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  • 23.03.2023 13:46 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Radboud University

    A Methods Excellence Network (MethodsNET) Event, hosted by Nijmegen School of Management, Radboud University, the Netherlands

    The academic concept and programme of the 3SRM is designed, coordinated ‘on the ground’ and evaluated by MethodsNET. The event is run in partnership with Radboud University, via the Nijmegen School of Management which hosts the event in corporation with the Radboud Summer School and Radboud Academy. Read more about MethodsNET and Nijmegen School of Management here.

    World-class methods courses -- and so much more

    Welcome to the second edition of the Summer School in Social Research Methods (3SRM), the most pluralistic methods training event worldwide, with no fewer than 40 main courses (36 one-week courses and 2 two-week courses, + 2 pre-event online software courses) across the whole span of methodological traditions and also covering innovative/emerging topics.

    If you want to bring your research to the next level, the 3SRM is the place to be. It is a unique venue: besides world-class methods courses taught by top pedagogues, with small-group interaction and individual tutoring, you get more:

    About your main courses:

    Tailored advice on choosing courses and a sequence across week 1 and week 2 – the programme has been designed to enable multiple useful sequences

    Pluralism, via the full diversity of methods covered

    Beyond your main courses: on a weekly basis, your main course fee in fact gives you access to a ‘full package’ which comprises:

    Two morning cross-cutting short courses on the Philosophy of Science (week 1) and on Research Approaches and Designs in the Social Sciences (week 2). Both are optional but encouraged to broaden your methodological expertise!`

    On both weeks: three late afternoon Supplemental short courses: Math Refresher (both weeks), Missing Data (week 1) and Data Visualization (week 2)

    …and lunches are also comprised, in addition to the necessary amount of caffeine and theine over breaks :-)

    Ample time for linking up and crossing perspectives. The 3SRM spirit is all about community-building, sharing, and networking. In particular: we have provisioned:

    Ample breaks in between the course sessions

    A great ‘Methods Café’ (both Mondays, week 1 and week 2) – designed to cross perspectives, link up and get informal feedback from expert instructors

    So: for a given week, in terms of academic content, your registration fee gives you access to a given main course (20 hours) + up to 8 hours of extra short courses + the Methods Café.

    See this bird’s eye view (pdf, 182 kB) of the main courses over the successive weeks, the event flyer and a video on our MethodsNET YouTube channel explaining in short the whole logic of the 3SRM programme, training package and pedagogy. Finally, here you can find an overview of the summer school programme, per week.

    Find all courses in Social Research Methods here

  • 22.03.2023 21:37 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    November 2-3, 2023

    Salzburg, Austria

    Deadline: June 9, 2023

    The “Communication Law and Policy” Section of the European Communications Research and Education Association (ECREA) and the Jean Monnet Network “European Media and Platform Policy” (EuromediApp) invite abstracts for theoretical and empirical papers on the topic Digital Platform Policy Spring? Promises and Trajectories for Digital Platform Regulation. This workshop will be a unique opportunity to bring together those investigating the processes of regulating media and digital intermediaries in Europe and beyond. The workshop will take place in Salzburg, Austria, on 2-3 November 2023. It is hosted by the Department of Communication Studies at the University of Salzburg.

    Context

    Digital platforms and intermediaries are increasingly disseminating news and structuring news consumption across the globe. They have become crucial spaces of civic discourse and cultural expression. Unique levels of ownership concentration in the hands of few extremely large industrial conglomerates dominate digital media landscapes. Checks and balances from media and telecommunication policy do not apply to these new players, enabling digital platforms and intermediaries to exercise unprecedented power in various ways.

    While implicitly accepting or even fostering media ownership concentration, European institutions have lately recognized the various challenges for media freedom, freedom of expression and the quality of news created by digital platforms and intermediaries. Digital Markets Act (DMA), Digital Services Act (DSA) and European Media Freedom Act (EMFA) address such challenges. These European initiatives also have a geopolitical dimension, shaping and being shaped by developments in other rich countries and in the Global South. This workshop is dedicated to discussing the nature of such challenges and the appropriateness of policy solutions offered by the European Commission, national governments from around the globe or national and international regulatory bodies.

