European Communication Research and Education Association
22-23 May 2025
Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
Deadline for abstracts: January 15, 2025
ECREA Communication & Democracy Section Off-Year Conference
https://automatingdemocracy.wordpress.com/
We invite submissions for the ECREA Communication & Democracy Section's off-year conference, Automating Democracy: AI Use Between Social Justice and Social Control, hosted by the Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication in Rotterdam on May 22-23, 2025.
This conference will explore the transformative effects of artificial intelligence (AI) on democratic processes, focusing on two inter-related themes:
We welcome a broad range of submissions engaging with both practical applications of AI and the technological hype through which AI is represented and talked about in political life. We are interested in questions such as: How is the technological hype around AI impacting contemporary democratic imaginaries? What would civic-oriented AI solutions entail? How are public discussions about automated decision-making informing the public sector’s propensity towards implementing such solutions in governance? How can citizens call for the development of ethical and transparent AI-use in governance? What are citizens and public authorities doing with AI? To what extent can AI facilitate citizen mobilization and political participation?
The conference will bring together faculty, PhD students and research MA students conducting critical research to examine AI’s potential in advancing social justice and inclusion, as well as its capacity for social control and marginalization. We are particularly interested in theoretical and empirical contributions that explore the role of AI in (re)shaping public policy, governance practices and democratic oversight; and, the role of AI in empowering or suppressing political participation, citizen activism and social movements.
The two-day event will include two keynote lectures, panel discussions, and a practitioner-scholar roundtable. This roundtable will provide a platform for dialogue between civil society representatives and participants on current practices and challenges of AI-use for progressive social change.
Conference submission and fees
Please submit a 250-words abstract indicating the intended theme by January 15, 2025, via email at automatingdemocracy2025@gmail.com
Notifications of acceptance will be sent by February 15, 2025.
Registration fees: 150 euro for PhD and (research) MA students; 200 euro for faculty members. PhD and (research) MA students should indicate their status in the abstract. The fee covers coffee-breaks and lunch during the conference.
The organizers intend to bring together the conference contributions into an edited collection.
For more information, visit the conference website at https://automatingdemocracy.wordpress.com/
Conference organizing committee
Dr. Delia Dumitrica, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Dr. Ofra Klein, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Victoria Balan, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Dr. Giuliana Sorce, Tubingen University
Dr. Jun Liu, University of Copenhagen
Dr. Arianna Bussoletti, Sapienza Universita di Roma
Dear colleagues
We are pleased to announce the publication of a free downloadable report on young audiences (16-34) in Italy (2024) and their engagement with British screen entertainment. This adds to previous AHRC-funded reports on Germany and Denmark. Please share with colleagues, students and whoever else might be interested.
Italy: Esser, A., Hilborn, M., Steemers, J., & D'Arma, A. (October 2024). Screen Encounters with Britain - Interim Report Italy: What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture? King's College London. https://doi.org/10.18742/pub01-195
Link here: https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/ws/portalfiles/portal/300203943/FINAL_Italy_Interim_Report_Sept._26_2024.pdf
Earlier reports are available on:
Netherlands: Esser, A., Hilborn, M., & Steemers, J. (May 2024). Screen Encounters with Britain - Interim Report Netherlands: What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture? . King's College London. https://doi.org/10.18742/pub01-177
Germany: Esser, A., Hilborn, M., & Steemers, J. (September 2023). Screen Encounters with Britain - Interim Report Germany: What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture?. King's College London. https://doi.org/10.18742/pub01-139
Denmark: Esser, A., Hilborn, M., & Steemers, J. (September 2023). Screen Encounters with Britain - Interim Report Denmark: What do young Europeans make of Britain and its digital screen culture?. King's College London. https://doi.org/10.18742/pub01-118
Kind Regards
Jeanette Steemers
King’s College London
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/screen-encounters-with-britain
Editors: Sameera Ahmed, Maha Bashri, Ahmed El Gody
Deadline: December 2, 2024
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Overview
We invite chapter proposals for an edited volume titled “Contesting Colonial Legacies: Processes of Decolonization in Media Spaces”. This book aims to critically examine the enduring influence of colonialism on contemporary societal frameworks, ideologies, and structures, with a particular focus on the media’s role as a key discursive arena where colonial legacies are both upheld and challenged.
