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ECREA WEEKLY digest ARTICLES

  • 03.06.2020 11:37 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    University of Fribourg

    The University of Fribourg’s Department of Communication and Media Research DCM is dedicated to research and teaching in the field of communication and media studies that adheres to the highest international standards. Researchers at the department cover research fields ranging from political communication, journalism, communication management, to communication history, business communication and new media, media systems and media effects. A fund raised by the department’s founding fathers Dr. Max Gressly and Dr. Florian Fleck allows the DCM to offer an

    International Visiting Scholarship

    or post-doctoral researchers and non-tenured professors. As a trilingual institution (French, German, English) the University of Fribourg provides a truly international research environment with plenty of opportunities to share ideas. Moreover, visiting scholars can benefit from enriching research opportunities in Switzerland. The remuneration consists of CHF 5.000, permitting a stay of two to three months. Visiting scholars will have the chance to collaborate with established scholars and to contribute to academic discussions at the department.

    The scholarship addresses young internationally-orientated scholars who are on a research or a sabbatical leave. The quality of the applicants should be demonstrated by publications in international peer-reviewed journals or by promising ongoing research projects. Priority will be given to applicants from outside of Switzerland focusing on research projects which correspond to the research interests at the DCM.

    Applicants are requested to submit a letter of application, a statement outlining their research plans and their motivation, a curriculum vitae, a list of publications (with the most significant publications highlighted), copies of degree certificate(s) and an academic letter of recommendation.

    Deadline for applications: September 30, 2020

    Please send applications by email to: nadege.rives@unifr.ch

    For additional information, please contact the Head of the Department of Communication and Media Research, Prof. Dr. Regula Hänggli (regula.haenggli@unifr.ch) or Nadège Rives, administrative assistant (nadege.rives@unifr.ch).

  • 03.06.2020 11:29 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    NECSUS

    Deadline: July 1, 2020

    How do things hold together? The highly complex, capitalistic world that we have built is held by supply chains and financial circuits, digital infrastructures and information streams. It is also held together by individuals and groups that share and support, that give and distribute in ways different from a purely market-oriented exchange of goods. Both forms of connectivity have come under considerable duress during the current COVID19 pandemic - this is also a crisis of and for media, mediation, and mediators. At the moment, life seems to be reoriented toward the more immediate values of home, health, family, and neighborhood where one can discover vast and untapped potentials for solidarity: a sense of interdependent belonging not grounded in logics of exchange but moved by a desire for collective well-being as individual well-being. At the same time, media play a crucial role in how we come together during times of social distancing, allowing for the invention of new modes of assembly, intimacy, and expression.

    The Spring 2021 issue of NECSUS intends to explore how media - today, in the past, and even in the future - may facilitate expressions of solidarity in the face of watershed moments such as the current health crisis, or indeed how it might have rendered inequalities and the lack of solidarity more glaring.

    Does media help us come together across our differences, and if so how and for whom?

    Solidarity is a fundamental social experience, a shared concern that connects individuals to each other and that also forms bonds among groups, collectives, and communities. Solidarity becomes more urgent at times of unrest, change, and social shifts. Our current Covid-19 situation, informed by a new ubiquity of mediated communication and social connections, is such a watershed moment for experiencing and thinking about social fabric and the role of media in particular. Other historical moments with impact on a larger social level, such as the 1989-90 fall of the ‘Eastern bloc’ and its repercussions for a global world order, or the 1968 student and peace protests in its various local forms, also brought forth their specific formations of solidarity with specific media politics. These moments also influenced media production and reception, or can trace memories of solidarity. For this issue we are looking for research articles that connect reflections of solidarity with the specificities of media, be it in the form of memory work and media archives, media influences on community or a revisiting of identity, (self)positioning and collectivity, media technologies and infrastructures, practices and affordances.

    Submissions might address modes of im/mediated solidarity that have emerged during the ongoing health crisis, but also prior iterations that need historicisation. This includes the crystallisation of new infrastructures, led most prominently by video conferencing software, and how they reassemble the sociality of, say, the workplace,

    but also of nightlife through something like a Zoom dance party. This might be a way to address more fundamental questions regarding media use: what are the limits of the tools deployed in the face of widely divergent access to media? Does the current health crisis reduce the differences that many still perceive between ‘real life’ and digitally mediated experience? How is our sense of solidarity impacted by the absence of co-presence, the sharing of a physical space with others? Other topics include new and old practices of media-related (self-)care. This could be in terms of how media have been enlisted for practices to increase individual and collective well-being or, in contrast, how collective care practices have been developed to protect against unhealthy influences of media. Solidarity is also a key term in relation to the ongoing debate around the migratory regime of the EU and the current ‘leave no one behind’ activism. Last, but certainly not least, solidarity might also be considered in relation to the recent boom n studying community-oriented media practices.