    Thus, the workshop invites interdisciplinary contributions interested in digital platform policy, regulation and policy implementation. We welcome submissions from political economy, policy and governance studies, media and communication law, and other approaches and fields. We welcome theoretical, methodological and empirical submissions, case studies and comparative work. Innovative use of methods is encouraged. The organizers are especially interested in the following areas, in particular in the intersection between European and non-European problems and solutions:

    • Digital intermediaries and media ownership concentration: What are the implications of ownership concentration on freedoms, news organizations, content, dissemination of news, and the public discourse at large? How do current policy developments such as the Anti-Money Laundering Directive affect platform and media ownership transparency?
    • Editorial independence in the digital platform environment: How far, and how, do digital platforms affect editorial independence of incumbent newsroom structures?
    • Quality of content and combat of misinformation: What is the economics of high-quality content in the digital environment? How are policy interventions seeking to fund quality content, and with what implications?
    • Public interest content in digital intermediaries: How are platforms dealing with prominence and discoverability of content? Which legal measures can be put in place to ensure that public service media and further public-oriented content remain visible in digital inter-mediaries, including devices such as smart TVs?
    • Inequalities and disparities: How do digital platforms and intermediaries contribute to increase or diminish inequalities and disparities in the field of communication? How effective are policy measures to combat such inequalities and disparities?
    • Inclusion: How can digital platforms engage marginalized and diasporic communities towards more inclusion? What are the links between technological infrastructure, innovative business models and inclusive media practices aimed at fostering justice and participation?

    Submission

    Abstracts of no more than 300 words should be submitted for blind peer review in DOCX or ODT directly to the organisers of the conference by Friday, June 9, 2023: contact@euromediapp.org. 

    Each abstract should address one of the above topics in a sound theoretical and methodological manner, and include a title as well as the name(s), institutional affiliation(s) and e-mail address(es) of the author(s). The colleagues will be notified of acceptance by July 15, 2023, and registration is required by September 30, 2023.

    Full papers might be invited after the workshop for publication. Reduced fee for ECREA-recognised “soft-currency” countries and non-waged participants is possible for accepted submitters. More information will be available in due time on the ECREA CLP and EuromediApp websites.

  • 22.03.2023 21:23 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    May 2-3, 2023

    University of Tübingen, Germany 

    https://uni-tuebingen.de/universitaet/campusleben/veranstaltungen/veranstaltungskalender/kongresse-und-tagungen/social-justice-and-technological-futures/  

    Registration as participant via email to Ms. Laura Schelenz (laura.schelenz@uni-tuebingen.de

    Social justice theories are crucial instruments to meet the challenges of emerging technologies such as Artificial Intelligence. The Tübingen Symposium questions canonical values in technology creation while also exploring diverse and potentially competing social justice concepts. The works of Black feminists and critical race theorists as well as decolonial and Global South scholars and activists render visible the interlockings of societal, economic, cultural, and political injustice in the design, production, and distribution of technology. In thinking about the future and its daunting challenges, including the transformation of work, climate change, migration, and overall precarity, what should be the role of technology? What do technological futures look like from a social justice perspective?

  • 22.03.2023 21:21 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    August 8-11, 2023

    Oslo, Norway

    Deadline for submissions: March 31, 2023

    https://ifip-summerschool.github.io/#2023-call-for-papers-out-now 

    Our future is shared. The Internet and the web, (personal) data, resources, climate effects, music, genetic information, trading routes, celestial bodies, holiday homes, rides: we have built a globalized world on sharing, and sharing will be the great protagonist of our future. However, sharing is mostly realized through centralized platforms, controlled by dominant industry players, instead of decentralized architectures and communities. The 18th IFIP Summer School on Privacy and Identity Management takes a holistic approach to society and technology. We support interdisciplinary research exchange and foster discussions through keynote lectures, tutorials and workshops. Participants will benefit from presenting their research and receiving meaningful feedbacks. The summer school culminates in the publication of selected papers among those submitted by the participants, in the form of an edited volume published by Springer.

