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ECREA WEEKLY digest ARTICLES

  • 16.11.2022 22:23 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The Database of Variables for Content Analysis DOCA has been available for more than half a year. Therefore, we now want to conduct a survey to find out how DOCA has been used in research and teaching so far, which benefits the database has had, and which improvements and thematic extensions would be desirable. 

    We would be very grateful if you would fill in the short questionnaire (maximum duration 10 minutes): https://www.hope.uzh.ch/doca/Survey 

    We will publish the results of the survey as soon as possible.

    Thank you and best regards,

    Edda Humprecht 

  • 16.11.2022 22:21 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 25, 2023

    Toronto, Canada

    Deadline: January 15, 2023

    Participants should focus on specific metaphors, groups of metaphors, discourses around metaphors, and reconstruct their histories over time and in certain cultural settings. The local and global dimension of metaphors is indeed crucial and the organizers aim to have a broad representation of different sets of metaphors in different cultures. 

    Metaphors have also to do with digital media theory. Metaphors are useful tool to make theories, they can be transversal to different fields and disciplines or, on the contrary, they increase the fragmentation of media and communication theories. Also in this case, the preconference aims to bring together scholars able to link empirical case studies of digital metaphors over time and theoretical perspectives on the relevance of these metaphors. 

    Please send your abstract of max 250 words to gabriele.balbi@usi.ch and carlos.scolari@gmail.com  by 15 January 2023. Remember to include in the abstract the category or categories to which your submission refers to:

    • Metaphors of transportation (e.g. info highways, surfing, etc.)
    • Metaphors of human body (e.g. electronic brain, artificial intelligence, etc.) 
    • Metaphors of nature (e.g. cloud, etc.)
    • Metaphors of building (e.g. windows, etc.)
    • Old media metaphors (e.g. envelopes, 3.5 floppy, etc.) 
    • Objects metaphors (e.g. clocks, bells, etc.)
    • Metaphors of places (e.g. agorà, square, etc.) 
    • Other categories.

    This preconference will have a peculiar structure and aims: it is made of classic presentations, but also would stimulate reflections on specific workshops/hackathon in which these and other metaphors will be discussed. The final aim is to create a group of scholars which could be later contribute to an edited book we plan to publish from the precon. For this reason, this preconference might be just the first workshop and others may follow in the future months.

    Important dates:

    • 15 January 2023: Submissions’ deadline
    • 15 February 2023: Notifications of acceptance
    • 25 May 2023: Preconference

    Organization: conference organized by Gabriele Balbi (USI – Università della Svizzera Italiana, Switzerland) and Carlos A. Scolari (Universitat Pompeu Fabra – Barcelona, Spain) 

    Division Affiliation: ICA Communication History Division  

    Sponsor: University of Toronto – St. Michael’s College

    Venue: McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology (Coach House), 39A Queens Park Crescent East, Toronto, Ontario

    More info here: https://digitalmetaphors.wordpress.com/ 

  • 16.11.2022 22:19 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    June 19-21, 2023

    Newcastle University, University of Sanctuary

    Deadline: December 9, 2023

    The academic conference will take place between 19-21 June 2023 during UNHCR Refugee week) at Newcastle University, a University of Sanctuary. The conference will be in person only, although we will record the keynote presentations. The cultural festival will take place in buildings and sites on campus and at venues around the city of Newcastle, a City of Sanctuary, between 19-25 June, although some exhibitions might extend into the following weeks.  Further details about the cultural festival including a programme of events and activities, will be available nearer the time. 

