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ECREA WEEKLY digest ARTICLES

  • 21.01.2019 15:20 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    ECREA supports young scholars and provides opportunities for their development. The Young Scholars Network (YECREA) at ECREA was established with exactly this goal in mind.

    ECREA supports this Network financially. For example, last year ECREA awarded 3 grants in total amount of 3.500€ for participation at the ECREA European Media and Communication Doctoral Summer School 2018 and offered 10 Young Scholars Grants for the ECREA 2018 conference in Lugano. We would like to continue this support, ideally on a larger scale.

    We kindly appeal for your support. By donating to the Young Scholars Fund you will directly support post-graduate researchers affiliated with the Young Scholars Network. We will gratefully accept any amount from individuals, groups, organisations or companies.

    As a way of expressing our gratitude, you will receive a delicious box of ECREA-branded chocolates (for donations of €15 and above) or an ECREA-branded athletic t-shirt (for donations of €35 and above). Ten donations of this amount will allow us to award the conference fee for one PhD scholar. We want to assure you that the whole amount will go to the Young Scholar Fund.

    If you wish to donate to the Young Scholars Fund, you can do so by clicking HERE. It is as easy as that.

    Please consider donating to the Young Scholars Fund. It is a great way to encourage participation and development of emerging young scholars within ECREA. Thank you for your valuable support.

    If you have any questions about donating to ECREA, contact Paweł Surowiec at treasurer@ecrea.eu.

  • 17.01.2019 19:01 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline: February 9, 2019

    The University of Stirling seeks to appoint a Senior Lecturer (Grade 9) in Film and Gender Studies with a demonstrable interest and expertise in gender.

    The appointee will contribute to doctoral, masters and undergraduate provisions within Stirling’s highly regarded film and media programme (ranked 8th in the UK in the latest Guardian rankings). The appointee will also take leadership of the MSc/MLitt in Gender Studies. While Stirling has always encouraged scholars with a diverse range of interests within the broad ambit of film and screen studies, we would be particularly interested in building capacity within the Division in areas such as science fiction and film theory.

    The MSc/MLitt in Gender Studies (Applied) at the University of Stirling is unique in the UK and is attracting a growing number of students interested in placing the application of learning to real-world contexts which lies at the heart of the course. The course awards two scholarships annually specifically for students studying the MSc/MLitt in Gender Studies (Applied), the Dr Dee Amy-Chinn Gender Studies Scholarship and the Gender Studies Community Bursary. The programme has been co-ordinated since inception five years ago by the departing chair and is proving particularly popular among third sector organisations both as hosts of masters interns and as a platform for re-training.

    Contract Type: Open Ended

    Working Pattern: Full Time

    Salary: Grade 9 (£50,132-£58,089)

    Closing date: Midnight on Saturday, 9th February 2019

    For further details, please see here


  • 17.01.2019 15:22 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

     May 9 – 11, 2019

    Piran (Slovenia)

    Deadline: February 28, 2019

    Today, algorithms are present everywhere, from the most basic functions of the biggest search engines and social networking sites, to the ways formerly laborious operations are fully automatized. Even though the omnipresence of algorithms increasingly shapes and defines relations at both individual and social levels of our lives, their quasi-autonomous logic and practice remains largely opaque. Practices performed by algorithms are often seen as if they were neutral and objective, even though their logic often merely confirms and reproduces the existing contradictions, inequalities and biases. Moreover, algorithms may strengthen mechanisms of surveillance and oppression, as they are silently taking over functions that in democratic societies ought to be subjected to public scrutiny.

    To provide a better understanding of how algorithms influence social relations in the wider field of communication studies, we invite proposals for presentations on a variety of topics connected to algorithms. We seek both empirical and theoretical studies, but the research should be critical in its nature and have strong theoretical foundations. Possible topics for the colloquium include, but are not limited to the issues more narrowly connected to algorithmization of journalistic and media practices, such as:

    • Automatization of journalistic labour and robot-journalism,
    • Transformations in news and media production,
    • News credibility and professional journalistic norms in automated journalism,
    • Propaganda,
    • Journalistic responsibility and ethics,
    • Personalisation of news production, social polarisation and divisions within society,
    • Changes in funding of journalism,
    • Media politics and regulation,

    or to the wider issues in which algorithms are related to social communication:

    • Ideology, logic and power of/in algorithms,
    • Global news-flows and new types of communication inequalities,
    • Search engine algorithms,
    • Pitfalls of algorithmization for democratic societies,
    • Political economy of algorithms (e.g. advertising, digital labour, market concentration),
    • Liquefaction of the publicness/privateness divide,
    • Big data and data monopolies,
    • Automated inequality,
    • Recent technological developments,
    • Human decisions in construction of algorithms,
    • Communication imperialism and platform imperialism.

