave Macmillan.
Coleman, S. (2008). Why is the Eurovision Song Contest Ridiculous? Exploring a Spectacle of Embarrassment, Irony and Identity. Popular Communication, 6(3), 127–140.
Cremona, G. (2022). The Eurovision University Study Unit and Its Pedagogic Value: A Critical Evaluation of Public and Media Reaction Towards Innovation in Higher Education. International Journal of Higher Education Pedagogies, 3(1), 13–23.
Dayan, D., & Katz, E. (1996). La télévision cérémonielle : anthropologie et histoire en direct. Presses universitaires de France.
Delanty, G., Giorgi, L., & Sassatelli, M. (eds.). (2011). Festivals and the cultural public sphere. Routledge.
Djakouane, A., & Négrier, E. (2021). Festivals, territoire et société. Ministère de la Culture – DEPS. https://doi.org/10.3917/deps.djako.2021.01
Do Carmo Cruz, V. (2019). Territoire et processus de territorialisation : usages et conceptions méthodologiques dans le domaine de la géographie. In Action publique, dynamiques sociales et pauvreté (1‑). Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée. https://doi.org/10.4000/books.pulm.21706
Dubin, A., Vuletic, D., & Obregón, A. (eds.). (2022). The Eurovision Song Contest as a cultural phenomenon: From concert halls to the halls of academia. Routledge.
Fornäs, J. (2017). Euro-Visions: East European Narratives in Televised Popular Music. In J. Fornäs (Dir.), Europe Faces Europe: Narratives from Its Eastern Half (pp. 179–236). Intellect.
Fricker, K., & Gluhovic, M. (eds.). (2013). Performing the “New” Europe. Identities, Feelings and Politics in the Eurovision Song Contest. Palgrave Macmillan.
Gilbert, H., & Lo, J. (2007). Cosmopolitics: Cross-cultural Transactions in Australasia. Palgrave Macmillan.
Haraway, D. (1988). Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective. Feminist Studies, 14(3), 575–599. https://doi.org/10.2307/3178066
Imre, A. (2020). The Eurovision Song Contest: Queer Nationalism. In E. Thompson & J. Mittell (eds.), How to Watch Television (2nd ed., pp. 193–202). NYU Press.
Jenkins, H. (2006). Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers: Exploring Participatory Culture. New York University Press.
Jordan, P. (2014). The Modern Fairy Tale: Nation Branding, National Identity and the Eurovision Song Contest in Estonia. University of Tartu Press.
Le Guern, P. (2007). Aimer l’Eurovision, une faute de goût ? Une approche sociologique du fan club français de l’Eurovision. Réseaux, 25(145), 231–265.
Legavre, J.-B. (2011). Entre conflit et coopération. Les journalistes et les communicants comme « associés-rivaux ». Communication & langages, 169, 105–123. https://doi.org/10.4074/S0336150011003097
Lemish, D. (2004). « My Kind of Campfire »: The Eurovision Song Contest and Israeli Gay Men. Popular Communication, 2(1), 41–63.
Leveneur-Martel, L. (2021). Les cérémonies Miss France, de la télévision à Twitter : Une ritualisation des commentaires (2015–2019). Réseaux, 230(6), 171–214. https://doi.org/10.3917/res.230.0171
Neves, M. (2017). Croatia in the Eurovision Song Contest: From an Anti-War Message to the Recognition of a Cultural Tradition. International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music, 48(1), 133–147.
Pajala, M. (2011). Making Television Historical: Cultural memory of the Eurovision Song Contest in the Finnish media 1961–2005. Media History, 17(4), 405–418. https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2011.602859
Panea, J. L. (2020). Las escenografías del Festival de Eurovisión: Estética, tecnología e identidad cultural al albor de la reconstrucción europea (1956–1993). Ámbitos: Revista de Estudios de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades, 49, 23–40.
Raykoff, I. (2021). Another Song for Europe. Music, Taste, and Values in the Eurovision Song Contest. Routledge
Raykoff, I., & Tobin, R. D. (eds.). (2007). A Song for Europe: Popular Music and Politics in the Eurovision Song Contest. Routledge.
Robertson, R. (1994). Globalisation or glocalisation? Journal of International Communication, 1(1), 33–52. https://doi.org/10.1080/13216597.1994.9751780
Salgó, E. (2017). ‘Rise like a Phoenix’: A New Anthem for (Federal) Europe. In Images from Paradise: The Visual Communication of the European Union’s Federalist Utopia (pp. 141–159). Berghahn Books.