    Call for Papers

    The experiences of refugees and asylum-seekers remains salient in and for the media as journalists report from one conflict zone to another, with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine adding immediacy to the coverage of war in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria, (re)animating public and political debate about how ‘we’ should respond. At the same time, major crises in regions such as DR Congo, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, South Sudan, Chad, Mali, Sudan, Nigeria, Burundi and Ethiopia go largely unreported (Wanless et al, 2022). Generations of Palestinians have now grown up in UN-administered refugee camps in the Middle East, around one million Rohingya people from Myanmar are living in refugee camps in Bangladesh, and the accelerating climate crisis is leading to the further displacement of millions of people worldwide.  Some scholars suggest that media coverage of war often lacks context or historical perspective, so that discussions about the economic and cultural aspects as well as the wider structural issue of migration, are largely ignored (Fengler et al, 2022). It is scarcely original to suggest that mainstream media outlets play an important role in informing the public about refugees and asylum-seekers – for example, the number of people attempting (and sometimes tragically failing) to enter Britain informally via the English Channel are a regular feature of UK national news – but the way the issue is reported is seen by many commentators as contributing to the rise of hostile populism across Europe and beyond.  However, refugees, asylum-seekers, activists and others interested in calling media to account are not standing passively by, but are increasingly using both legacy and social media platforms and technologies to challenge and contest misinformation and negative and polarising and narratives, not least in order to tell their own stories in their own words.

    For the academic conference, we now welcome abstracts which focus on any aspect of the relationship between refugees, asylum-seekers and the media from a range of contributors including academics, media professionals and media practitioners, especially those with lived experience and/or experience of collaborating with refugee or asylum-seeker communities. We are keen to receive abstracts of work which will be presented in a variety of formats including text, screen and sound-based based forms, as well as multi-media work*.  Topics could range from, but are definitely not limited to:

    §   representations in mainstream or social media

    §   reporting policy and/or legal responses

    §   refugee and asylum-seeking media practices, websites and/or social media accounts

    §   refugee and asylum-seeking experiences as sources or subjects of news discourse

    §   alternative media and community media representations

    §   refugees and asylum-seekers making media

    §   citizen journalism and the refugee and asylum-seeking experience

    §   participatory media projects with refugees and asylum-seekers

    §   practices of journalists and media practitioners with lived experience as refugees   

    §   the ethics of reporting

    §   refugee and asylum-seeker voices in the public sphere

    §   empathy and affect in media discourse

    §   journalism education in relation to covering refugees and asylum-seekers

    §   collaborative media projects with refugee or asylum-seeker communities

    §   refugees, asylum-seekers and the adoption/adaptation of media technologies

    Publication opportunity

    After the conference, we will be inviting full papers to be submitted for possible inclusion in a special double issue of Ethical Space: The International Journal of Communication Ethics which will be published in 2024 (issue 2, summer; issue 3, autumn).

    Dates for your diary

    §   9 December, 2022 – submission of abstracts/posters (350-500 words)

    §   6 February, 2023 - decisions announced

    §   20 February, 2023 – registration opens

    Posters

    PhD students are welcome to submit abstracts but can, as an alternative, submit a research poster.

    For further information, please contact Karen Ross and David Baines at:

    sanctuarysongs2023@newcastle.ac.uk  

  • 16.11.2022 22:15 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Comunicação e Sociedade, vol. 43

    Deadline (EXTENDED): December 11, 2022

    Thematic editors: Daniel Brandão (CECS, Universidade do Minho, Portugal), Nuno Martins (ID+, Instituto Politécnico do Cávado e do Ave, Portugal) and Rachel Cooper (PETRAS, Lancaster University, United Kingdom)

    The growing presence of digital technologies in citizens’ daily lives has resulted in a constant enhancement of the unexpected. Spontaneity and reactivity assume an increasingly prominent role in the communication universe, inevitably influencing social dynamics.

    Faced with a highly mediated and mediatised world, communication has attained significant power. A dispersed power shared between different protagonists. A power that is not always identifiable and often tends to be more associated with rumour and crisis than with information and clarification. This power of communication, more and more horizontal, challenges established power bases.

    What role can design play in this mediation of interpersonal and global communication?

    In its most varied perspectives and disciplines, design can be an important contribution to the construction of more informed, enlightened and, consequently, fairer societies. Whether in a supervisory capacity, deconstructing and decoding graphic, photographic, animated representations and all kinds of narratives of high cosmetic-manipulative content; or in the proposal of models, prototypes or the most varied type of solutions that seek to contribute to an active citizenship and respond to the challenges and dilemmas of digital and contemporary societies. In fact, design is much more than a tool of mere aesthetic operation. It also has a relevant role in the organisation of information, in the construction of narratives and, consequently, in the suggestion of meanings.