    EURICOM Colloquia are traditionally small-scale intellectual events with approx. 20-25 participants. This gives participants ample opportunities for in-depth discussions and presentations of research projects. The organisers welcome proposals for papers addressing any aspect of the subject and do not intend to prioritise any particular approach, method or attitude towards the issues under consideration.

    In keeping with the established practice of the Colloquia, a special issue of the journal Javnost-The Public will be published containing a selection of the papers presented at the Colloquium.

    Interested scholars are invited to submit abstracts for presentation at the 34th EURICOM Colloquium (approximately 250 words) to the editor of Javnost-The Public editor@javnost-thepublic.org by February 28, 2019.

    Deadline for abstract submission: 28 February 2018.

    Confirmation of abstract acceptance: 20 March 2019.

    Deadline for draft paper submission: 6 May 2019.


  • 17.01.2019 13:34 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline: March 1, 2019

    Edited by Christina Lee and Erik Champion (Curtin University)

    We are soliciting contributions for an edited book that will explore the affective landscapes – both real and imaginary – in screen tourism. Screen tourism is a burgeoning global industry whereby tourists visit locations that are featured in or are associated with film and television texts (e.g. filming locations, theme parks, the creator’s former abode). This simultaneously niche yet mainstream market has now extended the bucket list of travel destinations to include the likes of Westeros (Dubrovnik, Game of Thrones), Middle-earth (New Zealand, The Lord of the Rings), and Platform 9¾ (London, Harry Potter).

    The book will explore how affective landscapes in screen tourism are sights/sites of transformation, play and possibility. It will broach a spectrum of topics, ranging from the tourist’s/fan’s affective response to place, to the strategic design of ventures to enhance the experiential through creating senses of place and narrative. The book will further advance discussions of the future potential of the industry (e.g. use of mixed/augmented reality).

    'Screen Tourism and Affective Landscapes' will be a comprehensive collection of essays by international scholars and screen tourism practitioners, opening up a space for dialogue between the academy and industry. This interdisciplinary book will be informed by fields including cultural studies, tourism studies, media studies, cultural heritage and visualisation studies.

    Possible areas of research include (but are not limited to):

    • narrative and affective landscapes
    • liminal spaces
    • embodied experiences
    • themed experiences and places
    • augmenting place through technology
    • modes of reality
    • (popular) cultural heritage and authenticity
    • the screen tourist’s gaze
    • fandom communities and engagement

    Chapters are expected to be approximately 6000–7500 words.

    Proposals should be sent by email (in a Word document) to the Editors by March 1, 2019. This should include an abstract (250 words) and a short contributor bio (one paragraph including institutional affiliation, position and recent publications). Please note that the submission date for accepted papers is October 4, 2019.

    Contributors, please address all inquiries and proposals to: Dr Christina Lee (c.lee@curtin.edu.au)

  • 17.01.2019 12:56 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Media Mutations 11 Conference

    May 20-21, 2019

    University of Bologna (Italy)

    Deadline: January 20, 2019

    Confirmed keynote speakers

    • Rachel Dwyer (SOAS University of London)
    • Stanley Rosen (University of Southern California)

    Organized by Marco Cucco (University of Bologna), Gertjan Willems (University of Antwerp) and Zhan Zhang (Università della Svizzera italiana)

    Media products, in particular audiovisual works, have always been used both as soft power tools for shaping or branding the image and reputation of their producing countries, and as a diplomatic platform for facilitating international relations and trade. Soft power strategies involve public and private stakeholders working in different areas within a wide, complex and well-orchestrated plan. However, due to the fundamental role of culture, media always play a crucial role in any plan of soft power and strategic marketing.

    The conference aims at understanding how media products serve for diplomatic and soft power purposes, with a focus on emerging markets. While traditional flows of communication moved from the Western world to other regions (as in the case of Hollywood films), nowadays the most sophisticated and innovative soft power plans are going in the opposite direction: from developing countries to Western Europe and the United States. Not only do countries like China, India, South Korea and Mexico have more and more skillful and powerful media companies and professionals, they are also intensively working and negotiating to spread their media products and brands abroad and to create international co-productions and new media ventures. Within these collaborations and expansion strategies, Western Europe and the United States also became their targeted markets.

