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  • 26.01.2023 13:00 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Journal of Global Diaspora & Media. Special Issue

    Deadline: January 30, 2023

    Guest Editors:

    Alicia Ferrández Ferrer, Universidad de Alicante (Spain)

    Ola Ogunyemi, University of Lincoln (UK)

    Previous studies by social psychologists in the past two decades reveal the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is higher among journalists than the general population (Aoki et al. 2012; Backholm & Björkqvist 2012; Dworznik, 2011). However, we have little understanding of work-related trauma among diaspora journalists, because they were hardly included in these empirical studies. 

    Less attention has also been paid to the experiences of work-related trauma among diaspora journalists in diaspora studies which mostly prioritise the diversity and complexity of migratory processes, the motivations that push people to leave their own country to reside in another, and the profiles of those who migrate. 

    However, the risks of being a journalist in countries with regimes eager to control freedom of the press and being forced into exile have the potential to cause emotional and psychological trauma among diaspora journalists. To compound the problem, they suffer secondary trauma by reading statistics about physical attacks on and killings of journalists such as ‘2,174 journalists have been killed in the exercise of their profession between 1992 and October 2022’ (Comitee to Protect Journalists, 2022); that ‘48 journalists/media collaborators have been killed, and 524 have been imprisoned in 2022’ (Reporters Without Borders, 2022); and that ‘1,811 have been imprisoned for carrying out their work in the last 6 years’ (Reporters Without Borders, 2022). 

    This special issue focuses on exploring the experiences of work-related trauma among diaspora journalists from a multidisciplinary perspective in order to bridge the hiatus in literature. The scope of themes includes, but not limited to, an understanding of the perception and personal experiences of work-related trauma among diaspora journalists; an understanding of the causes of work-related trauma; the coping strategies in response to exposure to traumatic events; the family, organisational and social support available to diaspora journalists to cope with trauma; the ‘training needs’ to cope with work-related trauma in specific cultural and socio-political contexts; the trauma induced by physical and online attacks on diaspora journalists; and the experiences of secondary trauma in the host country. Responses to one or some of these themes, and other related themes, from a diversity of methodological and theoretical approaches are welcome. 

    IMPORTANT INFORMATION

    Submissions 

    Submission of abstracts should include: name, institutional affiliation, contact information, title and a 300-word abstract.

    Email your abstracts to both guest editors: Alicia Ferrández Ferrer, alicia.ferrandez@ua.es ; Ola Ogunyemi, oogunyemi@lincoln.ac.uk 

    Publication deadlines and timeline 

    Submission of abstracts: 30 January 2023 

    Confirmation of acceptance: 01 March 2023 

    Full manuscripts: 25 September 2023 

    Post-review acceptance decisions: 31 January 2024 

    Publication of Special Issue: May/June, 2024 

    For more information, visit https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-global-diaspora-media 

  • 26.01.2023 12:55 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Linkoping University

    Dear colleagues, 

    We are currently looking to hire a post-doc to join our new project  “Megabytes vs Megawatts: Understanding Infrastructural Frictions between Data Centers and Energy Grids for Sustainable Digitalization” funded by the Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation. 

    The project aims to study societal conflicts and sociotechnical imaginaries around “sustainability” that arise at the intersection between energy-intense data infrastructure and energy grids in transition. The project draws upon interdisciplinary perspectives, combining critical studies of media infrastructures; environmental media; anthropology, and science and technology studies (STS). The postdoc is expected to conduct critical qualitative, empirical research, focusing on the interplay between data infrastructure and energy in relation to sustainability. Candidates with a wide variety of backgrounds are eligible for the position, including media studies, science and technology studies, anthropology, sociology, history, human geography, political science or related fields.

    The post-doc position is full time, for 2 years with the possibility of extension up to a total maximum of three years. A certain amount of teaching will be part of the post-doc duties, up to a maximum of 20% of working hours.

    Deadline to apply: 28 February

    More information about the position and link to the application form:  https://liu.se/en/work-at-liu/vacancies/21055

    More information about the project: http://juliavelkova.org/megabytes-vs-megawatts-data-vs-energy/ 

    Please spread the word among your networks, and do not hesitate to get in touch with me if you have any questions.

  • 26.01.2023 12:51 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    February 9, 2023

    I am pleased to invite you to the next in the series of IPRA Thought Leadership webinars. The webinar Connecting ideas + action: communications + sustainability will be presented by Jessie Nagel, Jemma Gould, and Alison Pepper on Thursday 9 February 2023 at 15.00 GMT/UCT (unadjusted). Note later time than usual.