The book will explore how media and communication can either perpetuate or transform colonial legacies in the contemporary era. Unraveling and confronting these legacies is essential for fostering societies that are just, inclusive, and equitable, and that celebrate diversity in voices, cultures, and knowledge. To consolidate the literature emerging from the Global South that addresses these issues, chapters will reference, amongst others, diaspora studies, subaltern and postcolonial studies, and identity and conquest/anti-conquest discourses.
By bringing together these critical issues and perspectives in one volume, we aim to provide an extensive and interconnected framework for understanding experiences of neocolonialism in the 21st century. This book will create a valuable resource for scholars, researchers, activists, and the public to examine conditions that impact several aspects of our contemporary lives which are rooted in colonial histories.
We particularly encourage contributions from the Global South/Global Majority that:
Themes
We welcome submissions addressing one or more of the following themes:
1. Knowledge and Education: Examining media education’s role in propagating or challenging colonial ideologies.
2. Culture and Identity: Analyzing how media either reinforces or undermines dominant cultural norms and identity constructs rooted in colonialism.
3. Sustainability Concepts and Practices: Exploring how media narratives influence perceptions of sustainability, environmental justice, and resource management, and examining alternative, decolonization-based approaches.
4. Resistance Systems and Voices: Showcasing various forms of resistance, including grassroots movements, activists, alternative media, and indigenous knowledge, that confront colonial legacies.
Submission Guidelines
Chapters should blend theoretical insights with practical interventions, drawing on real experiences from individuals, communities, and organizations.
Potential research methods include literature reviews, case studies, comparative analyses, and discourse analyses.
Chapters should be between 6000-7000 words.
Important Dates
Abstract Submission Deadline: Monday, December 2, 2024
Notification of Acceptance: Monday, December 30, 2024
Full Chapter Submission: Monday, March 31, 2025
Anticipated Publication: September 2025
Submission Process
Please submit a 300-500 word abstract and a 100-word author bio by December 2, 2024, to ccldecol@gmail.com. Abstracts should clearly state the research question, theoretical framework, methodology, and expected findings. Please also indicate which theme(s) your chapter will address. For any queries, please contact ccldecol@gmail.com. We look forward to your contributions for this important volume on decolonization in media spaces.
June 11, 2025
University of Colorado Boulder, USA
Deadline: January 30, 2025
This one-day preconference, co-organized by the Center for Media, Religion and Culture (CMRC) at the University of Colorado Boulder and the Institute for Advanced Study in the Global South at Northwestern University in Qatar (#IAS_NUQ), seeks to explore intellectual and epistemic overlaps in African and Arab scholarship on media and culture. Our focus is on disrupting traditional area studies frameworks and drawing connections between long-standing theories, methods, and literatures from these regions.
It takes seriously ICA 2025's focus on"Disrupting and Consolidating Communication Research" and invitation to foreground scholarship from across the Global South to disrupt dominant theories and expand our understanding of communication, media, and culture. More than an invitation to talk back to the West, our endeavor is first and foremost driven by a desire to forge new directions for media and communication research by building on long-standing – yet often repressed – theories, methods, and literatures within Africa and the Arab world.
We are inviting contributions from scholars from around the globe who can draw on grounded, evidence-driven scholarship to speak imaginatively and creatively to one or more of the three following keywords, which serve as orienting standpoints for the discussions at the preconference:
Submit an extended abstract of 400-500 words (excluding references) by January 30, 2025, to ias@qatar.northwestern.edu. In a single PDF, include your name, institutional affiliation, email, title of your proposed presentation, and abstract.
A limited number of travel stipends will be available for scholars from the Global South. If you would like to be considered, please indicate this in your submission.