    This thematic volume of the journal Comunicação e Sociedade invites national and international academics and researchers from different areas of design, communication and digital technologies to share scientific work developed on emerging topics, such as:

    • sustainable and healthy design
    • inclusive, collaborative and participatory design
    • creativity, arts and design in education
    • identities, citizenship and social cohesion in design
    • design and communication for the mobility and the future of cities
    • challenges of digital interaction and communication
    • information design, data journalism and quality of information
    • responsible design: security, privacy, ethics and trust
    • design, equality and human rights
    • design for health and well-being
    • eating, dressing and breathing design
    • design, media arts and culture
    • expression and impression of audio-visual on digital communication
    • sound design: perception and performance in the real
    • frontiers and challenges of a technocentric design
    • conceptions and misconceptions of the virtual

    KEY DATES

    Proposals submission (full manuscript): September 5 to December 11, 2022

    Notification of acceptance: January 8, 2023

    Deadline for the submission of the final article (PT and EN): March 19, 2023

    Publication: June 2023

    Comunicação e Sociedade is an open-access academic journal indexed in several databases, including SCOPUS.

    https://revistacomsoc.pt/index.php/revistacomsoc/announcement/view/44

  • 16.11.2022 21:02 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    November 25-26, 2022

    Berlin, Germany

    The Brandenburg Centre for Media Studies (ZeM) and the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society (HIIG) would like to draw your attention to the conference „Infrastructures of Autonomy“, which will take place on November, 25-26th at HIIG (Berlin, Germany). The conference will be opened with a Keynote address from Beate Rössler (University of Amsterdam).

    For more information on Keynote and event regestration please visit:  https://www.hiig.de/en/events/infrastructures-of-autonomy-i-conference-opening/

    For more Information on conference and regestration please visit: https://www.hiig.de/en/events/infrastructures-of-autonomy/

  • 16.11.2022 20:48 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Journal of Digital Social Research (special issue)

    Deadline: December 15, 2022

    Following our preconference workshop, the Visual Cultures section is proud to share a Call for Papers for a Special Issue on "Methodological Developments in Visual Politics & Protest", to be published in the Journal of Digital Social Research (https://www.jdsr.io/). Abstracts of 400-500 words are due 15th December 2022.

    Full details regarding the scope, timeline and editing team can be found on the dedicated call website: https://www.jdsr.io/call-for-papers

  • 16.11.2022 20:39 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    November 21, 2022

    Virtual event

    Join us on World Children’s Day for the virtual launch of our new essay collection by regulators, specialists and academics on the problems and possibilities for children’s education data.

     Details:

    Date: Monday 21 November

    Time: 15:00 – 16:30 GMT

    Location: Virtual, see link below  

    Register for the event here

    Baroness Beeban Kidron and Professor Sonia Livingstone OBE, LSE, will be joined by:

    • Kruakae Pothong, DFC
    • Ben Williamson, University of Edinburgh
    • Julia Cooke, Information Commissioner’s Office
    • Riad Fawzi, Second Stand Solutions Ltd
    • Andrew McStay, Bangor University 
    • Larissa Pschetz, University of Edinburgh
    • Roger Taylor, Open Data Partners

    More speakers are to be confirmed. 

    We do hope you will be able to join us, and please do feel free to forward this invitation to anyone in your network who may be interested in attending. 

    If you have any questions about the event or the Digital Futures Commission please contact us on info@5rightsfoundation.com.

    Thank you,

    The Digital Futures Commission team

    The Digital Futures Commission – hosted by 5Rights Foundation – is a flagship project driven by a board of Commissioners. It consists of three work streams – Play in the Digital World, Beneficial Uses of Education Data, and Guidance for Innovators. In each strand we are trying to shift the dial – our outputs will be focused on reimagining the digital world as if it were built for children, by design. 