    What is the webinar content?

    Green The Bid’s work is devoted to how advertising can be made sustainably. The webinar will focus on the communications aspects of the climate crisis and discuss the building of transitional movements.

    How to join

    Register here at Airmeet. (The time shown should adjust to your device’s time zone.)

    A reminder will be sent 1 hour before the event. 

    Background to IPRA

    IPRA, the International Public Relations Association, was established in 1955, and is the leading global network for PR professionals in their personal capacity. IPRA aims to advance trusted communication and the ethical practice of public relations. We do this through networking, our code of conduct and intellectual leadership of the profession. IPRA is the organiser of public relations' annual global competition, the Golden World Awards for Excellence (GWA). IPRA's services enable PR professionals to collaborate and be recognised. Members create content via our Thought Leadership essays, social media and our consultative status with the United Nations. GWA winners demonstrate PR excellence. IPRA welcomes all those who share our aims and who wish to be part of the IPRA worldwide fellowship. For more see www.ipra.org

    Background to Green the Bid

    Green The Bid is a non-profit organisation of members commited to working together to share best practices in the sustainability space, reporting successes and acknowledging hurdles. They advocate across industry for consistent and measurable standards to support the building of a net-carbon negative, waste-free future for commercial production. For more see www.greenthebid.earth

    Contact

    International Public Relations Association Secretariat

    United Kingdom

    secgen@ipra.org

    Telephone +44 1634 818308 

  • 26.01.2023 12:34 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Mediální studia/Media Studies (special issue)

    Marisa Torres da Silva, Maria José Brites & Miguel Vicente

    Media Studies 3/2022 was supported by a subsidy from the Media and Audiovisual Department of the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic.

    FULL ISSUE is available PDF

    Introduction to Special Issue: Marisa Torres da Silva, Maria José Brites & Miguel Vicente

    STUDIES

    Magdalena Saldaña & Valentina Proust: Comments that hurt: Incivility in user-generated comments about marginalized groups 

    Hilde Sakariassen: Facebook as a public arena for women: Infringing on democratic ideals and a cause of worry 

    Anda Rožukalne & Dite Liepa: From “Covid idiots” to “Covidshow and “Covidhysteria”: Analysis of digital news commenters’ verbal aggressiveness and means of linguistics creativity during COVID-19 pandemic in Latvia (2020 – 2021)  

    Ernestina Lamponi, Marinella Paciello & Francesca D’Errico: Mapping emotional responses across the individual moral system in Social Network ethical public communication: a quasi-experimental study

  • 26.01.2023 12:28 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Bengt Johansson, Øyvind Ihlen, Jenny Lindholm, Mark Blach-Ørsten (red.)

    This edited volume compares experiences of how the Covid-19 pandemic was communicated in the Nordic countries – Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. The Nordic countries are often discussed in terms of similarities concerning an extensive welfare system, economic policies, media systems, and high levels of trust in societal actors. However, in the wake of a global pandemic, the countries’ coping strategies varied, creating certain question marks on the existence of a “Nordic model”. 

    The chapters give a broad overview of crisis communication in the Nordic countries during the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic by combining organisational and societal theoretical perspectives and encompassing crisis response from governments, public health authorities, lobbyists, corporations, news media, and citizens. The results show several similarities, such as political and governmental responses highlighting solidarity and the need for exceptional measures, as expressed in press conferences, social media posts, information campaigns, and speeches. The media coverage relied on experts and was mainly informative, with few critical investigations during the initial phases. Moreover, surveys and interviews show the importance of news media for citizens’ coping strategies, but also that citizens mostly trusted both politicians and health authorities during the crisis. 

    This book is of interest to all who are looking to understand societal crisis management on a comprehensive level. The volume contains chapters from leading experts from all the Nordic countries and is edited by a team with complementary expertise on crisis communication, political communication, and journalism, consisting of Bengt Johansson, Øyvind Ihlen, Jenny Lindholm, and Mark Blach-Ørsten. 

    https://www.nordicom.gu.se/sv/publications/communicating-pandemic

  • 26.01.2023 11:53 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    April 21-22, 2023

    ESCS / IPL – Politécnico de Lisboa

    Deadline: January 31, 2023

    Dear ECREA colleagues,

    On behalf of the Informal Media Literacy Group (GILM), we are pleased to invite all ECREA members to send proposals to the Call for Papers of the 6th Congress of Literacy, Media and Citizenship, which will take place next  April 21 and 22,  at the School of Communication and Media Studies (ESCS), Lisbon, Portugal.

