European Communication Research and Education Association
June 10-12, 2026
Malmö, Sweden
Deadline: February 27, 2026
Welcome to the 20th anniversary of the Swedish STS Conference that will be held at the Niagara building in Malmö, 10–12 juni 2026.
It's hosted by Malmö University in collaboration with Lund University.
The Swedish STS Conference is an open, widely advertised, biennial conference, organised since 2006. It is an interdisciplinary meeting place for researchers interested in issues related to technology and science in society as approached from social science and humanities perspectives, and while it gathers researchers at all levels of their careers, it is planned and coordinated to particularly appeal to doctoral students and early career researchers, with special sessions and events catering to the concerns of junior colleagues.
Conference theme
The theme Cross-Pollinations, Contamination, Collaboration invites contributions that address pressing global challenges such as climate change, artificial intelligence, warfare, infectious diseases and migration. The conference explores how cultures, technologies and disciplines interact in ongoing processes of exchange, how contamination shapes interdependence and accessibility, and how collaborations across boundaries can foster innovation and societal change. A particular strength of the STS field is its ability to critically examine both successes and failures of science and technology across their entire life cycle – from inception to everyday use and eventual decline.
Collaboration is central to STS practice, often requiring interdisciplinarity and engagement across the traditional divide between natural sciences and the humanities. This conference will highlight how such collaborations can generate new methods, perspectives and models for engagement, while also interrogating the values that underpin them – who participates, what counts as legitimate knowledge, and how boundaries are maintained or transgressed. Without cross-pollination, contamination and collaboration with wider society, science risks losing relevance and legitimacy.
Conference website: Swedish STS conference 2026: Cross-Pollinations, Contamination, Collaboration | Malmö University
December 17, 2025
Paris, France
Dear all,
I would like to share an invitation to our Study Day/Stakeholder Event — Growing Up in the Digital Age: Five Years of European Research on Screens and Adolescent Mental Health. Please note that this event will be held in French, and is intended primarily for a French-speaking audience (researchers, practitioners, institutions, and organizations working with young people in France).
Topic: How do digital media shape young people’s well-being and mental health today? Growing up in 2025 means navigating daily between smartphones, social networks, online gaming, and platforms like Spotify. While these digital practices can boost some adolescents’ self-esteem, they can also heighten anxiety for others. Understanding why these effects occur—and for whom—has never been more essential.
Since 2020, researchers from KU Leuven (Belgium), the University of Tours (France), and the University of Ljubljana (Slovenia) have been conducting the international MIMIc project (coordinated by Prof. Laura Vandenbosch), funded by the European Research Council (ERC). The project examines the digital habits of more than 2,700 adolescents aged 12 to 18 in Belgium, Slovenia, and France — including over 800 in France alone.
Our research focuses on two central questions:
As we conclude this project, we are pleased to invite you to our study day, which will take place on Wednesday, 17 December 2025, from 2:00 pm to 6:00 pm at Deskeo République – 32 Rue René Boulanger, 75010 Paris (with an option to join online, though in-person attendance is encouraged).
This event aims to bring scientific findings into dialogue with educational practice and emerging regulatory frameworks, including the Digital Services Act. It will bring together researchers, institutional stakeholders, education professionals, and youth-focused organisations. Confirmed speakers include Prof. Grégoire Borst (Université Paris Descartes), Arthur Tréguier (DSA Officer for France, European Commission) and Mrs Axelle Desaint (director of Internet Sans Crainte).
You will find all relevant materials attached and listed below:
Mandatory registration link: https://forms.gle/TeZNqqU4TX15mnQE8
LinkedIn invitation: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/anaellegonzalez_dsa-jeunesetaezcrans-recherche-activity-7403732183112241152-jvTN
We look forward to sharing our findings and engaging in discussion with all stakeholders committed to supporting young people in their digital lives.
1/ Reporter Without Borders (RSF)
Founded in 1985, Reporters sans frontières (RSF) defends the right to reliable information. Its mandate is based on article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states that: "Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers".