    Investigating these dynamics is very challenging for scholars. Soft power strategies are often based on “unwritten” political decisions; they usually aim at reaching intangible goals, and their analysis requires expertise from several research areas (political sciences, economics, media studies, etc.). In light of these challenges, the conference aims at a better understanding of the role played by media products in international diplomacy and as soft power tools of developing countries favoring a dialogue between scholars from different research fields and geographic areas. In line with its founding purposes, the Media Mutations conference series aims to serve as a platform for discussing methodologies, sharing expertise and promoting a multi-disciplinary approach.

    The 11th edition of Media Mutations encourages submissions that cover the following subjects and topics:

    • Mapping of public and private stakeholders involved in soft power strategies of emerging markets, with a focus on creative industries
    • The role of media within soft power strategies of emerging markets
    • Case studies of single countries (economic and cultural goals policies; international agreements; development and performance of media products, etc.)
    • Case studies of particular media companies/organizations for their success/failure (corporate strategy, output, markets, economic results, etc.)
    • Case studies of particular media products for their success/failure (content design; financing; international distribution/circulation; reception in the national market and in foreign markets)
    • Soft power and national branding
    • The implementation of soft power into media practices
    • The places of networking for diplomatic and soft power purposes (fairs, markets at festivals, etc.)
    • Relations between developing countries and international organizations (e.g. European Union, World Trade Organization, etc.) in the field of media
    • Methodological approaches for investigating soft power strategies and their tangible/intangible results

    The official language of the conference is English. Abstracts (300-500 words for 20-minute talks) should be sent to mediamutations.org@gmail.com by January 20th , 2019. Please attach a brief biography (maximum 150 words) and an optional selected bibliography (up to five references). Notification of acceptance will be sent by February 18 th . A registration fee will be requested after notification of paper acceptance (€60 for speakers and professionalattendants; free conference admission for students).

    This Conference is financially supported by Centro Dipartimentale La Soffitta and Dipartimento delle Arti, Università di Bologna, and sponsored by the ECREA Film Studies Section.

    The CFP is also available on the Media Mutations web site: https://www.mediamutations.org/about/902-2/


  • 17.01.2019 12:47 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline: February 25

    The Department of Information Studies, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, invites applications for two 3-year fully funded PhD scholarships.

    The candidates are expected to begin on September 1, 2019 or as soon as possible thereafter.

    The PhD scholarships are open-area; we are looking for applications in all of the department’s areas of strength (read more about the department here: www.ischool.ku.dk ). We are especially interested in PhD project proposals that augment the department’s strong, international research profile in new ways and areas.

    It is expected that the PhD scholars will take active part in the department’s research activities and it is a plus if the proposed research project is situated between multiple areas of research within the department’s research profile. As a minimum we expect that the proposed research project is clearly situated within the department’s research strengths and activities, and that it is clearly connected to the expertise or interest of individual faculty members or research groups in the department.

    Qualification Requirements

    Applicants are expected to have a strong educational background. The successful candidates will be part of a dynamic department that spans several disciplines, and the candidates must thrive in such an interdisciplinary environment. It is expected that the successful candidates take part in the department’s daily life and activities, and contribute to the development of the overall research milieu at the department.

    The applicant’s qualifications for the scholarship are evaluated by taking into account the applicant’s general educational and academic background such as the applicant’s grade average, thesis grade, language competencies, publications and other academic activities given by the curriculum vitae as well as the duration of study especially during the applicant’s MA programme.

    In addition, the proposed PhD project and study plan will be evaluated by taking the following into consideration; originality, choice of theory and method, disciplinary relevance, and prospects for completion within the required timeframe of 36 months.

    Furthermore, applicants are encouraged to reflect on how their project relates to the research activities and the academic profile at the department.

    Applications must be submitted electronically no later than February 25, 2019 at 23.59 (11.59 pm) (CET).

    See full description and guidelines for application here: https://employment.ku.dk/phd/?show=148628 


  • 17.01.2019 10:48 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    ZeMKI, Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research, University of Bremen

    Application deadline: February 17, 2019 (23:59 CET)

    Duration: 1 month (either between April and June 2019 or between October and December 2019)

    Salary: 3,000 euro + 1,500 euro budget for direct costs

    Contract: Fee contract

    The ZeMKI, Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research, University of Bremen, offers a thriving interdisciplinary research environment in the areas of media, communication and information. Involved disciplines include communication and media studies, computer science, cultural studies, educational science, studies in religion, and history. The ZeMKI invites applications from excellent researchers in the field of media, communication, and information.