    The VI Congress on Literacy, Media and Citizenship – Digital Transition and Public Policies, promoted by GILM, is an initiative that aims to deepen reflection and debate around public policies that have been adopted nationally and internationally in the current scenario of digital transition. Today media literacy assumes its place as one of the key literacies for empowering all citizens, without exception. It is undeniable that, particularly in the context of European Union countries, this recognition has been accelerated by the role that media literacy can play in the unavoidable fight against misinformation and false online narratives, as well as in the fight against hate speech, which is expanding in digital environments, phenomena that threaten the strength of democracy and the full exercise of citizenship.

    The event, which will take place on April 21 and 22, 2023, at the School of Communication and Media Studies – ESCS / IPL – Politécnico de Lisboa, aims to be an opportunity for decision-makers (policy makers, regulators, managers and directors of media outlets), to meet teachers and other educators, specialists in information and documentation sciences, researchers and higher education students, journalists and other media professionals, cinema and audio-visual professionals and other stakeholders. The organization of the congress invites researchers, educators and teachers, non-governmental organizations, specialists, and communication professionals to present their papers or poster proposals, whether they are studies, papers or projects that may fit in one of the following topics:​

    • Current strategies of national and international public policies for media literacy;
    • Prospects for an integrated and comprehensive national strategy for media literacy;
    • Impacts of technological developments in the current communication universe;
    • Digital transition and media literacy;
    • New challenges in media education;
    • Change of communicational paradigm and new business models;
    • Impacts of COVID and war on media and information literacy;
    • New media literacy projects and resources;
    • Accessibilities and inclusive perspectives in media literacy;
    • New dynamics of algorithms and message robotization;
    • Manipulation of information in disinformation campaigns.

    In this context, we invite you all to take part in the next Congress and we would be very pleased to see many ECREA members enriching our Congress with knowledge, experience, and ability to reflect on such current and pertinent topics.

    Send your proposal

    Looking forward to welcoming you in Lisbon, please accept my best regards,

    On behalf of GILM

    Fernanda Bonacho

  • 19.01.2023 15:19 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    February 9, 2023

    Online

    The IAMCR Publications Committee will be hosting the first in a series of talks exploring the politics of knowledge and its dissemination.

    When: 9 February 2023, at 14h00 UTC / 09h00 New York / 14h00 London / 15h00 Paris / 17h00 Nairobi / 19h30 Kolkata / 22h00 Beijing. The event will last 90 minutes.

    Pre-registration is required by 23h59 UTC on 07 February 2023. //  Register here.

    Moderator: Prof Claudia Padovani, IAMCR Publications Committee.

    Speakers 

    • Prof Lucy Montgomery, Professor of Knowledge Innovation, Curtin University, Australia
    Lucy Montgomery is the co-lead of the Curtin Open Knowledge Initiative: a major strategic research project exploring how big data can help universities to understand their performance as Open Knowledge Institutions. 
    • Dr Fereshteh Rafieian Najafabadi, Associate Programme Specialist, Science Technology and Innovation Policy, UNESCO. 

    Location: The meeting will take place on Zoom. Attendees will receive their personal invitation at least 24 hours before the event begins.

    Who can participate: The event is open to the general public, but space is limited. Pre-registration is required by 07 February 2023.  //  Register here.

    About the series

    This series of conversations, hosted by the IAMCR’s Publications Committee, will explore the possibilities of open access publishing, and ways of achieving greater diversity and inclusion in systems of knowledge generation and dissemination. Drawing on multiple perspectives from across the globe, the series seeks to discuss how we can achieve a genuinely participatory, multi-vocal epistemic landscape. This would foster a productive dialogue around knowledge exchange, co-creation, with an interest in understanding alternative epistemologies, methods, and pedagogies.

    The series will have two strands: the first will look at the possibilities, potential and challenges of Open Access publishing, while the second will explore how communication and media studies can grow beyond dominant epistemologies.

  • 19.01.2023 15:13 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 25-26, 2023

    University of Salford, UK

    Deadline: March 24, 2023

    Two-day conference at the University of Salford, UK (on campus)

    The development of social housing estates after the Second World War in Europe initiated in many cities the radical transition of urban environments from 19th-century dwellings to modern housing. The plans and hopes of architects, planners, and city councils when developing modern infrastructure and housing not only focussed on elevating living standards; modern housing estates were also believed to support the development of ‘new communities’ within which pre- existing and widespread social problems would dissolve.