    Other topics may include (but are not restricted to):

    # Collective media action and its specific forms in history and in the current moment

    # Solidarity and technology/infrastructure - what are the affordances and possibilities opened up by media technologies that might allow for expressions and practices of solidarity? How does the unequal penetration of infrastructures prevent or thwart attempts at solidarity?

    # Solidarity and viewing practices; interrogating and/or disrupting media consumption habits and forms of spectatorship defined (wholly or in part) by social atomisation and/or solipsism, in the past and/or the present (e.g. responses to the closure of public spaces designed for the consumption of media, such as cinema theaters; digital film festival debates, etc)

    # Solidarity, media and phenomenology: how do we experience the lack of physical presence and its ‘replacement’ by dematerialised communication?

    # Solidarity and new forms of collective labor, including analysis of media practices that respond to neoliberal models of education and push for a rethink of such models in times of unprecedented crisis

    # Mediated networks of care: how does the notion of care change if it is largely practiced at a distance and/or through media?

    We also invite submissions on the intersection between academic research and artistic practice. Submissions may address the audiovisual essay as an old and new method of doing media studies; also, practice-based research or research-creation as evolving methods of knowledge production and performance.

    We look forward to receiving abstracts of 300 words, 3-5 bibliographic references, and a short biography of 100 words by 1 July 2020 to g.decuir@aup.nl. On the basis of selected abstracts, writers will be invited to submit full manuscripts (6,000-8,000 words, revised abstract, 4-5 keywords) which will subsequently go through a double-blind peer review process before final acceptance for publication.

    NECSUS also accepts proposals throughout the year for festival, exhibition, and book reviews, as well as proposals for guest edited audiovisual essay sections. We will soon open a general call for research article proposals not tied to a special section theme. Please note that we do not accept full manuscripts for consideration without an invitation.

    Access our submission guidelines at necsus-ejms.org/guidelines-for-submission/

  • 03.06.2020 11:21 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Dr. Benjamin Krämer, Prof. Dr. Christina Holtz-Bacha

    This volume assembles a wide range of perspectives on populism and the media, bringing together various disciplinary and theoretical approaches, authors and examples from different continents and a wide range of topical issues. The chapters discuss the contexts of populist communication, communication by populist actors, different types of populist messages (populist communication in traditional and new media, populist criticism of the media, populist discourses related to different topics, etc.), the effects and consequences of populist communication, populist media policy and anti-populist discourses. The contributions synthesise existing research on this subject, propose new approaches to it or present new findings on the relationship between populism and the media.

    With contibutions by

    Caroline Avila, Eleonora Benecchi, Florin Büchel, Donatella Campus, María Esperanza Casullo, Nicoleta Corbu, Ann Crigler, Benjamin De Cleen, Sven Engesser, Nicole Ernst, Frank Esser, Nayla Fawzi, Jana Goyvaerts, André Haller, Kristoffer Holt, Christina Holtz-Bacha, Marion Just, Philip Kitzberger, Magdalena Klingler, Benjamin Krämer, Katharina Lobinger, Philipp Müller, Elena Negrea-Busuioc, Carsten Reinemann, Christian Schemer, Anne Schulz, Christian Schwarzenegger, Torgeir Uberg Nærland, Rebecca Venema, Anna Wagner, Martin Wettstein, Werner Wirth, Dominique Stefanie Wirz

    https://www.nomos-shop.de/titel/perspectives-on-populism-and-the-media-id-88425/

  • 03.06.2020 11:16 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    January 20-22 2021

    Aix-Marseille University, France

    Deadline: June 19, 2020

    The Mediteranean Institute of Information and Communication Sciences (IMSIC) & The Journalism and Communication School of Aix-Marseille (EJCAM)

    Infomediation platforms (Smyrnaios, Rebillard, 2019) have become the dominant force of a ‘reintermediation’ of information online by organising a large variety of contents and making them available to internet users. Information from journalists, which we would qualify here as news, finds itself subject to exogenous imperatives which finish by influencing editorial decisions on information medias (Bell, Owen, 2017). This ‘platformisation’ of information online has coincided with an acceleration of the circulation of non-journalistic information besides news, from satire to disinformation, which increases the offer of contents proposed to internet users. In this open environment where journalistic productions, disinformation, click traps, infotainment and satire live together, journalism needs to rethink itself.

    The aim of this conference is to explore new journalistic practices in relation to “fake news” at the heart of environments dominated by platforms. By “fake news”, and because the polysemy of the term has sometimes contributed to its instrumentalisation, we mean more precisely ‘information problems’ (Wardle, Derakhsan, 2019) in all their diversity.