RSF strives to ensure that all human beings benefit from information that enables them to know, understand and form an opinion on the issues facing the world and their environment. To achieve this, the organisation is developing a holistic strategy, with 360° activities, to bring about global change. RSF acts on four levels: press freedom, relations between the public and journalists, the information market and the information space.
RSF also demonstrates creativity by developing systemic initiatives that address the causes of problems: the Journalism Trust Initiative (JTI) and the Partnership on Information and Democracy (I&D).
RSF has an international secretariat in Paris, thirteen sections and offices around the world, more than 150 correspondents, 4 representatives and local partners in a wide range of countries. RSF is a registered association in France and has consultative status with the United Nations and UNESCO.
2/ Context of the project
Access to free, reliable and independent information is a fundamental right and Reporters Without Borders (Reporters sans frontières - RSF) fights for the power of journalism to shape societies and promote transparency and accountability. RSF has been involved for years in exposing Russian propaganda. As RSF’s World Press Freedom Index highlights, the Russian state is pursuing its crusade against journalism, with almost all independent media banned, blocked and/or declared “foreign agents” or “undesirable organisations” and all others subject to military censorship. Throughout the last 25 years of Vladimir Putin’s regime, Russians have been subjected to a non-stop barrage of propaganda from all media sources. A systematic suppression of freedom of expression has occurred within Russia and the neighbouring states, engendering an alternative reality media universe. Since the beginning of the large-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia in February 2022, the lockdown on independent media has worsened, rendering it virtually impossible for Russians to access reliable information. A war of information happens daily alongside the physical conflict, both in broadcasting media and on social platforms, as Russia projects a message of aggression against Ukraine and against the West, inciting hatred and spreading misinformation.
At a time when the level of censorship of journalists and media is unprecedented in Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union, civil society and independent media in exile have rallied to combat propaganda and find innovative and different solutions to ensure that populations in the region have access to alternative voices. To lead this fight, RSF has stepped up its efforts to create the concrete conditions for the circulation of free, pluralistic independent news and information in the region (JX Fund, Collateral Freedom).
Given the intensification of the Russian government's actions and measures to prevent the spread of reliable information and strengthen the grip of propaganda and disinformation campaigns, it was necessary to develop new ambitions and innovative solutions that are aimed more broadly at the Russian audience and public in the region, which are deprived of access to alternative, independent and pluralistic information. To meet this objective, the Svoboda Satellite Project, a package of mainly Russian-speaking television and radio channels run by independent media in exile, was launched in March 2024. Svoboda, which means "freedom" in Russian, represents a significant step forward in the quest for unrestricted access to information in a region where media freedom faces numerous challenges. This ambitious initiative intends to reverse the logic of propaganda. With the Svoboda project, the aim is to provide an alternative source of information, give access to exiled media content and ensure media pluralism for the people in Russia and in the region.
3/ The project
Title : Svoboda Satellite Project, bringing free, alternative and trustworthy information to the people in Russia and neighbouring countries
Donor : European Union (DG Connect) + RSF
Duration : 1 November 2024 - 31 October 2026 (2 years implementation period).
Budget : 2 599 868,29€.
Target countries : Russia and neighbouring countries.
Target groups :
The Svoboda Satellite Project aims to ensure the free flow of alternative, pluralistic and independent media information in countries subject to intense propaganda. The project, a pioneering initiative, aims to provide an alternative source of information and ensure media pluralism. The project aims to provide independent journalists and media outlets, particularly those working in exile, the technical means to broadcast their content effectively in Russia and neighbouring countries. In order to reverse the logic of propaganda, and based on the independent media in exile, the project operates an independent and diverse package of TV channels distributed via direct-to-home satellite.
The project has two specific objectives :
Specific objective 1 : Operate an independent and diverse TV channels package distributed via direct-to-home satellite.
Specific objective 2 : Expand the access to independent, alternative and pluralistic information for audiences in Russia and in the neighbouring countries.