Key Dates
Organizers:
For more information, contact: ias@qatar.northwestern.edu
ICA Division Affiliation:
Philosophy, Theory, and Critique
May 23, 2025
Örebro University, Sweden
Deadline: December 1, 2024
On 23rd of May, 2025, Örebro University will arrange a symposium to explore what we know about SVOD audiences (focusing on audiovisual fiction) and democracy in the European context.
The European audiovisual landscape is complex, with a huge variety of content providers and a traditionally strong public service. While only about 10% of all European providers feature public ownership, these play a key role as facilitators of original European productions across the continent (Fontaine, 2024:7; Antoniazzi et al., 2022). However, the US has a substantial and increasing influence on the European audiovisual sector (Schneeberger, 2024:7). The SVOD segment, as the most concentrated market segment in Europe, has the highest share of US (84%) and private (99%) interests (Ene Iancu, 2024:10). In terms of SVOD consumption, a lion part of what is watched originates from the US (Grece & Tran, 2023; Iordache et al., 2023), and earlier concerns on US cultural imperialism have been revived (Davis, 2023; Lotz, 2021).
Recently, the public service media across Europe has experienced dire economic conditions. For example, in Sweden, budget cuts have been announced for public service in the spring of 2024 with the argument of unfair competition while diversity and democratic arguments are downplayed (SOU 2024:34). This evolution is in line with the European Commission’s focus on competition and on creating a single market. Ultimately, this bypasses opportunities for cultural objectives such as media pluralism, cultural protection or social regulations (Humphreys, 2008:154). Although the European Audiovisual Media Services Directive (2018) has sought to level the market between domestic and transnational platform suppliers and protect the production of film and television in Europe (Kostovska et al. 2020), the political space to discuss streamed content as culture seems to have shrunk. This has far-reaching consequences for European content and democratic values such as equality and diversity (Jansson et al., 2024). In this symposium, we aim to investigate what these evolutions mean for audiences, as fiction consumers, but also – and especially – in their role as citizens.
On a theoretical level, there are a range of conceptualizations of how fiction (and culture) shapes citizens, including the “political self” (Van Zoonen, 2007), the cultural public sphere (McGuigan, 2005), and civic cultures (Dahlgren, 2009). Askanius (2019:273) focuses on explicit articulations of community in relation to fiction, while Nærland (2019:652) uses the concept of “public connection” to denote a more complex orientation of the audience toward the public and the political. Bengesser (2023) argues public service in particular, including drama productions, is of importance in civic engagement and in building “lifeworlds” (Bengesser, 2023:63).
On an empirical level, the link between fiction and democracy is often presupposed in research relating to democratic values or “the political” (Van Belle, Aitaki and Jansson, forthcoming). Audiovisual fiction has been argued to directly correlate with political engagement (e.g. Fielding, 2014; Cardo, 2011) and opinion-formation or political attitudes (e.g. Hermann et al., 2023; Swigger, 2017; Adkins et al., 2014; Butler et al., 1995). Indirectly, identities and bodies are assumed to be the glue between connecting audiences and democracy through the viewing of fiction (e.g. Smith, 2020; Yea, 2014). On a more structural level, fiction is seen as contributing to imagined worlds (Randall, 2011) or discourses (Kato, 2015). Regardless of theoretical belonging, most studies have a rather crude understanding of the audience and its agency (see e.g. La Pastina, 2004). This actualizes questions about how democratic values and political topics are negotiated in relation to the fictional content audiences watch. Further, it includes exploring audiences’ understandings of fiction in relation to their roles as citizens in a democratic European context.
This symposium is interested in contributions that could, but are not limited to, illuminate some of the following topics:
- The relation between sVODs and citizenship or democracy
- Public service audiences and society
- Fiction and political activism
- The negotiation of identities via fiction, in relation to democracy and politics
- The negotiation of political and democratic values in relation to fiction, such as equality, solidarity, community, or freedom
- Fiction/audiences and political trust
- Missing audiences/citizens
- Media pluralism, cultural protection, social regulations, or diversity from an audience perspective
The symposium will take place 23 May 2025, and will be held at Örebro University, with the option of participating online. Depending on funding, travel costs may be reimbursed. Limited number of spots for participants.