    Our Commissioners represent the following organisations: 5Rights Foundation; BBC Research & Development North Lab; Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation; Erase All Kittens; EY; Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop; LEGO; London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE); Technological University Dublin; The Alan Turing Institute; The Behavioural Insights Team; University of Leeds.

    You can learn more about the Digital Futures Commission here. You can also check out our blog, where we regularly profile the DFC's work. 

  • 10.11.2022 11:17 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Deadline for proposals (EXTENDED): November 30, 2022

    Edited by Willemien Sanders and Anna Zoellner

    Media occupy an increasingly central position in our everyday lives, facilitated by the development of increasingly smaller and smarter screens and sophisticated digital, interactive infrastructures. The mediatisation of society entails that the production of media is no longer limited to the field of audio-visual culture, communication and entertainment (such as film, television, radio, advertising, PR, and gaming) but pervades a range of other areas, including, but not limited to, governance, education, health care, tourism, the military, religion, and sports. In these areas, media content in the form of audio, video, apps, virtual and augmented reality, and social media is increasingly part of everyday practices.

    Expanding the field and focus of existing media production research, this book explores this trend of media production in non-media domains. With non-media domains we mean domains other than legacy media (print, radio, television, film, and social media). Our focus lies on the production of media content that is not intended for communication to a wider public, such as popular and news media, and that is instrumental rather than intrinsic in its purpose: these media serve as a means to achieve some other goal. They facilitate professional and everyday practices (and will, arguably, often replace previous practices that did not include audio-visual media). In that sense, they are oriented to a specific professional/practice field. This includes media such as nutrition apps, serious games for military training, and augmented reality in tourism. In all these cases, the media texts are a means within a mediatised practice in a non-media domain. Propaganda material or public health communication, for example, would not fall in this category.

    This kind of media production for non-media sectors is by nature interdisciplinary. It requires a mix of skills, techniques and technologies and therefore the collaboration of people from different sectors and work roles. We provisionally label this ‘cross-sector’ media production, to refer to the collaboration between the media sector and other sectors. This book explores how cross-sector media production functions, how different professionals collaborate – having different occupational identities, bringing in different perspectives and relying on a wide variety of work cultures, epistemologies, and ethics.

    Topics may include but are not limited to the following technologies:

    • virtual reality
    • augmented reality
    • web 2.0, web 3.0
    • apps
    • holograms
    • serious games
    • websites
    • other sound and screen applications

    Topics may concern but are not limited to the following sectors:

    • education
    • health care
    • manufacturing
    • sports
    • travelling
    • commerce
    • home appliances
    • design
    • fine arts

    The book will be structured in three corresponding sections: (1) theoretical debates on its origin and related developments, to discuss how we can understand cross-sector media production better; (2) methodological debates about such research, to explore methodological implications, challenges, and approaches; and (3) empirical research of cross-sector media practices, to investigate these particular production contexts including their conditions, processes and practices.   

    Section 1

    For this section we invite contributions that address the origins and conceptualisation of cross-sector media production. Contributions will discuss theoretical approaches and histories of digitalisation, mediatisation, platformisation, innovation and other relevant theories in different domains, with a focus on what these mean for cross-sector production specifically. The section will address various developments (technical, social, cultural, legal) that facilitate and co-shape cross-sector media production by setting and extending boundaries.

    Section 2

    The second section of the book discusses the investigation of cross-sector media production as research process. For this section we invite contributions that explore theoretical, epistemological, methodological and other challenges as well as solutions in the study of cross-sector media production practices. This section problematizes taken for granted research methods and approaches and invites discussion of alternatives and new directions, including those that go beyond conventional ethnography, as well as those instigated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Section 3

    Drawing on empirical research of cross-sector media production practices, the chapters in this section will explore the assumptions, interests, and challenges when producing media in such cross-sector production contexts. This includes how media makers navigate the ideas and demands within a non-media domain in relation to their own expertise and preferences. The section explores what kind of values, expectations and cultures underlie cross-sector media production. It also looks at the epistemologies, competencies and best practices for the different occupations involved. 