The project is organised into three work packages which includes tasks :
Work Package 1: Project management and Coordination
Work Package 2: Deployment of the technical means to ensure the access to independent, alternative and pluralistic information in Russia and in the region
Work Package 3: Communication and dissemination
4/ Objectives of the impact assessmen
RSF reserves the right to make small changes to the content of these ToR after their publication. If changes have to be made, they will be discussed during the inception phase of the assessment.
The main objective of the impact assessment is to determine how many households are reached by RSF's Svoboda satellite package and are watching the channels. The other objective of the assessment is to have a global overview of RSF’s Svoboda satellite impact. Some impact that could be studied are the following :
The aim of this call for proposals is to find consultants who can offer innovative solutions to meet this objectives, taking into account the following elements and limits:
Stakeholders who can be involved in the impact assessment are :
All the documents required for the assessment will be made available to the consultants after the signature of the contract.
5/ Deliverables
The expected deliverables includes :
An inception report that will form the basis for the impact assessment process and shall be approved by RSF before starting to implement the assessment. The inception report should be written in English. The report will include:
A final report (including draft reports for comments and review by RSF). The format of the final report will be decided during the inception phase based on the methodology chosen. Additional documents to the final report may be proposed as part of the methodology in the response to the terms of reference.
6/ Budget
The maximum budget available for this impact assessment is €35,000 all taxes included. This amount must include all the costs required to carry out the impact assessment.
The assessment can be carried out remotely or the evaluators can decide to carry out field mission(s), with the prior agreement of RSF. In the event of mission(s), the costs must be part of the total budget and the consultants will be required to arrange the logistics including any necessary security arrangements.
7/ Calendar
The impact assessment consultancy mission is scheduled to start at the end of January 2026.
RSF will need the results of the impact assessment as soon as possible. The impact assessment must be finalised and the final report approved by RSF by the end of May 2026 at the latest.
As part of their proposal, consultants are expected to submit a timetable. The timetable must allow for a certain degree of flexibility.
8/ Consultant qualifications
For this assessment, RSF is seeking to recruit a team of consultants. Preference will be given to the team with the most relevant expertises and experiences, and that proposes the methodology that best meets the objectives.
The following skills will be sought :
9/ Submission of the offer and selection
Team of consultants interested in the impact assessment should include the following documents in their application:
Proposals must be submitted in English. Incomplete applications will not be considered.
Full applications must be sent by email to the following addresses before 07/01/2026 at 9.00 a.m (Paris time, CET) :
Charlie Troncy, MEAL officer: ctroncy@rsf.org
Cléa Monier, Project officer : cmonier@rsf.org
The interviews with pre-selected applicants could be organised in January 2026.
June 3 (9:00 AM - 5:00 PM)
Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) - Hanover St, District Six, Cape Town, 7925, South Africa
Deadline: February 15, 2026
Division(s)/Interest Group(s): Public Relations
Rationale & theme
Public relations and strategic communication often sit at the intersection of power, ethics, and inclusion. Around the world, widening gaps in wealth, voice, and representation shape who gets heard and how institutions and organizations are held to account. This preconference invites scholarship and practice that examine how public relations and strategic communication can help bridge inequality gaps, as well as what role they play in reproducing them across organizational, community, governmental, and transnational contexts. We welcome conceptual and empirical work as well as practitioner‐academia collaborations that surface actionable insights for practice and policy.
We especially encourage contributions that:
Participation tracks
1) Research papers
Original scholarly submissions (conceptual or empirical) that advance theory and/or evidence on the conference theme.
Format
2) Actionable research & practice labs
Short, impact‐oriented contributions that translate scholarship into tools for practice and policy.
Submissions should include at least one tangible output, such as:
Publication opportunities
Special issue in Journal of Communication Management
Special issue in Communicare: Journal for Communication Studies in Africa
Costs
The conference fee is 40 USD and includes a light breakfast on arrival, lunch, and refreshments during session breaks. Participants attending this pre-conference on June 3rd as well as the Metamodern Public Relations pre-conference on June 4th will benefit from a reduced joint participation fee of 60 USD.