In conjunction with the symposium, a follow-up volume in a leading academic publishing house is planned.
Please submit full contact information, a short biography that explains your background and field (of no more than 300 words) and an abstract (of no more than 500 words) on the topic you would like to present on to jono.van-belle@oru.se
The call for papers will close on 1 December 2024. The authors of selected contributions will be notified by 1 January 2025.
We are looking forward to your proposal!
Jono Van Belle & Maria Jansson (Örebro University, Sweden)
Deadline: November 22, 2024
This CFP, requiring no payment from the authors, is a shared space where scholars and practitioners explore various aspects of everyday democracy, particularly in the context of polarization and radicalization. Polarization, aligning societal differences along a single dimension, poses significant risks to democracy by fostering opposition and conflict (McCoy et al., 2018). Radicalization, often a consequence of polarization, involves individuals or groups moving away from mainstream ideologies toward more extreme positions, sometimes leading to violence (Schmid, 2013).
By examining how everyday democracy interacts with these processes, this book aims to provide new insights into how democratic resilience can be built in the face of polarization and radicalization. Through a broad approach encompassing various societal systems and institutions, the book explores the complexities and nuances of these challenges, offering a deeper understanding of everyday democracy and its potential to mitigate the risks of polarization and radicalization. Read more below or at http://lnu.se/en/research/research-projects/project-the-book-everyday-democracy/.
Interested chapter contributors are welcome to propose chapters that showcase the wide spectrum of research on polarization and radicalization in relation to democratic values. Examples of topics chapters can address in the three respective categories that form the framework of the book, include but are not limited to the following:
1. Collaborative Forms:
• How participatory governance initiatives, such as citizen assemblies or deliberative practices, can foster democratic resilience against polarization and radicalization
• The role of digital platforms and open government practices can play in promoting dialogue, common understanding and a cohesive society
• Ways in which citizen professionalism and public-work democracy can foster everyday democratic engagement that counters radical ideologies and polarization
• How collaborative action research methodologies can facilitate depolarization and democratic discourse
• Avenues for interdisciplinary approaches (e.g. politics, sociology, and science) to enhance the effectiveness of everyday democracy in counteracting radicalization
2. Interaction Cases:
• Cities where shared governance of public spaces foster democratic engagement and challenge local extremism or exclusion
• Art and cultural institutions, or local libraries, engaging e.g. marginalized youth in democratic processes
• Schools where democratic practices have been implemented, making use of e.g. participatory decision-making and curriculum design
• Everyday democratic practices in cities or local communities facing different types of crises (such as inequality, climate change, or migration)
• NGOs and community-led fact-checking initiatives aiming to counter microradicalization
• Lessons learned from the Dialogue to Change Approach (also known as Dialogue to Action)
• The contribution by makerspaces, graffiti, and other art forms in contributing to everyday democratic engagement in polarized communities
3 Research-Based Explorations:
• How media and social media shape everyday democratic discourse, both promoting polarization and offering platforms for counter-radicalization and democratic engagement
• The democratic potential of local histories and urban movements to reclaim public spaces for equity and inclusion
• The impact of popular culture—music, films, and literature—on shaping public perceptions of democracy and radicalization, both positively and negatively
• The role of speculative thinking and conspiracy theories in fostering or deepening political polarization
• Commonalities and differences in approaches to de-radicalization across diverse global contexts
• Feminist perspectives on authoritarian populism as seen through the boundary work in everyday life
Submission guidelines
If you are interested in contributing to this project, please submit an extended abstract (max. 500 to 750 words) of your proposed chapter and a short biographical note (max. 150 words) by 22 November 2024, to everydaydemocracy@lnu.se. Chapter submissions and further editorial and peer reviews will be carried out via a publishing platform.