    As a ZeMKI Visiting Research Fellow, the selected candidate will delve into the versatile research activities at the interdisciplinary centre with over 60 members. Applicants should demonstrate experiences and a strong interest in collaborative research which is embraced at the ZeMKI in various ways and contexts. The selected candidate is expected to contribute to these research activities in the area of media change and transforming communications in the form of a research paper submitted to the peer-reviewed “Communicative Figurations” working paper series and a lecture in the ZeMKI Research Seminar.

    Applicants must have a PhD or other doctoral degree in a relevant discipline by the application date.

    We offer a lump sum allowance of 3,000 Euros plus up to 1,500 Euros for research related expenses.

    To apply for this post, please send your application documents via e-mail to andreas.hepp@uni-bremen.de. The closing date for receipt of applications is February 17, 2019 (23:59 CET). We are unfortunately unable to accept any late applications.

    Website: http://www.zemki.uni-bremen.de/en/research/zemki-visiting-research-fellowship.html


  • 17.01.2019 10:42 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline: January 25, 2019

    The Digital Media Research Centre at QUT is seeking applications for PhD students (on stipend) to commence research in 2019 allied to one of two projects.

    Internet-distributed television: Cultural, industrial and policy dynamics

    Supervisor: Distinguished Professor Stuart Cunningham (s.cunningham@qut.edu.au)

    This project investigates the impact of global subscription video-on-demand platforms on national television markets. As U.S.-based services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime Video open up these markets to unprecedented competition, the project will provide much-needed comparative analysis of how governments are responding and what the implications are for debates about local content, local screen production, and media diversity. Analysis of original production and programming strategies will identify new forms of transnational media flow. Conceptually, the project aims to advance our understanding of an emerging paradigm of globalising, multiterritory television.

    The PhD project sits within a wider Australian Research Council-funded project (conducted by Ramon Lobato (RMIT University), Amanda Lotz and Stuart Cunningham (QUT)). You are invited to propose an area of focus, for example, on a particular streaming service, institution, national context, production practice, policy issue.

    The Platform Governance Project: Rethinking Internet regulation as media policy

    Supervisor: Professor Terry Flew (t.flew@qut.edu.au)

    The Platform Governance Project is an Australian Research Council (ARC) funded project that investigates the regulatory and policy implications of understanding global digital platforms as media companies. Responding to ongoing public concern about these companies’ self-management of online communication and social media, this project will address these concerns by developing detailed recommendation for reform based on international case studies, enabling media policy makers to more effectively regulate digital media platforms to better align with contemporary public interest rationales. As part of a research a team led by Professor Terry Flew (QUT), and working with Nicolas Suzor (QUT), Fiona Martin (Sydney) and Tim Dwyer (Sydney), the PhD candidate will conduct research on the changing political economy of digital platforms, the value ecology of content distributed online through these platforms, and the shifting relationship of media and communications policy to such challenges. It would be advantageous to have a research background in media and creative industries, and an interest in media law and policy.

    Applications must contain the following

    • A two page research proposal demonstrating alignment to the selected project including proposed project title, project outline, research question or problem statement, a brief overview of previous relevant research, objectives of the program of research and investigation, research methods/methodologies and plan including references to key literature/contextual sources.
    • Full Curriculum Vitae including three referees (two referees must be academic).
    • Academic Transcripts from previous undergraduate and postgraduate study.

    Applications close midnight (ADST) January 25, 2019.

    Applicants will be notified of outcome by February 15 2019.

    Applications are to be sent as a single pdf to the QUT Digital Media Research Centre Coordinator at dmrc@qut.edu.au

    For further information about the projects please contact the listed project supervisor directly via email.

    Eligibility

    To apply for this scholarship, you must meet the entry requirements for a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) at QUT, including any English language requirements for international students.

    You must also

    • have completed a first-class Honours degree, a research Masters degree, or a coursework Masters degree with a significant research component from a recognised institution and in a cognate discipline
    • be able to take up the scholarship and begin full-time study no later than July 2019 and enrol full-time
    • develop a research proposal that responds to and aligns with the aims of either the Internet-distributed television or Platform Governance Project
    • demonstrate excellent capacity and potential for research


  • 17.01.2019 10:31 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 7-8, 2019

    Bydgoszcz (Poland)

    Deadline: March 31, 2019

    Organized by the Department of Journalism, New Media and Communication, Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz, Poland.