    As such, the conference will consider the question of fact-checking and the way it has been repositioned by criticising “fake news” (Bigot, 2019). Fact-checking has been called upon during electoral campaigns and is becoming increasingly part of a close relationship of collaboration and dependence between editors and web platforms which should be brought into question (Smyrnaios, Chauvet, Marty, 2017; Alloing, Vanderbiest, 2018). Over and above the current political situation, “fake news” on the subjects of health, the environment and even clickbait presenting false promises and strange revelations, questions the expert status of specialist journalists as well as other concerned parties.

    Propositions should address the following four lines of research:

    • At the information source: media education in the face of the platforms
    • Fighting against “fake news”, a reaffirmation of journalism?
    • Political journalism and health journalism: the challenge of “fake news” to specialised journalists
    • Reception of false information and platforms: a reinforcement of cognitive biais?
    At the information source: media education in the face of the platforms

    “I saw it on Facebook”. This unequivocal statement from Reuters Institute (Kalogeropoulos, Newman, 2017) demonstrates the way digital environments have changed our relationship to information. The intermediary, in this case Facebook, is more powerful than traditional media as a source of memorised information, opening the door wide to “fake news” by rendering the different sources of information interchangeable. This deconstruction of the source, which journalists call upon and confront, which media use as a reliable source of information is renewing the historic inspiration of media studies. The necessity of a pedagogical attention to source, the one which we often consult via the intermediary of web platforms, overlaps on to understanding the logic of information production. The platforms also present themselves pedagogically when they contribute to highlighting the wheat and the chaff in all the content they host (Joux, 2018). However they are both advocates and judges, which explains why media studies is increasingly transforming into education on web platforms. What are the stakes created by the erasure of the source in the ecosystems where the platforms are dominating? What are the new relationships between information source and information as a source? What are the challenges for media studies?

    Fighting against “fake news”, a reaffirmation of journalism?

    Fact-checking has been experiencing an important development in publishing since the 2000’s (Bigot, 2017). The increased visibility of “fake news” has given it a new role since the beginning of the 2010’s. While dressing itself up as a social mission with obvious uses, fact-checking has restated the importance of journalism in producing news information in the public sphere. It has also criticised the illusion that anyone can be a journalist which the ease of internet sharing may have led us to hope for (Mathien, 2010). This reaffirmation of specific journalistic savoir-faire is supported differently by the platforms. Facebook, as well Google (through the CrossCheck project), finances publishing to check certain contents, which circulate in their ecosystem. However, this recognition of fact-checking by the platforms can be considered as ambivalent. If it relies on the education of internet users thanks to the visibility of journalistic work, it also corresponds to the imposition of priorities financed by the platforms in publishing. We propose to question these major themes here, fact-checking and its ambitions for journalism as well as the economic and editorial relationships between the platforms and newsrooms.Political journalism and health journalism: the challenge of “fake news” to specialised journalists

    Representing a ‘serious symptom of political breakdown’ (Mercier, 2018), the contemporary unfurling of “fake news” is being fed by a growing defiance to the position of the ‘knowledgeable’ elite which journalists belong to, whether they are ‘general’ or ‘specialist’. In two key information areas – politics and health-, areas which are connected to major collective stakes, the question of the transformation/adaptation of journalists’ professional practices is particularly important. Faced with this menace, is it sufficient to generalise the practices of fact-checking and to correct certain problematic practices (hurried treatments, insufficient verification, incomplete scientific acculturation, …) to restore a curtailed legitimacy? Is turning the discursive weapons employed by ‘post-truth’ (Dieguez, 2018) against it the best way to renew the codes and modes of expression of specialised journalism? Is it enough to remove the “barriers” to the exercise of the profession and organise it in a network (Bassoni, 2015), leaning now on the practices of all the parties concerned by the containment of “fake news” (in this case, in health, the health authorities, scientists, carers, patients and “digital opinion leaders”)?

    Reception of false information and platforms: a reinforcement of cognitive bias?

    If the proliferation of fake news is linked to the technical and economic conditions of information circulation, it also relies on cognitive domains which do not always promote the truth and forms of reception attached to plural contexts. Recognised cognitive biases frequently lead individuals to select and believe false information to encourage consensus within a group (Festinger, 1954) or through an economy of means (Kahneman, 2011). Social illusionism and the illusion of truth can thus favour the propagation of false information (Huguet, 2018). Indeed, individuals perceive “fake-news” as one of the elements of the globally degraded universe of information, including forms of propaganda or mediocre journalism (Nielsen et Graves, 2017). Here, the public’s perception of “fake news” is the combination of the interests of certain medias which publish it, politicians who contribute to it and the platforms who allow it to be distributed. What are the characteristics of the public’s reception of “fake news”? What type of individual or collective sources does “fake news” call upon? How far can platforms and their business models reinforce the cognitive biases associated to “fake news”? These questions will be approached by considering the modalities of the public’s reception of “fake news” through their permanence or, on the contrary, their variation according to contexts.