Shepherd, J. (2021). ‘I’m not your toy’ : rejecting a tourism boycott. Tourism Recreation Research. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/02508281.2021.1998874
Shuker, R. (2016). Understanding Popular Music Culture. Routledge.
Tragaki, D. (Ed.). (2013). Empire of Song: Europe and Nation in the Eurovision Song Contest. Scarecrow Press.
Vänskä, A., & Tuhkanen, M. (eds.). (2007). Special Issue: “Queer Eurovision”. SQS: Journal of Queer Studies in Finland, 2(2). https://journal.fi/sqs/issue/view/3606
Venon, F. (2007). L’Eurovision et les frontières culturelles de l’Europe. Cybergeo: European Journal of Geography. http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/5633
Vieira Lopes, S. (2023). Música, televisão, memória e representação: Um estudo do Festival RTP da Canção (1964–2020) [Doctoral thesis, Universidade Nova de Lisboa].
Vuletic, D. (2018). Postwar Europe and the Eurovision Song Contest. Bloomsbury.
Wolther, I. (2006). Der Eurovision Song Contest als Mittel national-kultureller Repräsentation. Königshausen & Neumann.
Yair, G. (1995). Unite, Unite, Europe: The Political and Cultural Structures of Europe as Reflected in the Eurovision Song Contest. Social Networks, 17(2), 147–161. https://doi.org/10.1016/0378-8733(95)00253-K
Yair, G., & Maman, D. (1996). The Persistent Structure of Hegemony in the Eurovision Song Contest. Acta Sociologica, 39(3), 309–325. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4194833
Organizing committee
Sébastien Appiotti, GRIPIC, CELSA – Sorbonne Université
Lisa Bolz, GRIPIC, CELSA – Sorbonne Université
Johan Boittiaux, LabSIC, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord
Philippe Le Guern, PTAC, Université Rennes 2
Marie-Caroline Neuvillers, Centre Norbert Elias, Avignon Université
Scientific committee
Catherine Baker, University of Hull
Alix Bénistant, LabSIC, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord
Marcin Bogucki, Instytut Kultury Polskej, University of Warsaw
Isabel Campelo, NOVA University of Lisbon
Jessica Carniel, University of Southern Queensland
Juliette Charbonneaux, GRIPIC, CELSA – Sorbonne Université
Thierry Devars, GRIPIC, CELSA – Sorbonne Université
Karen Fricker, Brock University
Thibault Grison, GERiiCO, Université de Lille
Jonathan Hendrickx, University of Copenhagen
Zhao Alexandre Huang, Dicen-IDF, Université Gustave Eiffel
Virginie Julliard, GRIPIC, CELSA – Sorbonne Université
Valeriya Korablyova, University Charles Michel
Louisa Martin-Chevalier, IreMuS, Sorbonne Université
Ivan Raykoff, New School, New York
Simon Renoir, Centre Norbert Elias, Avignon Université
Sofia Vieira Lopes, NOVA University of Lisbon
Hécate Vergopoulos, GRIPIC, CELSA – Sorbonne Université
November 11, 2025, 14:00 CET
Registration for ECREA members is now open: https://forms.gle/YzAQWM7LoVmGHY3v6
The recent years have been marked by wars and authoritarian repression that have greatly affected the academic community. There have been various responses from academic institutions aimed at supporting scholars at risk, supporting academic freedom, and discussing the role educational institutions should have in responding to conflict and pressure. Wars, persecution, and insecurities have pushed scholars into exile, forcing them to adapt to new academic environments.
ECREA already started the discussion with a focus on Ukraine and Gaza, which opened many questions about the academic role in responding to mass atrocities and authoritarian threats to academic freedom. For this reason, the EDI subcommittee proposed ECREA to hold a series of webinars to discuss academic freedom, scholars at risk, and strategies for assisting scholars.
The first webinar will address the issue of scholars in exile and strategies for supporting them. The discussion will focus on the experiences of scholars who were forced to leave their country and adapt to a new academic environment. The webinar will provide an opportunity to reflect on the structures or circumstances that forced scholars into exile, as well as the pressures, expectations, and roles scholars experience while in exile.
In what ways can ECREA protect and support its members, whose physical safety can be at risk if they are in zones of war or violence, or whose academic and civic freedoms might be under attack from repressive governments or institutions, including academic institutions? We hope the webinar series will help ECREA develop a response to these issues, such as recommendations or other practices designed to support academics.