The extended abstract must clearly state the intended analytical goals and empirical/theoretical coverage of the proposed chapter while clarifying how the proposed chapter addresses central themes of the edited volume. If possible, indicate which category your chapter is best suited for, i.e. as Collaborative Forms and Scholarly Approaches, Interaction Cases or Research-Based Explorations.
Please include up to five indicative references you plan to use in your chapter. While these references might change along the way, they are useful to avoid potential overlaps among contributors.
The targeted academic publisher will be chosen after the selection of abstracts is finalized. All chapters submitted should be original works and must not be under consideration by other publishers.
Important dates
Editors
Pernilla Jonsson Severson, Associate Professor in Media and Communication Studies, Department of Media and Journalism, Linnaeus University, Sweden Contact: pernilla.severson@lnu.se
Emma Ricknell, Senior Lecturer, Department of Political Science, Linnaeus University, Sweden Contact: emma.ricknell@lnu.se
Contact information
Please contact Pernilla Jonsson Severson at pernilla.severson@lnu.se if you have any questions regarding the chapter proposal.
June 12, 2025
Denver, CO (USA)
Deadline: December 15, 2024
International Communication Association Preconference
Co-sponsored by: Global Communication and Social Change, Communication History Divisions
With the emergence of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) in the 1960s, newly independent nations from across the Global South sought to generate channels and protocols for international collaboration that would bypass centuries-old colonial extractive dynamics. What began as a political project of high level diplomacy soon expanded into an ethos that inspired and guided numerous initiatives in the fields of scientific research, cultural production, architecture, and so on. In short, the Non-Aligned Movement was a major disruptor of the political, economic, and cultural status quo of the mid-20th century, and media and communication practices were key to this disruption. Projects like New World Information and Communication Order (NWICO), Broadcasting Organization on Non-Aligned Countries (BONAC), and Non-Aligned News Agency Pool (NANAP) aimed to reconfigure the international arena of communication, from reimagining networks and technology exchange to forging new collaborative practices to respond to unique and shifting on-the-ground situations of decolonizing countries in the Global South. These projects troubled and challenged established logics of the existing institutional apparatuses and research paradigms they relied on. However, the histories of these disruptions have mostly remained unwritten or been forgotten by contemporary scholarship.
This preconference aims to examine the conceptual implications and epistemic challenges that NAM disruptions (as well as other forms of disruptions that emerged in media and communication systems of the Global South and are aligned to the spirit and objectives of NAM) continue to pose for media and communication research. How do we account for the varied projects that were simultaneously initiated in and carried out from locations such as India, Iraq, Algiers and Cuba? How does such a fundamentally transnational character of collaborative initiatives expand our grasp of global media histories? What do we make of institutional collaborations that unsettle our understandings of top-down and bottom-up activities? How should we frame the persistence of racial logics that NAM actors faced in the realm of international media governance? And how do NAM’s failures, alongside the simultaneous persistence of its legacies, trouble existing conceptions of media temporalities? We will bring together scholars who are tackling these and other questions to provide a greater depth and geographical scope to media and communication studies’ understanding of the long history of global connectivity. By centering historical projects of media decolonization, we also aim to advance the field’s contemporary efforts to decolonize and de-canonize knowledge production.
This ICA preconference continues from two previous preconferences held in Canada and Australia respectively: “Media and Communication Studies in Global Contexts: A Critical History” and “Repressed Histories of Communication and Media Studies.”
The preconference will be organized as a set of four roundtables and we invite submissions that address one of the following roundtable topics:
Information about submissions
Authors should submit an extended abstract of 350-400 words (excluding references) to cargc@asc.upenn.edu. In a single PDF, please include: your name, institutional affiliation, email address, title of your proposed presentation, and abstract.
The deadline for submissions is December 15th, 2025, 23:59 GMT.
Authors will be notified by January 30, 2025 if their abstract has been accepted.
Attendance to the preconference has a general USD 50.00 fee. Please note that we will be able to defray registration costs and provide some travel funding for panelists.