The pre-conference is supported by the Public Relations Division of the ICA.
Abstract submission
The deadline for submissions is February 15, 2026.
Abstracts of up to 800 words are invited. Please send your abstract to: bridginggapsconf@gmail.com
Submissions will undergo blind peer review, so please make sure to submit a suitably anonymized text. Please make sure that your abstract is a specific contribution to this pre-conference.
Acceptance notifications will be sent out by mid-March, 2026. It is understood that, by submitting an abstract, you are going to attend the pre-conference should it be accepted.
Check the Call for Papers on the ICA website: https://www.icahdq.org/mpage/ICA26-prepostconferences
Organizers
Local organizers
Nirvana Bechan, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa Deidre Porthen, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa
RePIM – Revisioning Public Interest Media – is a four-year Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) Doctoral Network dedicated to reimagining how Public Interest Media can remain relevant, sustainable, and impactful in a rapidly changing, data-driven and platform-dominated environment.
The network unites leading European universities, Public Interest Media organisations, and industry partners to train 12 Doctoral Candidates (DCs) working across media content innovation, infrastructure transformation, organisational change, audience analysis, and policy development. RePIM offers an interdisciplinary, international, and cross-sectoral training environment, including secondments, summer/winter schools, scenario-building workshops, and close collaboration with non-academic partners.
We are now recruiting 12 fully funded PhD researchers, each employed for 36 or 48 months (project-dependent) at one of the participating universities across Europe.
All positions are full-time, fully funded according to Marie Skłodowska-Curie Doctoral Network regulations, including living allowance, mobility allowance, and, when applicable, family allowance.
Eligibility (MSCA-DN Requirements)
To be eligible, applicants must:
General Requirements
Open PhD Positions (12 Doctoral Candidates)
Below is an overview of all RePIM Doctoral projects. Each title links to a full description and guidelines for applying.
Applicants may indicate interest in up to three positions. This can be done as part of a single application but this must clearly specify their first choice.
PhD project
DC1. Coping with the challenges of automated content in public interest media
University of Zurich (UZH)
Switzerland
DC2. Reinventing content for online-first public media
Charles University Prague (CU)
Czechia
DC3. Quality news bots for public service media
Aalborg University (AAU)
Denmark
DC4. Object oriented edge-casting using semantic encoding
DC5. Digital infrastructures in the public interest
University of Stavanger (UiS)
Norway
DC6. Global logics in local contexts: Reinventing partnership strategies for Public Interest Media
Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)
Belgium
DC7. Reconfiguring organisational structures for delivering platformised public value
DC8. Developing and transforming sustainability requirements for Public Interest Media
Paris Lodron University of Salzburg (PLUS)
Austria
DC9. Regulating Public Interest Media in a platform world
DC10. Public support for non-public service media organisations
University of Warsaw (UW)
Poland
DC11. Reaching the unreachable
DC12. Audience data management and performance measurement in the cross-media landscape
Tallinn University (TLU)
Estonia
Deadline for Applications
Apply before 31 January 2026 by following the procedure detailed in each job posting.
What RePIM Offers
All DCs will benefit from:
RePIM – Revisioning Public Interest Media is a four-year Marie Skłodowska-Curie (MSCA) Doctoral Network dedicated to reimagining the role and future of public interest media in a data-driven, platform-dominated environment. RePIM brings together leading European universities, industry partners, and 12 Doctoral Candidates in an interdisciplinary, cross-sectoral training and research programme. The network investigates how public interest media can remain relevant, sustainable, and impactful by transforming how content is produced, packaged, distributed, and supported organisationally and technologically. Through its focus on strategic innovation, organisational change, and media management, RePIM equips its doctoral researchers with advanced analytical and managerial skills to help reshape public interest media across diverse European contexts.