    How to submit

    Propositions should be 6000 characters and include a short biography. They will indicate which research theme they are most appropriate to. Descriptions of the field of study/corpus and the research methodology are expected.

    Propositions should be sent to the following address: jep2021@outlook.fr

    The deadline is June 19, 2020

    Propositions will be double blind evaluated, replies will be sent out during September 2020.

    Scientific committee

    • Amiel Pauline (IMSIC, Aix Marseille Université)
    • Bousquet Franck (Lerass, Université Paul Sabatier – Toulouse 3)
    • Cabrolié Stéphane (IMSIC, Aix Marseille Université)
    • Graves Lucas (University of Wisconsin – Madison)
    • Grevisse Benoît (MiiL, UC Louvain)
    • Jeanne-Perrier Valérie (GRIPIC, Paris Sorbonne)
    • Jenkins Joy (Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford)
    • Joux Alexandre (IMSIC, Aix Marseille Université)
    • Mercier Arnaud (CARISM, Université Paris 2)
    • Pignard-Cheynel Nathalie (Université de Neuchatel)
    • Sebbah Brigitte (Lerass, Université Paul Sabatier – Toulouse 3)
    • Smyrnaios Nikos (Lerass, Université Paul Sabatier – Toulouse 3)
    • Vovou Ioanna (ICCA Sorbonne Nouvelle, Université Panteion, Athens)

    Organization team

    • Coordination : Joux Alexandre (IMSIC) & Amiel Pauline (IMSIC)
    • Bassoni Marc (IMSIC)
    • Belgacem Fetta (IMSIC)
    • Cabrolié Stéphane (IMSIC)
    • Cappuccio Alexia (IMSIC)
    • D’Aiguillon Benoît (IMSIC)
    • Lukasik Stéphanie (IMSIC)
    • Pélissier Maud (IMSIC)

    References :

    Alloing C., Vanderbiest N. (2018), « La fabrique des rumeurs numériques. Comment la fausse information circule sur Twitter ? », Le Temps des médias, 30(1), 105-123.

    Bassoni M. (2015), « Journalisme scientifique et public-expert contributeur. Une « nouvelle donne » dans les pratiques du journalisme spécialisé ? », Questions de communication, série actes 25 (sous la direction de Ph. Chavot et A. Masseran), Presses Universitaires de Nancy, 179-189.

    Bell E., Owen T. (2017), The Platform Press. How Silicon Valley reengineered Journalism, Columbia Journalism School, Tow Center for Journalism.

    Bigot L. (2017), « Le fact-checking ou la réinvention d’une pratique de vérification », Communication & Langages, 2, n°192, 131-156.

    Bigot L. (2019), Fact checking versus fake news : vérifier pour mieux informer, Paris : INA Editions.

    Dieguez S. (2018), Total Bullshit ! Au cœur de la post-vérité, Paris : Presses universitaires de France.

    Festinger L. (1954), « A theory of social comparison processes », Human Relations, 7, 117-140.

    Huguet P. (2018), « Eléments de psychologie des fake news », in L’information d’actualité au prisme des fake news, Paris : L’Harmattan, 201-222.

    Joux A., Pélissier M. (2018), L’information d’actualité au prisme des fake news, Paris : L’Harmattan.

    Joux A. (2018), « Des dispositifs contre les fake news : du rôle des rédactions et des plateformes », in L’information d’actualité au prisme des fake news, Paris : L’Harmattan, 73-93.

    Kahneman D. (2011), Thinking, fast and slow, London : Penguin.

    Kalogeropoulos A., Newman N. (2017), ‘I saw the News on Facebook’. Brand Attribution when Accessing News from Distributed Environments, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Oxford University.

    Mathien M. (2010), « “ Tous journalistes ! ” Les professionnels de l’information face à un mythe des nouvelles technologies »,Quaderni, 72, 113-125.

    Mercier A. (2018), Fake news et post-vérité : 20 textes pour comprendre la menace, The Conversation France/e-book, (hal-01819233).

    Nielsen K. R., Graves L. (2017), News you don’t believe: audience perspectives on fake news, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Oxford University.

    Smyrnaios N., Chauvet S., Marty E. (2017) L’impact de CrossCheck sur les journalistes et les publics, First Draft

    Smyrnaios N., Rebillard F. (2019), « How infomediation platforms took over the news: a longitudinal perspective », The Political economy of communication, vol. 7/1, 30-50.

    Wardle C., Derakhsan H. (2017) Information Disorder: Toward an interdisciplinary framework for research and policy making, Strasbourg: Council of Europe

  • 27.05.2020 13:51 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    University for the Creative Arts - School of Film, Media and Performing Arts

    Location: Farnham

    Salary: £35,845 to £49,552 pro rata per annum

    Hours: Part Time

    Contract Type: Permanent

    Placed On: 30th April 2020

    Closes: 31st May 2020

    Job Ref: 20-AMCD119-0168-1

    UCA is The Times / Sunday Times ‘Modern University of the Year 2019’ and the No.1 Specialist Creative University in all three major University league tables. Ranking 13th of all UK universities in the main Guardian League Table 2020 the University is also proud to hold the TEF Gold award for teaching quality from the Office for Students.