Eszter Zimanyi, University of Pennsylvania
Sima Kokotovic, University of Pennsylvania
Aswin Punathambekar, University of Pennsylvania
Simone Natale, University of Turin
Usha Raman, University of Hyderabad
Emily Keightley, Loughborough University
Jing Wang, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Ignatius Suglo, University of Richmond
April 29-30, 2025
University of Minho, Portugal
Deadline: November 30, 2024
Until November 30, 2024, the MigraMediaActs project is accepting submissions for the "Migrations and communication in a planetary age: debates and actions" conference it is organising between April 29 and 30, 2025, at the University of Minho in Braga. Proposals will be peer-reviewed, and the evaluation results will be sent by January 20. Abstracts should be submitted using the form available on the project's website. To value the linguistic diversity and the diversity of forms of communication, proposals (for oral communications, panels and artistic interventions) can be submitted in Portuguese, English, Spanish or French. Still, the sessions will not have simultaneous translation. The conference will have face-to-face and online sessions.
Based on inter-and transdisciplinary approaches, fostering dialogue between different areas of knowledge and other types of expertise, the main objective of this conference is to debate how communication, culture and migration studies can challenge existing notions of diaspora, identities, cultures, nation, family, literacy, digital networks, youth, body, gender, among others, and contribute to building fairer and more inclusive futures. The aim is to discuss the multiple dimensions of communication, art and social activism in order to understand their role in (re)configuring relational spaces and poetics and in promoting attentive listening. In a fragmented planetary context marked by daily "crises", this conference proposes to question, rethink and rebuild community paths through communication.
We welcome contributions on the following topics and other issues in the field of communication and migration:
* Migration, decolonisation of knowledge and science communication
* Intercultural communication and the media
* Mnemonic activism, arts and media
* Media culture, racialisation processes and intersectionalities
* Media productions and artistic practices of migrant and racialised people
* Migrations, media and action research
* Migration, media activism and social change
* Experiences of (im)mobility and their mediation
* Migration and ecotransition
* Transnational comparisons of media practices in the communication of migration
* Media representations of migration
* Mediated experiences of family migration
* Digital technologies and the governance of migration and borders
* Challenges and innovations in methodologies for communication and migration studies
* Others, not named but related to the theme
For submission guidelines and further details, please visit our website: https://www.migra.ics.uminho.pt/en/conference-2025.
We look forward to your contributions and encourage you to share this call with colleagues who may be interested.
Dr. Raquel V. Benítez Rojas, Ph.D, MAC, MBA,CMP and Dr. Francisco Martinez Cano
Revolutionizing Communication: The Role of Artificial Intelligence explores the wide-ranging effects of artificial intelligence (AI) on how we connect and communicate, changing social interactions, relationships, and the very structure of our society. Through insightful analysis, practical examples, and knowledgeable perspectives, the book examines chatbots, virtual assistants, natural language processing, and more. It shows how these technologies have a significant impact on cultural productions, business, education, ethics, advertising, media, journalism, and interpersonal interactions. Revolutionizing Communication is a guide to comprehending the present and future of communication in the era of AI. It provides invaluable insights for professionals, academics, and everyone interested in the significant changes occurring in our digital age.
https://www.routledge.com/Revolutionizing-Communication-The-Role-of-Artificial-Intelligence/Rojas-Martinez-Cano/p/book/9781032733425?srsltid=AfmBOoou3aXpERuMJYYsnLNcTjDEUPY8PmTujAWy0bahHJc1eB2EUHax
November 22, 2024
You are cordially invited to attend the public inaugural lecture of the workshop Towards Development of Mediatization Research VIII. The keynote speaker is Carlos Alberto Scolari, who is a researcher and expert in communication and digital media, interfaces and communication ecology. Building on the tradition of the theories of mass media, since 1990, he has been dedicated to studying new forms of communication arising from the spread of the World Wide Web.
Date: 22.11.2024 (Friday)
Time: 11:15 - 12:00 CET
Platform: MS Teams
Link: https://bit.ly/opening-lecture
Any substantive questions about the workshop can be answered by Katarzyna Kopecka-Piech, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, via email: katarzyna.kopecka-piech@umcs.pl
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