Confirmed Speakers:
Dr. Bermal Aydın, formerly a lecturer at Mersin University in Turkey, was dismissed, banned from public employment, and had her passport cancelled for signing the Peace Petition, “We will not be a party to this crime.” Supported by CARA (Council for At-Risk Academics), she became a postdoctoral fellow and later a guest teacher at the London School of Economics (LSE), researching authoritarian neoliberalism and the politically motivated precarisation of academics and journalists in Turkey. She taught and supervised master’s dissertations at LSE, published in journals such as Globalizations and Turkish Studies, co-edited books, contributed chapters, and continues her work independently.
Dr. Zeina Al Azmeh is political sociologist at the University of Cambridge. Her work examines the cultural sociologies of knowledge production in exile and their impact on diasporic political subjectivities. Her book Syrian Intellectuals in Exile: The Dilemmas of Revolution and the Cost of Leaving will be published this December with Cambridge University Press. She has published in journals such as Theory and Society, Cultural Sociology, Qualitative Inquiry, and IJPCS and chairs the Syrian Academics and Researchers’ Network in the UK.
Dr. Olena Zinenko is a media scholar and senior lecturer at Institute of Sociology and Media Communication, Karazin Kharkiv National University in Ukraine, a feminist peace activist, and currently a PSI Visiting Fellow at the IFHV, Ruhr University, Bochum. Her research focuses on media discourse analysis, investigating the role of media in peace processes and public communication in Ukraine.
The webinar will be accessible to ECREA members only.
Nordic Journal of Media Studies
Deadline: January 15, 2026
Nordic Journal of Media Studies invites contributions to the 2027 issue exploring how scandals unfold and are communicated across media.
Editors:
Nordic Journal of Media Studies invites contributions to the 2027 issue exploring how scandals unfold and are communicated across media. The issue welcomes international as well as Nordic perspectives and asks the following questions: How have the emergence and development of scandals evolved with the advent of social media, algorithmic amplification, and platform-driven visibility? In what ways do audiences, users, and digital publics engage in the exposure, circulation, and escalation of scandal online? What counts as “scandalous” – and to whom? What are the (social, political, cultural, and personal) consequences of the disclosure of morally dubious and transgressive actions in a networked media landscape? How can scandals be understood as cross-platform and cross-mediated public events today? Can value be attributed to scandal communication and scandals as networked public events? What role do automation and emerging technologies of generative AI play in accelerating or fabricating scandal? How do new technologies complicate questions of responsibility and accountability in scandals and their aftermath? By addressing these questions, this issue offers new insights about the multiple trajectories and shifting temporalities of contemporary scandals, particularly in view of audiences taking on active roles in exposing, co-constructing, and driving scandal.
Media studies have long conceptualised scandals as the mediated disclosure of what a society considers morally dubious and objectionable (e.g., Lull & Hinerman, 1997). John B. Thompson’s (2000) classical definition stated that “‘scandal’ refers to actions or events involving certain kinds of transgressions which become known to others and are sufficiently serious to elicit a public response”. Occupied with the processes through which moral transgressions were scandalised and with the public reaction to scandal, Ari Adut (2008) similarly regarded scandals as “symbolic centers” that confirm, contest, or reinforce societal values. Scandals used to be extraordinary media events; however, mediatisation, personalisation, and celebritisation have, over the past decades, made, for instance, political, financial, and celebrity scandals the “new normal” (Pollack et al., 2018; Entman, 2012). Tabloid and investigative journalism continue to give prominence to the coverage of transgressive behaviour among celebrities, politicians, CEOs, and so on, but the rise of social media has also challenged the key role played by news media in uncovering, defining, and framing scandal and the scandalous.
Demarcating and tracing the unfolding of scandals has thus become more complex. Scandals today emerge and progress across media, involve multiple actors, are fuelled and amplified by emotionalised, personalised, and polarised communication online, and unfold intensely for short periods of time with more or less severe consequences for those involved. One might say that mediated scandals – or scandals as (news) media events (Thompson, 2000) – have transitioned into socio-mediated scandals – or scandals as communicative events (Zulli, 2021). Understanding scandals today necessitates analysing their rise and development as more unpredictable processes, as well as recognising the role of (social) media users in co-constructing and circulating the scandalous. At times, these users take on the role of investigating and exposing possible transgressions which may then travel to traditional news media. This challenges clear distinctions between participants and non-participants in scandals and the temporal unfolding of a scandal in relatively linear phases across media, as originally conceptualised by Thomspon (2000). Finally, the altered circuits of communication suggest that scandals may serve as sites for public value negotiation and creation with unifying, empowering, yet also polarising potential, as audiences articulate their worries, interests, and emotions online. As such, scandal communication may be seen as expressions or gestures of concern (Ingraham, 2021).