    Such modern developments appear in the material and visual culture (film, TV, art, literature, newspapers, etc.) between the 1950s and 1960s whereby artists observed and commented on the transition of urban quarters from blackened, often decaying 19th-century houses to modern tower blocks. The lives and living conditions in the old and new working-class quarters interested artists, filmmakers, and writers as much as the aesthetics of modern urban quarters. Both provided the backgrounds for commentaries on changes in society and modernisation. Films such as Albert Finney’s Charlie Bubbles in 1968 or Stanley Kubrick’s 1971 A Clockwork Orange utilised the imagery of this transition and offered commentary on the effects and social consequences of modernisation. TV soap operas such as Coronation Street (1960 – ), that were part of the ‘kitchen sink drama movement’ in the UK, also addressed social housing and modernisation efforts. The literary work of J.G. Ballard (High Rise, 1975) and B.S. Johnson (The Moron Made City, 1966) react to urban modernisation satirically and critically. In the fine arts, the topic and its social consequences were addressed multifacetedly; photographs by artists such as Shirley Baker, UK and Albert Renger-Patzsch, Germany juxtapose social housing and its inhabitants who appear alienated from the modern environment they find themselves in. Representatives of Art Brut and Art Informel were inspired by non-traditional subject matter and art production that was perceived as more genuine. Artworks such as Jean Dubuffet’s Parages fréquentés (Busy Neighbourhood), 1979 observed the asphyxiating nature of urban spaces. Others considered emotional conflicts, society and its development after the Second World War. Yuri Pimenov, on the other hand, worked in the context of the Soviet Union (Wedding on tomorrow’s street, 1962) and depicted the modernisation of cities and social housing as a beacon of hope and evidence of the improving living conditions of the working class.

    Proposals are welcome from scholars in fields such as art and architectural history, media studies, urban studies, cultural anthropology, consumer studies and gender studies.

    We are inviting papers that investigate topics such as:

    - Representations of the Working-Class in material and visual culture (film, TV, photography, painting, literature, etc.)

    - Architectural design and social engineering: theories on the transformative power of architectural design on behaviours of residents

    - Mid-20th century narratives and histories of slum clearance, overspill estates and rehousing

    - Challenges in architecture and planning concerning the process of slum clearance, rehousing, planning, building, and occupying mid-20th century social housing estates

    - Stigmatiser and stigmatised. The role of news media in the stigmatisation process of residents and territories

    - The roles of media in affirming and solidifying reputations of social housing estates and their residents

    - The role of city councils in redeveloping urban ‘slums’

    - The exclusion and inclusion of ‘slum dwellers’ in the planning and redevelopment processes

    - Slum clearance and the short and long-term impacts of being ‘rehoused’

    - Effects of media representations on memories of lived experiences

    - Representations of the working class in the fine arts

    Members of the Conference Programme Committee are:

    • Tanja Poppelreuter. Reader in Architectural Humanities (Conference Chair)
    • Andrew Clark. Professor in Sociology
    • Ursula Hurley. Professor in English & Creative Writing
    • Alaric Searle. Professor of Modern European History, Politics & Contemporary History Seamus Simpson. Professor of Media Policy

    Please submit a title and 300-word abstract by Friday, March 24th, 2023 to: themodernbackdrop@salford.ac.uk

    Each abstract should include the name and affiliation of the author(s), have a title, and be 300- words.

    Venue Information: The conference will take place on campus at the University of Salford and registration is free of charge.

    Tanja Poppelreuter

    Reader in Architectural Humanities, University of Salford themodernbackdrop@salford.ac.uk

    This two-day conference is part of the research project ‘The Modern Backdrop: Memories of Salford’ and is funded by the Paul Mellon Centre. https://hub.salford.ac.uk/modern-salford/

  • 19.01.2023 13:38 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Tuesday, 30 May 2023 | 8:30 - 17:00

    Off-site: The Creative School Catalyst, Toronto Metropolitan University

    Deadline: February 3, 2023

    Co-Sponsored: Urban Communication Foundation (UCF) and Activism, Communication and Social Justice, Global Communication and Social Change, Ethnicity and Race in Communication, and Popular Media and Culture with support from the University of Michigan.

    Organizers: Matthew Bui (U of Michigan), Myria Georgiou (London School of Economics), Germaine Halegoua (U of Michigan), Dave Colangelo (Toronto Metropolitan U), Sherry Yu (U of Toronto)

    This preconference convenes scholars and practitioners interested in topics such as the mediated representation of urban (sub)communities; digital rights and inequalities; datafication; and communication and social change. Participants will reimagine the role of urban communication research and praxis in effecting more equitable, sustainable futures amid multiple convergent crises including housing, poverty, and climate change. Work foregrounding questions of power and inequality from local, global, and/or transnational lenses, underrepresented regions and communities is encouraged.