    The international conference The Future of Media, Mediatization, Journalism and Communication will be part of the celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the University and the 500th anniversary of the heritage of Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519). The founder of Microsoft, Bill Gates, after the acquisition in 1994 (for over $ 30 million) of this Renaissance genius’ notes ("Codex Leicester"), said the computer is a reflection of ​​Leonardo da Vinci’s ideas. The special panel on the first day of the conference is to be devoted to the heritage of Leonardo and other geniuses whose minds were ahead of the ages in which they lived. Thanks to the inventions of Edison, Marconi, Tesla and many others, including those living today, like the mentioned Bill Gates or Tim Berners-Lee (the inventor of the World Wide Web), people today use technologies that enable fast, efficient, interactive communication, and the works of Leonardo and others geniuses are now easily available in the global Network, in digital form, being an inspiration for further activities for the development of civilization. Using this inspiration, the conference is organized to exchange ideas, opinions, results of research and predictions related to the development of media, journalism, various forms of communication and mediatization of social life in various dimensions.The conference panels are to concern in particular (but not limited to):

    the future of media, including:

    public, local/regional and community media

    printed press in the face of proliferation of the Internet sources of information

    radio and television in the era of digitalization and multimedia communication

    the future of mediatization of social life and gamification, including:

    mediatization of politics on a local, national and international scale

    mediatization of sports and Olympic Games, including e-sport

    mediatization of culture, gamification, robotics, cyborgs and VR

    the future of journalism, including:

    online and data journalism

    investigative journalism (also international)

    specialist journalism (political, cultural, sports reporting etc.)

    the future of various forms of communication, including:

    communication in social networks

    political communication in the cyberspace

    global communication, environmental communication etc.

    The event accompanying the conference will be the pre-premiere of an educational computer game devoted to overcoming the spiral of violence as part of the project (co-funded by the Europe for Citizens Programme of the European Union) #Again Never Again: Teaching Transmission of Trauma and Remembrance Through Experiential Learning. The project's participants, led by scientists from the University of Turku (Finland), are partners from 7 other countries, including Poland (see the project’s website: https://againneveragain.eu).

    The conference is free (no conference fee) and addressed to experts in media and communication studies, information science, game studies, sociology, political science, law, cultural studies and other specialists whose research is related to the topic of the conference.

    We are waiting for your proposals till 31 March 2019.

    We are planning to publish the papers as chapters of an edited peer-reviewed book (as an e-book or in a printed version).

    More about the event on the conference website: http://www.futureofmedia.ukw.edu.pl

    The conference is free (no conference fee) and addressed to experts in media and communication studies, information science, game studies, sociology, political science, law, cultural studies and other specialists whose research is related to the topic of the conference.

    Head of the conference organizing committee:

    Dr hab. Radoslaw Sajna – e-mail: r.sajna@ukw.edu.pl

    For more information, visit the conference website: http://www.futureofmedia.ukw.edu.pl

  • 17.01.2019 10:27 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Conference in comparative political communication

    July 1-2, 2019

    Nice (France)

    Deadline: February 27, 2019

    Elections to the European Parliament have long been considered "second class" elections (Reif & Schmitt, 1980). Two main factors have been put forward in order to justify this assessment: the persistent low level of participation in this election in most of the European Union countries and the weakness of the European Parliament in regard to the capabilities and powers of the different national parliaments. As a result, mainstream political parties - in office locally sooner or later - have somewhat neglected these elections, often perceived by the public at large as a "sideline" for politicians having lost momentum or at the end of their careers. However, marginal political parties, or those representing the extremes of the political spectrum, have benefited from the weak investment of mainstream parties, making their voices heard and advancing their ideas.

    While the 2014 European elections did not directly change the situation, the influence of this vote is far from negligible. Indeed, the political communication of the marginal and extreme parties during this election has influenced the opinion of its tone even more demagogic and populist than before, with speeches attacking the European Union and its Brussels institutions, or those opposed to immigration or advocating a return to national borders, sometimes with some violence unheard since the first half of the 20th century. More than ever, mainstream parties have been blamed as "complicit" in this surrender of sovereignty.