    As the UK’s No.1 specialist creative university for employment of graduates* and the second largest provider of creative education in Europe, the University has been producing exceptional graduates for the global creative sector for over 150 years. 96.9% of UCA’s graduates were either in employment or further study within 6 months of graduation in the most recent DLHE* survey released in 2018. We have more than 7,500 students studying on 120 creative arts, business and technology courses at campuses in Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Rochester, Hampton Court and Maidstone as well as by distance learning. Our exceptional team of world-class teaching and research academics are equipping the next generation of creators, innovators and leaders with the skills they need to thrive in the creative industries.

    Destinations of Leavers in Higher Education (DLHE) July 2018

    Part-Time Post: 21.75 hours per week

    The School of Film, Media and Performing Arts at the University for the Creative Arts has a well-established reputation for developing talented and creative graduates capable of working at all levels of the creative industries.

    The School wishes to appoint a Lecturer/Senior Lecturer for the Games programme at our Farnham campus. The role includes; maintaining and developing recruitment, retention, curriculum and assessment, ensuring that the delivery of the courses are carried out in accordance with the mission, policies and regulations of the University and School strategic plans. This appointment provides the right candidate with the opportunity to make a significant contribution to the development and progression of this well-respected provision.

    To be a contender for this exciting position you will have solid experience in Games. You will also have a relevant BA and PG degree in a related discipline. Experience of teaching at undergraduate and postgraduate level as well as of curriculum development and academic and administrative management would be a distinct advantage.

    You will be an inspirational practitioner, a team player and be interested in applying new technologies to learning and teaching, as well as developing these in a business practice environment. We would encourage you to be actively engaged with industry and your own practice, and to be expected to demonstrate the ability to frame your work as research.

    The pro rata salary for this position will be £21,507-£29,731 per annum.

    For further details and to apply for this post please visit our website https://jobs.ucreative.ac.uk

    The closing date for receipt of applications is 31st May 2020.

    Interviews will be held on 10th June 2020.

    We value the diversity of our organisation and welcome applicants from all sections of the community.

  • 27.05.2020 12:39 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa

    Country Experts to assist with the coding of codes of conduct and ethics/disciplinary bodies inside party organisations, willing to contribute to making the largest dataset on ethics self-regulatory measures implemented by representative institutions across the EU democracies.

    Ethics and Integrity in Public Life project (ETHICS) is a two-year project, coordinated by Luís de Sousa at the Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa (ICS-ULisboa), Portugal and funded by the Foundation Francisco Manuel dos Santos (FFMS). With this survey we will be mapping codes of conduct and ethics/disciplinary bodies inside party organisations across Europe.

    Political ethics strengthen the bonds of trust between citizens and their representatives, and therefore matter to the overall quality of democracy. Yet levels of trust in parties remain low, despite all the laws governing the ethical conduct of individual and collective political actors. The overall perception is that most of these regulatory efforts have not been properly designed and enforced. We want to give parties a chance to speak out and show what they have done so far to reduce this credibility deficit and how successful they have been in their intents.

    In these times of uncertainty about the future of representative democracy, volunteering a few hours of your time to contribute to a project that seeks to identify best practices to improve ethics management in political life, is also an act of positive citizenship.

    Our institutional profiling questionnaire has 24 detailed indicators and is organised in two sections: one focusing on the legal framework; another on the institutional setting. We will be completing a questionnaire per political party with parliamentary seating. Each questionnaire should not take more than an hour to complete. We are only coding parties with parliamentary representation in the 28 Member States (UK included). The coding procedure is documentary and web-based, through the consultation of both party statutes/constitutions and their institutional websites. The project’s default language is English.

    The coding is to be carried out during the month of June and to be completed by mid-July the latest.

    We are particularly looking for dedicated and committed collaborators with interest in these topics and familiar with party politics and political ethics in a country or set of countries.

    Collaborators will be able to use the data for their research endeavours.

    Join our team of country experts!

    How to apply:

    If you are interested in taking part in this project, just send us an e-mail to (ethics@ics.ulisboa.pt) indicating the country or set of countries you would be in grade of coding, and attach a copy of your CV.