    Registration Fee: $75.00 USD, registration will open in January, by invitation-only.

    Call for Papers

    This full-day post-conference will convene scholars and practitioners to discuss and reimagine the role of urban communication and urban technology research and praxis. Participants are invited to engage with urgent and emerging questions about power and inequality amid multiple convergent crises, including but not limited to housing, poverty, discrimination, and climate change. The event aims to create an open and collaborative environment for discussing themes and challenges related to urban communication but also opportunities to advance ethical and equitable futures for and through urban communication, technology design, and policy through scholarship and activism. Work foregrounding questions of power and inequality from local, global, and/or transnational lenses, underrepresented regions and communities is strongly encouraged. The post-conference is driven by a number of key questions:

    • How are digital and data-driven technologies embroiled with various political, social, and economic campaigns for change within local, transnational, and global urban contexts?
    • What is the role of grassroots movements in exploring and articulating novel and creative interventions for urban technology and urban communication? How are such campaigns enmeshed in ongoing sociocultural and political struggles for power?
    • What are the ethical and practical considerations for how to engage with marginalized groups and communities around urban technology and data? How are (urban and digital) policy and design implicated in these issues?
    • What are the connections between datafication and digitalization and the persistence of–and alleviation of–“wicked problems” (e.g., poverty, homelessness, climate change)?
    • What issues and themes shape the sub-field of urban communication and urban technology now and in the future? How can current and emerging scholarship and praxis re-imagine urban communication, infrastructures, and exchanges?

    The ICA post-conference welcomes interdisciplinary conversations and participants from fields such as media, information, and communication; science and technology studies (STS); urban planning and architecture, sociology, and the urban humanities, among others.

    Please submit 300-word abstracts, including your name, affiliation, and 150-word bio to the link below by 20 January 2023. Notifications will be sent out by 10 February 2023. Registration will open in March 2023. Please contact organizers for inquiries regarding travel and registration stipends.

    The post-conference is co-sponsored by the Urban Communication Foundation (UCF) and supported by the ICA Activism, Communication and Global Change interest group; Ethnicity and Race in Communication division; and Popular Media and Culture division (with further support from the University of Michigan).

    All presenters will be considered for inclusion in a special issue or other publication or venue to be discussed among participants and organizers during the conference. Beyond these intellectual exchanges, we also hope to use the post-conference as a space for networking and mentorship for researchers from a variety of disciplines and career stages.

    Submission Details

    Abstract submission and short deadline: 3 February 2023

    Submit abstracts, short bios, and travel assistance (or fee waiver) requests to this link: https://forms.gle/Z2u2B6RySEAg1929A

    Inquiries of submission should contact Dr. Matthew Bui, U. of Michigan, mattbui@umich.edu, subject line “ICA 2023 Postconference”

  • 19.01.2023 13:36 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    CICANT (Lisbon, Portugal)

    CICANT - Research Centre for Applied Communication, Culture and New Technologies is accepting applications for 6 doctoral research scholarships.

    Description

    Between January, 16th and the 30th of April (11.59  p.m. lisbon time) a call is open for 5 (five) national research grants and 1 (one) mixed research grant, hereinafter referred to respectively as National Doctoral Research Grant and Mixed Doctoral Research Grant, in the area of Media Arts and Communication Sciences under the FCT Research Grant Regulations (RBI) and the Research Grant Holder Statute (EBI). The grants will be funded by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under the Collaboration Protocol for the Funding of Doctoral Research Fellowships within the European Universities Alliance for Film and Media Arts (FilmEU), signed between FCT and the Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias. The work to be carried out under the scope of the grants will be hosted by the R&D Unit - CICANT - Research Centre for Applied Communication, Culture and New Technologies (ref: 5260), at Lusófona University - Lisbon University Centre.

    Deadline for applications

    The call is open from January 16th to April 30th 2023 (23h59, Lisbon time). 

    Submissions

    Applications and supporting documents for the application set out in this call for applications must be submitted by email to cicant@ulusofona.pt , with the subject of the email being "candidatura a bolsa de doutoramento - COFAC/ULHT/FilmEU-FCT/2023". Each candidate may submit only one application, under penalty of cancellation of all applications submitted. The provision of false statements or plagiarism by the applicants will lead to the cancellation of the application without prejudice to the adoption of other sanctionary measures.

    More information

    For more details and to apply: https://cicant.ulusofona.pt/careers-opportunities/opportunities/808-open-call-for-6-research-fellowships-for-doctoral-students-filmeu

    Please direct questions to: cicant@ulusofona.pt

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