With this issue of Nordic Journal of Media Studies, we thus invite scholars to explore how to understand processes of scandalisation and scandal communication in an era when social media users play a significant role in co-constructing the scandalous.
Adut, A. (2008). On scandal: Moral disturbances in society, politics and art. Cambridge University Press.
Entman, R. M. (2012). Scandal and silence: Media responses to presidential misconduct. Polity.
Ingraham, C. (2021). Gestures of concern. Duke University Press.
Lull, J., & Hinerman, S. (Eds.). (1997). Media scandals: Morality and desire in the popular culture marketplace. Columbia University Press.
Pollack, E., Allern, S., Kantola, A., & Ørsten, M. (2018). The new normal: Scandals as a standard feature of political life in Nordic countries. International Journal of Communication, 12, 3087–3108. https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/7099
Thompson, J. B. (2000). Political scandal: Power and visibility in the media age. Polity.
Zulli, D. (2021). Socio-mediated scandals: Theorizing political scandals in a digital media environment. Communication Theory, 31(4), 862–883. https://doi.org/10.1093/ct/qtaa014
Procedure
Those with an interest in contributing should write an abstract (max. 750 words) where the main theme (or argument) of the intended article is described. The abstract should contain the preliminary title and five keywords. How the article fits with the overall description of the issue should be mentioned.
Send your abstract to both editors by 15 January 2026 at the latest
Scholars invited to submit a full manuscript (6,000–8,000 words) will be notified by e-mail after the abstracts have been assessed by the editors. All submissions should be original works and must not be under consideration by other publishers. All submissions are submitted to Similarity Check – a Crossref service utilising iThenticate text comparison software to detect text-recycling or self-plagiarism.
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After the initial submission and review process, manuscripts that are accepted for publication must adhere to our guidelines upon final manuscript delivery. You may choose to use our templates to assist you in correctly formatting your manuscript.
Read the instructions for authors and download a manuscript template here
About Nordic Journal of Media Studies
Nordic Journal of Media Studies is a peer-reviewed international publication dedicated to media research. The journal is a meeting place for Nordic, European, and global perspectives on media studies. It is a thematic digital-only journal published once a year. The editors stress the importance of innovative and interdisciplinary research, and welcome contributions on both contemporary developments and historical topics.
Read the aims & scope of NJMS
About the publisher
Nordicom is a centre for Nordic media research at the University of Gothenburg, supported by the Nordic Council of Ministers. Nordicom publishes all works under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence, which allows for non-commercial, non-derivative types of reuse and sharing with proper attribution. All works are published Open Access and are available to read free of charge and without requirement for registration. There are no article processing charges for authors, and authors retain copyright.
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Journal of Advertising (Special issue)
Deadline: July 31, 2026
Advertising regulation is becoming increasingly important as governments, industry bodies and international organizations respond to mounting concerns over online harms, misinformation, sustainability, and consumer vulnerability. With the rapid growth of social media, AI-generated content and advanced forms of data tracking, advertising is now woven into the fabric of daily life, often in ways that are not visible or well understood. These technological and market developments have moved faster than the regulatory systems intended to manage them, creating significant gaps in the protection of the public, particularly for children and other vulnerable groups.
Globally, regulators are rethinking how advertising should be governed in the face of a shifting digital landscape and rising pressure for more responsible corporate behavior (Dickinson-Delaporte et al., 2020; Stewart, 2019). The rapid growth of digital advertising has significantly complicated regulatory oversight, as traditional rules struggle to keep pace with real-time, algorithm-driven targeting, cross-border content flows, and platform-mediated ad placements. This complexity is heightened by the opacity of digital advertising supply chains, where intermediaries and platform algorithms operate with limited transparency, highlighting the need for more responsive and accountable regulatory approaches.
Advertising regulatory approaches vary across the globe, and typically include government regulation, where laws and public agencies enforce advertising standards; industry self-regulation, where advertising bodies develop and apply their own codes of practice; media-led regulation, where platforms or publishers set and enforce their own standards of practice; and the laissez-faire approach, which relies on market forces and consumer response to address advertising issues without formal oversight. There is often a hybrid approach in practice, with many countries combining elements of these models to suit regulatory, cultural, and market contexts (see Appendix 1 for advertising regulation models in top 10 ad-spending countries).