  • 27.05.2020 12:36 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The University of Edinburgh - College of Arts, Humanities and Soc Scis

    Location: Edinburgh

    Salary: £32,872

    Hours: Full Time

    Contract Type: Fixed-Term/Contract

    Placed On: 21st May 2020

    Closes: 30th June 2020

    Job Ref: 052153

    Early-Stage Researcher (ESR) Fellowship, European Training Network FEINART: Gender and the sexual division of labour in the curating and production of socially engaged art

    This Early-Stage Researcher (ESR) position is made available through FEINART (The Future of European Independent Art Spaces in a Period of Socially Engaged Art), an ambitious interdisciplinary doctorate research programme funded by the European Union (Grant N. 860306) as part of the Horizon 2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Innovative Training Network (ITN) Action led by University of Wolverhampton; the Network also includes The University of Edinburgh, The University of Iceland, (Reykjavik) and Zeppelin University, Germany.

    The successful candidate, to be appointed at History of Art, ECA, University of Edinburgh, will undertake a three-year doctoral programme in the area of socially engaged art, with the position starting preferably in October/November 2020.

    This is a full-time, fixed-term post at 35 hours per week for 3 years.

    Successful candidates will receive a 3-year full-time employment contract. As per MSCA regulations, the salary includes a living allowance of €3,270 per month (gross amount) to be paid in the currency of the country where the host organisation is based, with a country correction coefficient to be applied; a mobility allowance of €600 per month; and a family allowance of €500 per month (depending on family situation). Please note: the exact (net) salary in Pound Sterling will be confirmed upon appointment, depending on UK tax regulations and the, country correction coefficient.

    Vacancy Ref: 052153

    Closing Date:30-JUN-2020 at 5pm GMT

    For further particulars and to apply for this post please click on the 'apply' button below

    https://www.vacancies.ed.ac.uk/pls/corehrrecruit/erq_jobspec_version_4.jobspec?p_id=052153

  • 27.05.2020 12:33 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    17 August 2020 (All day) - 23 August 2020 (All day)

    Warsaw/Poland or Bishkek/Kyrgyzstan (to be confirmed)

    Deadline: June 19, 2020

    ORGANIZED BY: Standing Group on Central East European Politics, Standing Group on Political Parties of the European Consortium, European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR), OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR)

    The summer school event will bring together an international team of academics and practitioners to train and instruct a group of 20 MA/PhD researchers, practitioners and civil society activists in the field of political parties and democracy.

    Given the current COVID-19 pandemic, the format of the school might be changed - adopting a “hybrid” or “online only” arrangements.

    Organisers and sponsors

    The summer school is organised under the auspices of the Standing Group on Central East European Politics and the support of the Standing Group on Political Parties of the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR).

    The sponsors are the European Consortium for Political Research and the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), while the event is also supported by the OSCE Academy in Bishkek, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw and the Centre for the Study of Parties and Democracy.

    Aims

    The main aims of the summer school are to:

    • provide instruction and discussion on a wider range of issues in the study of political parties, party systems, elections and democracy
    • develop a multinational forum for both junior scholars and practitioners to critically discuss their research projects
    • assist PhD researchers to develop their dissertation projects, contributing to innovation in conceptualisation, measurement, analysis and theory
    • prepare PhD researchers for the requirements and criteria of international academic publishing, and to encourage them to submit their work to academic journals
    • help practitioners to understand the main academic findings regarding party politics and democracy promotion
    • build on the most recent developments and challenges of political party development and democracy promotion presented by the “Global Agenda for the Renewal of Representation”
    • stimulate international collaboration in the field of parties, party systems, elections and democracy, encourage PhD researchers and practitioners to take part

    Participants

    The summer school event is open for MA/PhD researchers, practitioners and civil society leaders in the field of political parties, elections, representative democracy and closely related areas (e.g. anti-corruption, gender equality, political participation).

    Participants should be from and working on OSCE post-communist member states (i.e. Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, Estonia, North Macedonia, Georgia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan).

    The maximum number of participants is 20. Organisers will attempt to achieve both a gender, diversity, and a regional (i.e. Central and South-Eastern European as well as post-Soviet region) balance.

    Application

    Applications should be appropriately filled in (please do answer all the questions) and submitted to both Fernando.Casal.Bertoa@nottingham.ac.uk and k.grzybowska-walecka@uksw.edu.pl by Friday, 19 June 2020 (inclusively). They should be joined by a 500-word abstract (and up to 5 keywords) of the applicant's proposed paper. No other documents (e.g. CV, passport) are required at this stage.

    A preliminary selection of shortlisted participants will be made by Tuesday, 30 June 2020, conditioned to the final submission of papers by Friday, 31 July 2020. The papers should be a maximum of 8000 words.

    The shortlisted participants may also be contacted for a Skype interview before final acceptance.

    Those participants failing to submit the papers in time will be prevented from participating in the school.

    Applications by citizens from and/or working on other countries than those mentioned above, incomplete (e.g. missing questions, no abstract or keywords) applications or those submitted after the deadline as well as from those applications who have already obtained (i.e. defended) their PhD will not be considered.