    With this frontal denunciation of mainstream parties, but also with the rebuttal of the ideas of political consensus inherent to the usual democratic debates, the political communication of the 2014 European elections has become the testing ground of several demagogic parties, frequently characterized as "populists". They took advantage of this platform to make their voices heard, and then grasped power in several countries of the European Union. One can also glimpse in this movement the birth of the idea of "clearing off" (politicians and parties), which made the later happiness of some newcomers on the political chess boards of several countries of the Union, with notably the 2017 "party-less" victory Emmanuel Macron in France in 2017.

    Looking at the political communication flows of the 2014 European elections thus made it possible to show that their "second-order" status had become questionable: if their immediate result - the composition of the European Parliament - did not change very much, the influence of these elections on the internal votes that followed in the EU countries is far from negligible.

    This conference proposes to its contributors to draw up an initial assessment of the political communication of the 2019 European elections by particularly exploring three points:

    • a comparative analysis of the political communication strategies and tactics of the campaign in the European Union, through all the communication tools and methods, including possible subversive uses of social networks and the deliberate use of fake news;
    • linking content and programs with the political evolution of many EU countries since the previous European elections, which will lead to consider the balance between national issues and European issues, some seemingly becoming crucial for politicians in office (starting with France);
    • finally, the evaluation of the "disruptive" or, on the contrary, more classical feature of political communication at the European level; will we be witnessing a banal practice of political communication across the countries of the Union? Or will the diversity and fragmentation of political landscapes and the increased growth of social networks spark innovation and creativity?

    These central questions will be the subject of the international conference on Comparative Political Communication to be held in Nice on July 1st and 2nd, 2019, in the framework of cooperation between the "Sic.Lab Méditerranée" laboratory of the Côte d'Azur University (www.siclab.fr) and the Center for Comparative Studies in Political and Public Communication (www.ceccopop.eu). This scientific event will bring together researchers and communication professionals on the Carlone Campus of the LASH Faculty of the Côte d'Azur University and at the Mediterranean University Center, located on the "Promenade des Anglais".

    The conference is organized by Philippe J. Maarek, Professor specialized in Political Communication at the Paris Est Créteil University (UPEC), former president of the Political Communication Research Sections of IPSA and IAMCR, associate member of the Sic.Lab and head of CECCOPOP. He ensures its scientific coordination with Nicolas Pelissier, Professor of Information Sciences and Communication at the University of Côte d'Azur and Head of Sic.Lab Méditerranée (EA 3280).

    The event will be bilingual, French-English. Colleagues wishing to present a paper are invited to send a request to participate before February 27, 2019, to the following email address: ceccopop@gmail.com.

    Proposals must include an abstract of 250 to 500 words (one or two sheets) and a one-page Vitae. They will be subject to a double-blind evaluation by the Scientific Board. Proposals must include an abstract of 250 to 500 words (one or two sheets) and a one-page Vitae. They will be subject to a double-blind evaluation by the Scientific Board

    • Françoise Albertini, Université de Corse, France
    • Paul Baines, Cranfield University, Royaume-Uni/United Kingdom
    • Camelia Beciu, Université de Bucarest, Roumanie/Romania
    • Donatella Campus, Università di Bologna, Italie/Italy
    • Maria-José Canel, Université Complutense, Espagne/Spain
    • Eric Dacheux, Université de Clermont Auvergne, France
    • Alex Frame, Université de Bourgogne, Dijon, France
    • Lutz Hagen, Université Technique de Dresde, Allemagne/Germany
    • Denisa Hejlova, Charles University, République Tchèque/Czech Republic
    • Christina Holtz-Bacha, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Allemagne/Germany
    • Karolina Kok-Michalska, Audiencia, France
    • Darren Lilleker, Bournemouth University, Royaume-Uni/United Kingdom
    • Eric Maigret, Université Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle, France
    • Pascal Marchand, Université de Toulouse 3, France
    • Anna Matušková-Shavit, Charles University, République Tchèque/Czech Republic
    • Lars Nord, Midwestern University, Suède/Sweden
    • Paul Rasse, Université Côte d’Azur, France
    • Jordi Rodriguez Virgili, University of Navarra in Pamplona, Espagne/Spain
    • Brigitte Sebbah, Université de Toulouse 3, France
    • James Stanyer, University of Loughborough, Royaume-Uni/United Kingdom
    • Ioanna Vovou, Panteion University, Grèce/Greece
    • Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam, Pays-Bas/Netherland
    • Małgorzata Winiarska-Brodowska, Jagellon University, Pologne/Poland

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