Increasingly, there is recognition of the need for stronger mechanisms and greater international coordination (Greer & Thompson, 1985) across different regulatory forms, in order to address the dynamic issues of the contemporary world, such as online safety (Ahmad et al., 2024; Diaz Ruiz, 2025), advertising fraud (Liang et al., 2024), the use of AI (Hardcastle et al., 2025), influencer advertising (Asquith & Fraser, 2020), environmental claims and greenwashing (Parguel et al., 2015; Schmuck et al., 2018), advertising of harmful products (Abernethy & Teel, 1986; Adams et al., 2012), and gender stereotyping (Antoniou & Akrivos, 2020; Knoll et al., 2011) (see Appendix 2 for examples of recent changes in advertising regulation).
At the same time, efforts to enhance consumer protections are meeting resistance. In contexts such as the United Kingdom and the United States, anti-regulatory sentiment is gaining traction, driven by concerns that increased oversight might restrict innovation and economic progress. This push and pull between protecting the public and preserving commercial freedom is making the regulation of advertising a more urgent and contested issue. Public distrust of digital platforms and unease about how personal data is used for advertising only sharpen the need for a re-evaluation of current frameworks. In this context, we highlight the crucial role advertising research plays in informing and shaping such regulatory frameworks (Kees & Andrews, 2019).
With this Special Issue, we focus on the systems that govern advertising, rather than on advertising content or ethical intention alone. Our interest lies in the legal, institutional, and procedural arrangements that support, or fail to support, ethical and socially beneficial advertising. We aim to draw attention to the conditions under which regulation can enable greater transparency, accountability, and harm reduction. Beyond analyzing what regulation currently does, we also seek to develop theory on what advertising regulation could become: how regulatory development might advance social wellbeing, shape markets more ethically, and position advertising as a force for social good. The purpose is not to promote one model of regulation over another, but to build a deeper understanding of how governance - in all its forms - shapes advertising’s societal influence and its capacity to address pressing societal issues.
We encourage submissions that theorize how regulatory approaches effect social change, and conceptual papers that propose new directions for research on advertising governance. We welcome empirical contributions that adopt multidisciplinary perspectives (Rotfeld & Taylor, 2009) and employ diverse methodological approaches and theoretical frameworks, including—but not limited to—work grounded in Transformative Advertising Research (Gurrieri et al., 2022), institutional theory, market shaping, and ethics. We are especially interested in scholarship that explores where regulation is falling short, how new interventions affect both industry and society, and theorizing that can help reimagine advertising regulation in light of contemporary challenges.
Key Themes and topics
We invite submissions that address regulatory questions across the following areas:
(please contact Guest Editors for list of references)
Submission Instructions
Submissions should follow the manuscript format guidelines for JA found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=ujoa20. The word count should be no longer than 12,000 words for Original Research Articles and Literature Reviews, and 6,000 words for Research Notes (including references, tables, figures, and appendices).
The submission deadline is July 31, 2026
All manuscripts should be submitted through the JA Submission Site. The link to the submission site can be found at this link (“Go to submission site”). Authors should select “Article Type” (e.g., research article, literature review) on the first page of the submission website. On the second page, authors will be asked if this is for a specific special issue or article collection. Select “Yes” and select “Social Change and the Role of Advertising Regulation” from the drop-down menu. Please also note in the cover letter that the submission is for the Special Issue on Social Change and the Role of Advertising Regulation: New Challenges and Opportunities.
All articles will undergo blind peer review by at least two reviewers.
The anticipated date for publication of the Special Issue is June 2027.
Any questions about the Special Issue can be sent to the guest editors: Drs. Karen Middleton, Kristina Auxtova, Lauren Gurrieri & Sean Sands at AdRegulationJA@gmail.com.
ECREA is still deeply concerned about the state's pressure on the academic community in Serbia.
See the updated Public Statement HERE.
Please consider signing a letter in support of Associate Professor Jelena Kleut (University of Novi Sad), ECREA Governing Body member, who was targeted in a campaign recently.
You can sign the letter HERE.
On 2 September 2025, Commissioner Ekatherina Zarahieva clarified that the European Commission (EC) proposal from 16 July 2025 aims at strengthening research on Society within Pillar 2. EASSH welcomes the move and invites legislators to confirm the commitment.
EASSH calls for the European Parliament and the EU member states to support the key issues described in the paper in the EC proposal for a new framework programme (FP10).
EASSH also invites member and related organisations to endorse this position paper. Please send your organisation's contact details and logo to executive.secretary@eassh.eu.
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