    Submission details

    Please send proposals for chapters before the deadline of Wednesday, November 30, 2022. Proposals should be between 500-800 words, excluding notes and referenced sources. In addition, short bios for each author (150 words) should be included. Please indicate for which section you are proposing your chapter.

    Proposals and any inquiries should be sent to the editors: w.sanders@uu.nl and  a.zoellner@leeds.ac.uk

    Decisions will be communicated in January 2023. Chapter manuscripts are expected to be submitted in June 2023.

    Media Production in Non-Media Domains – Researching cross-sector media production will be published in the Springer Media Industries series, edited by Bjørn von Rimscha and Ulrike Rohn.

  • 09.11.2022 16:22 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    November 30, 2022

    On November 30, 2022, from 6.00 to 7.00 pm, the next event of the European Media Salon will take place on the topic "Communicative AI, Human-Machine Communication and the Automation of media and Communications: Taking a societal view“. 

    Artificial Companions like voice-based agents, social robots, bots on Twitter and other platforms, systems of automated generation of journalistic content are increasingly spreading. These technological developments are seemingly associated with a major change in the media environment and the ways in which we communicate, challenging our understanding of the nature, actors and borders of communication. Yet, to media and communication scholars, this shift is similar to the development of the Internet towards the commercialized Web 2.0 and associated platforms. At the same time, the public, but also media and communication research, has a persistently limited view of this automation of communication. There is little discussion and research on what consequences this has for societal communication and human agency as a whole. Instead, the discourse is either dominated by techno-utopian views, or comparatively “narrowly” focused on the interaction of humans and machines as happening in a vacuum, while the research is often instrumental on the “improvement” and “implementation” of such systems. In this event of the European Media Salon we want to discuss how critical and sociologically informed research on communicative AI, human-machine-communication and the automation of communication should look like, which sees these as part of societal communication. 

    Discussants

    For more information on the event, visit: 

    https://www.european-media-salon.org/events/communicative-ai-human-machine-communication-and-the-automation-of-media-and-communications-taking-a-societal-view 

    To register for this and future events, email: 

    EuropeanMediaSalon@uni-bremen.de 

  • 08.11.2022 17:23 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    University of Salzburg

    The University of Salzburg (Dept. of Communication Studies) is inviting applications from  qualified candidates for a faculty position at the level of PhD student [Dissertant/in] in the chair of  Communication Policy and Media Economics. The department looks for candidates who could  contribute to the research of the department, including the Euromedia Ownership Monitor  (EurOMo), a project funded by the European Commission which deals with media ownership  transparency in Europe. The dissertation should address areas such as media and internet  policy/governance, media structure, and critical political economy of media and communication.  Focus is preferably Austria or Europe, but comparative analysis with other countries/regions are  also welcome.​​

    Additional information: 

    • Start of employment: 1st March, 2023 
    • Duration of employment: 4 years 
    • Weekly hours: 30 (20 for faculty projects and teaching, as assigned by the head of the unit) 
    • Job description: scientific support of research, teaching (from year 3) and administrative tasks; own research/PhD dissertation, cooperation with research proposals  (conceptualisation, writing, and submission), support of planning and conducting  conferences. 
    • Supervision by Prof. Josef Trappel 
    • Requirements: 
      • Diploma or Master in communication studies or related social sciences 
      • Fluency in English 
      • Willingness to learn German within 2 years (fluency by the time of application is an  asset) 
      • Willingness to live in Salzburg 
    • Desired qualifications: 
      • Previous experience in researching issues of media policy and economics 
      • Knowledge of the relevant literature 
      • Experience with qualitative and quantitative methods of communication science 
      • Publications of scientific papers on these topics 
    • Remuneration: € 2.294 (gross, 14× year) 
    • Submission by email – including CV, letter of motivations and relevant documents – to  bewerbung@plus.ac.at with reference to GZ A 0232/1-2022, on or before 23 November 2022. 
    • For information, please email the contact person of the chair, Prof. Sergio Sparviero, at sergio.sparviero@plus.ac.at 

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