    Staff

    The teaching staff consists of 9 leading scholars and practitioners in the field of political parties, elections and democracy from leading universities and international organisations.

    Teaching format

    The summer school includes an intensive programme of lectures and seminars by leading scholars and practitioners in the field, and presentations with in-depth discussions of participants’ projects. The working language (both for papers and presentations by participants) will be English only. The event contains 7 teaching days, each of which is organized around a topical research question related to the overall theme. Each day will comprise of two main elements, guest speakers presentations and students presentations. The overall number of class contact hours will thus be 45 hours.

    The first element consists of a presentation by a guest speaker/expert on a specific topic related to the theme of the school. This will be followed by a question-and-answer session.

    The second element consists of presentations by participants of their projects (which may, but do not have to be part of their PhD research). Each of these presentations, which should be no longer than 10 minutes, will be followed by a rigorous discussion (approximate 40 minutes) with all other participants and staff. Per day, up to three participants will present their work. Each participant will also act as discussant in one of the sessions.

    All high quality papers might also be included in a final volume edited by the OSCE Academy in Bishkek and ODIHR, to be confirmed.

    The East European Politics journal will also award a prize of €100 to the best paper presented at the event (both 2020 winter and summer sessions) and some small grants might be available for the papers which would require additional research/revisions.

    Assessment and accreditation

    Each participant fulfilling the above mentioned requirements will receive a certificate of participation.

    On special request, PhD researchers' papers may be assessed and credited by staff members of the School. The credits awarded for successful participation and assessment will be 6.5 European Credit Transfer System (ECTS) credits. PhD researchers wishing to have their work accredited are advised to consult the directors of the School at an early stage.

    Accommodation

    In the event the summer school (traditional face-to-face) format is allowed, most of participants will be accommodated in single rooms at organiser’s discretion.

    In the case the summer school adopts a “hybrid” or “online only” format, there will be no accommodation provided for online participants.

    Fees

    There are no fees. In the event the summer school (traditional face-to-face) format is allowed, B&B accommodation (8 nights starting on August 16th), tuition, lunches and one reception-dinner are sponsored by the organisers.

    Any travels arrangements/expenses (including visa, health/travel insurance, etc.) will be organized/covered by the participants. However, if the summer school finally runs as usual, a very limited number of participants (maximum 2 from ECPR institutions) will have the opportunity to get their travel reimbursed on a merit-base.

    Location

    The event is, in principle, planned to be hosted by the OSCE Academy in Bishkek. If, due to the pandemic, it is not possible to do so, the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) will be the venue - to be confirmed.

    Directors

    The summer school is directed by:

    Dr Katarzyna Grzybowska - Walecka - Assistant Professor at the Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University, Head of the MA Programme on Politics in Cyberspace and editor of the journal Politologia

    Dr Fernando Casal Bértoa - Associate Professor at the University of Nottingham, co-director of REPRESENT, member of the OSCE/ODIHR “Core Group of Political Party Experts”, and co-editor of the Routledge Book Series on Political Parties and Party Systems

  • 27.05.2020 11:06 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Editors: Ulrike Rohn (Tallinn University) and Tom Evens (Ghent University)

    Routledge

    This edited volume explores media management as engaged scholarship, building a bridge between theory and practice and discussing research collaboration between academia, policymakers and the media industry. In addition to advancing the scholarly discipline, it also questions, investigates and discusses the practical value of the research undertaken, showing how media management research can provide actionable, practice-relevant knowledge to decision makers throughout the media industry.

    The volume is broken into two parts: a section reflecting on the need for collaboration between research and practice, and a section overviewing specific projects that aim to deliver administrative value to stakeholders. The international research projects presented here span topics such as digital transformation, business models in news and digital journalism, media entrepreneurship and start-ups, ad-blocking, location-based services, audiovisual consumption preferences, the sustainability of small television markets, co-located and clustered industries and digital privacy. Incorporating under-used methodological approaches, such as action research and ethnography, Media Management Matters brings suggestions for how scholarship might be promoted outside academia. Simply put, this book aims to demonstrate why media management matters. 

    Featuring an international roster of contributors, this collection is essential reading for scholars and practitioners of media management, business and policy.

    https://www.routledge.com/Media-Management-Matters-Challenges-and-Opportunities-for-Bridging-Theory/Rohn-Evens/p/book/9780367211004

    Ulrike Rohn is Professor of Media Economics and Management at Tallinn University, Estonia, where she works at the Baltic Film, Media, Arts, and Communication School (BFM) and the Centre of Excellence in Media Innovation and Digital Culture (MEDIT). She served as the President of the European Media Management Association (emma, 2016–2020), and is co-Editor of the Springer Series in Media Industries and Associate Editor of the Journal of Media Business Studies. Dr. Rohn’s research interests include, among others, audiovisual policies, media business models and international media strategies. Latter research interest has led to her book publication Cultural Barriers to the Success of Foreign Media Content: Western Media in China, India, and Japan (2010).