Weizenbaum Institut
Founded in 2017, the Weizenbaum Institute researches the effects of advancing digitalisation on our society. With its recommendations for action, it helps to ensure that the digital transformation is sustainable, self-determined and responsible. The Weizenbaum Institute is supported by a network of seven partners, including Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Technische Universität Berlin, Berlin University of the Arts, the University of Potsdam, the Fraunhofer Institute for Open Communication Systems (FOKUS) and the Social Science Research Centre Berlin (WZB). The institute is financed by the Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space (BMFTR) and the state of Berlin. It is located in Berlin.
For our third-party-funded research group “Local Digital Public Spheres” at the Weizenbaum-Institut e.V. we are looking, at the earliest possible date, for 3 research associates in social science (m/w/d) with 29.25 hours per week (75%). The position is initially limited until 31 December 2028. Further employment up to a total duration of four years will be sought and is dependent on further funding approval.
The Team
The junior research group “Local Digital Public Spheres” is funded as part of the German Research Foundation’s (DFG) Emmy Noether program. It investigates how contemporary local public spheres are formed under conditions of digitalization and globalization, as local issues and events often gain national or even international attention. The project investigates digital discourses on places which have gained public notoriety in the fields of (a) illiberalism and backlash against plural societies and (b) industrial transformations and environmental concerns. It further investigates how residents respond to such public attention and organize around these issues locally. The group employs a mixed-methods design of computational (text-as-data, network analysis) and qualitative approaches (interviews, ethnographic field work) to investigate six local digital public spheres in three countries (Poland, Germany, the United Kingdom). Based on this empirical data, it will develop a theory of the spatial dimension of digital public spheres. You can take a closer look at the team and their work here.
Your tasks
Your profile
Your chance
Severely disabled applicants with equal qualifications will be given preference. We value diversity and welcome all applications - regardless of gender, nationality, ethnic or social origin, religion, disability, age and sexual orientation. The Weizenbaum Institute expressly encourages women and people with a history of migration to apply.
Please submit your application, consisting of a motivation letter, your curriculum vitae (including a list of publications, conference presentations, or other academic activities, if applicable), university degree and other relevant certificates, and a writing sample (e.g., a student paper or master’s thesis) in English or German addressed to Dr. Daniela Stoltenberg, in our application portal until 2nd January 2026. Please indicate clearly for which country case studies you are applying. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact Maite Vöhl from our HR team (personal[at]weizenbaum-institut.de) at any time. We look forward to receiving your documents.
Application portal
Deadline for panel paper abstracts: January 15, 2026 (5pm UTC)
Panel Convenor: Nico Carpentier, CULCORC, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.
Submission to be sent to: nico.carpentier@fsv.cuni.cz
I plan to submit a panel proposal for the IAMCR 2026 conference, which will take place in Galway (Ireland), from 28 June - 2 July 2026. The theme of this year's conference is "Peripheries and Connections: Media, Communication and Transformation", with panel and paper submission deadline of 3 February 2026. More about the conference can be found (as you know) at https://iamcr.org/galway2026.
This panel proposal, which originates from my work in MeDeMAP (a European research project), will be entitled “Participation, Knowledge and Communication: An Intersection of Transformative Forces”; the abstract is below.
With this call for papers (for this panel) I want to invite interested scholars, activists and artists, from a diversity of locations and affiliations, to join me in this panel proposal. In order to allow time for the panel selection process, proposals should reach me, at nico.carpentier@fsv.cuni.cz, on or before 15 January 2026, 5pm UTC.
Proposals need to include (1) an abstract between 500 and 800 words, (2) a title, (3) an author list with names, affiliations and email addresses, and (4) a note confirming that at least one author will be present in person at the IAMCR conference (if the panel is accepted).