    Tom Evens is an Assistant Professor at research group for Media, Innovation and Communication Technologies (imec-mict-UGent) at the Department of Communication Sciences at Ghent University, Belgium. He teaches in media economics, business model innovation and technology policy. He specialises in the economics and policies of media and technology industries, and has published widely on the media business. He is the lead author of The Political Economy of Television Sports Rights (2013) and Platform Power and Policy in Transforming Television Markets (2018). He served as the Deputy President of the European Media Management Association between 2017 and 2019. He is a member of several editorial boards and has been consulting several governments and media organisations on strategy and public policy issues.

  • 27.05.2020 11:02 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline for abstracts: June 22, 2020

    The proposed edited collection aims to explore the possibilities and limitations of teaching journalism in countries with strong media control.

    Target publisher: Palgrave Studies in Journalism and the Global South, Palgrave Macmillan.

    Recent scholarship has expressed increasing concern over the importance of acknowledging the varieties of journalism and its teaching around the world. It has been suggested that universalistic assumptions of what constitutes journalism should be challenged and domestic cultural standards and diverse political configurations should be taken into account (Mensing and Franklin, 2011; Hanitzsch et al., 2019; Bebawi, 2016; Mikal, 2014; Obijiofor and Hanusch, 2011; Berger, 2011; Schiffrin, 2011; Josephi, 2010; Hossein, 2007; Friedman, Shafer and Rice, 2006).

    An interdisciplinary, cross-geographical approach has been advocated as a way to spur discussion and criticism of the theoretical and practical principles underpinning journalism education. Collaborative work, at the global level among journalism educators, could foster the reciprocal exchange of ideas promoting innovation in practice, curriculum design and research (Mensing and Franklin, 2011).

    A focus on countries with robust media control, in times when the relationship between education and profession is being debated at a global level, might foster a discussion on the paradoxical features characterizing the tension between theory and practice. Typical questions arising are, for instance, whether journalism educators can teach effectively in a restrained media environment without compromising the very principles they are trying to abide by (Thompson, 2007).

    Existing studies note how in countries with strong governmental influence journalism programs face contradictory priorities over ideological impositions and commercial or educational imperatives (Obijiofor and Hanusch, 2011). For example, many universities in the Global South face the challenge of having to teach students how to write engaging content to meet audience and market demands whilst demonstrating loyalty to the state and adhering to its principles (Dombernowsky, 2016; Long and Zeng, 2016; Hao and Xu, 1997; Repnikova, 2017). Thus, it is crucial to understand how teachers and students make sense of, negotiate and reinterpret the clashing interests of state ideological infusions and public demands, and translate them into practice and reporting models.

    The proposed edited collection aims to discuss how to teach journalism in countries with limited freedom, including those which are in transition from authoritarianism to freer modes of government. The book has four main purposes: to illustrate and contextualize the challenges of journalism education under governmental control; to problematize transplanting a Western Anglo-American model into non-Western countries; to assess both the limitations and creative opportunities arising from teaching journalism under constraints; and, to broaden our understanding of the meaning and forms that journalism can take and the consequences that such a fluid understanding might have for future journalists.

    We would like the focus of the edited collection to be on China but we are open to contributions regarding other countries as well. Possible themes include but are not limited to:

    • Theoretical frameworks
    • Emerging learning models
    • The application of Western teaching principles in non-Western countries
    • Teaching journalism in transnational universities
    • Teaching journalism law/ethics
    • Accreditation standards of journalism education
    • Journalism training in countries that are making a transition to democracy
    • History of journalism training
    • The gap between academia and the industry
    • Fieldwork policies and learning outcomes
    • Teaching in collaboration with the industry
    • The structure of journalism curricula
    • Student awareness of politics
    • Managing student expectations
    • Technology-enhanced teaching
    • Community-based educational projects
    • Aesthetic journalism
    • Student media
    • Education as an agent of change
    • Education as a way to maintain the status quo
    • Internationalization of educational strategies
    • Journalism as a reservoir of transferable skills
    • Political and market influences on journalism curriculum design
    • Journalism training and ideological/political indoctrination
    • Illustrated Journalism

    Key dates

    • Abstract submission deadline: June 22, 2020
    • Notification of acceptance: July 1, 2020
    • Full paper submission (min 6, 500 - max 7, 500 words): September 1, 2020

    Please send in abstracts of max 500 words to:

    Diana.Garrisi@xjtlu.edu.cn (Lecturer, Department of Media and Communication, Xi’an-Jiaotong Liverpool University, China)

    and

    Xianwen.Kuang@xjtlu.edu.cn (Lecturer, Department of Media and Communication, Xi’an-Jiaotong Liverpool University, China).

    We look forward to receiving your abstracts!

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