The panel “Participation, Knowledge and Communication: An Intersection of Transformative Forces” incorporates theoretical and empirical research papers which scrutinise the intersection of three key concepts and the multitude of practices they cover. First, participation, defined here as the rebalancing of power imbalances (see, e.g., Pateman, 1970), or, as the sharing of power, with its promises of empowerment, is central to our understanding of political processes in a variety of societal fields (also moving beyond politics). Participation has the capacity to validate ordinary people and the decentralisation of decision-making processes. Knowledge, in its very Foucauldian meaning, is seen the assemblage of the discourses that are constructed as truthful renderings of social reality. To use McCarthy (1996: 2) definition: “knowledge refers to any and every set of ideas accepted by one or another social group or society of people, ideas pertaining to what they accept as real.” Finally, communication is approached here as the interpreting and sharing of meaning, through the exchange of signifying practices, structured through discourses and ideologies. Also knowledge and communication, are deeply political practices, structured through power relations, and part of discursive-material construction processes, always located in particular geographies.
This panel is particular interested in how these three notions theoretically and empirically intersect, and how these intersections allow us to (re)think societal transformations, in a diversity of centres and peripheries. For instance, this panel aims to open up discussions about situated knowledge (Haraway, 1988), and its capacity to feed into participatory processes, but also how participatory processes can bring out a diversity of voices which otherwise would be silenced by hegemonic knowledge and communication practices. Similarly, the panel is interested in collaborative-participatory knowledge production and communication processes, which disrupt the traditional centres and hierarchies of knowledge production. Equally important are alternative-participatory communication practices, which allow for the generation of new knowledges, or for the re-articulation of existing hegemonic knowledge frameworks. Through an articulation of different critical perspectives, this panel aims to deepen our reflections on how these three notions intersect, and how they can support (or disrupt) social change processes and societal transformations.
Slavko Splichal
A new book by Slavko Splichal, titled The Gig Public, was recently published by Anthem Press. The book explores the rise of the “gig public” in the age of performative publicness, highlighting challenges in sustaining meaningful discourse, the impact of new technologies and AI on public engagement, and the emergence of the will to visibility within the context of capitalism and algorithmic governmentality.
Read open access version HERE.
Contents:
Introduction: The Gig Public – Rethinking Publicness in the Age of AI
1-From Collective to Counter: Understanding the Evolving Territories of Publicness
2-Paradigm Shifts: Habitual and Contractual Foundations of Publics
3-The Gig Public: Redrawing the Boundaries between Public and Private Realms
4-Invigorating Publicness in the AI World: Challenges, Opportunities and Strategies
Today the Global Media & Internet Concentration Project released its report on market, policy and technological developments in a swathe of communication, internet and media industries in Germany:
- The Germany report was prepared by: Lukas Barbutev, Dr Hendrik Theine, Dr Tobias Mast and Josefine May Spannuth
This follows editions we have already published on the state of media and internet concentration in Canada, Mexico, South Africa, Norway the United States and many more, with the end goal a library of regularly updated reports for all of the nearly 40 countries that make up the GMICP.
These reports are rich with insights into growth and concentration trends within media and communication sectors in these countries, as well as key regulatory developments.
Finally:
- Please review any of our reports and the underlying data sets here.
- We invite other researchers to contribute their expertise to our efforts – please reach out to us here.
June 4, 2026 (8:30 - 12:00 PM (UTC+2)
Cape Town, South Africa (in-person only)
Deadline: December 15, 2025 (12:00 CET)
Organised with the ICA divisions Children, Adolescence and Media and Communication Law and Policy, the DFC welcomes original research studies addressing the theme of children’s rights in the digital environment, from all disciplines, employing empirical methods, relevant theory, and contributing to children’s rights in the digital environment, especially Global South perspectives.
In the pre-conference, scholars and practitioners will explore how research can inform policy, regulation and design with children in digital environments, framed by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child’s General comment No. 25 on Children’s Rights in Relation to the Digital Environment.
More info: https://www.digital-futures-for-children.net/events/ica-preconference/call-for-submissions
SUBSCRIBE!
ECREA
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry 14 6041 Charleroi Belgium
Who to contact
About ECREA Become a member Publications Events Contact us Log in (for members)
Help fund travel grants for young scholars who participate at ECC conferences. We accept individual and institutional donations.
DONATE!
Copyright 2017 ECREA | Privacy statement | Refunds policy