  • 22.03.2023 21:14 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    City, University of London

    The School of Communication & Creativity (SCC) at City, University of London is a cosmopolitan, industry-focused, socially engaged and politically conscious centre of educational excellence and world-changing interdisciplinary research which shapes and influences professional practice.

    Our PhD studentships will support the next generation of researchers, practitioners and entrepreneurs working across the media, creative and cultural sectors. More information on our website and below.

    We want to support PhD research that will make a positive difference in the world, pushing forward knowledge and/ or practice in the creative and cultural industries, and are particularly interested in receiving proposals that are interdisciplinary and/ or engage with equality, diversity and inclusion.

    Possible topics may include but are not limited to:

    • transformative justice;
    • radical creativity;
    • social justice and communication and/ or creativity;
    • power, representation and communication;
    • anti-racist, feminist and queer futures;
    • the role of creativity and/or communication in tackling climate change, crises, conflict and racism;
    • race and migration;
    • media freedom;
    • criminalisation and media victimisation;
    • digital/ new media;
    • aural environmentalism;
    • sonic cities;
    • health humanities.

    What is included

    Funding is available for UK, EU and international students.

    The doctoral studentships will consist of:

    • An annual stipend (currently £19,688; will rise in line with UKRI guidelines) for three years full-time (pro-rata for part-time study), inclusive of London weighting
    • A full tuition fee waiver
    • £1500 in research expenses/ consumables over the course of the award
    Eligibility

    The studentships will be awarded on the basis of academic promise, creative thinking and/ or practice-based achievement, or professional equivalent. Projects demonstrating a commitment to interdisciplinarity, social change, and/ or equality, diversity and inclusion are particularly encouraged.

    • Applicants must hold, or be on course to complete, at least a good Second-Class Honours degree and a Master's degree in a relevant subject (or international equivalent), or provide equivalent qualifications or professional/ practice-based experience that evidences their preparedness for PhD study.
    • Applicants whose first language is not English and whose qualifications were not completed in a majority English-speaking country must achieve at least 7.0 in IELTS or a recognised equivalent. Please see the entry requirements for further information.
    • Applicants must not be currently registered as a doctoral student at City, University of London or any other academic institution.
  • 22.03.2023 13:38 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    October 28-30, 2023

    Kuwait University, Kuwait

    Deadline: May 15, 2023

    The Twenty Seventh Annual Conference of the Arab-US Association for Communication Educators Kuwait University

    Media platforms have developed at an unprecedented rate recently, disrupting traditional models for publishing, broadcasting, and advertising and creating a need for identifying new models. As media become more fragmented and at the same time converge, implications can be seen across several different areas, such as the way people access media, how media are marketed, and how the media industry is changing.

    The main objectives of this conference are to discuss, analyze, and critique topics related to those phenomena and to contribute to the academic debate about new media models and theory. The subjects and themes covered in the conference will include, without being limited to:

    • History of media fragmentation and convergence in media landscape

    • Digital and social media fragmentation and convergence in media landscape

    • Changes in media theories and research in a fragmented and converged media landscape

    • New media for media education in a fragmented and converged media landscape

    • Effects of media convergence and fragmentation in media landscape

    • Corporate and strategic communication and their relationships with media convergence and fragmentation in media landscape

    • Agenda setting effects of influencers in media landscape

    • Effects of media fragmentation and convergence on consumers in media landscape

    • Fragmentation and convergence of journalism in media landscape

    • Health and emergency communication in a fragmented and converged media landscape

    Site: Kuwait University, Kuwait

    Date: 28-30 October 2023

    Languages of the conference: Arabic and English Registration fees: $150

    Hotels: To be announced later

    Important deadline dates:

    • May 15th: Submission of abstract

    • June 15th: Response to abstracts

    • August 15th: Submission of registration forms and fee payments

    • Sept. 1st: Submission of full paper

    Consequently, the consumers of media messages have changed their usual patterns of consumption. The phenomena of digitization, media convergence, media fragmentation, and consumption of media and user-generated content set the agenda of interests and concerns for educators, scholars, and practitioners.

    • Sept. 20th: Dissemination of final conference program

    Contact:

    Send abstracts and questions to Dr. Yousef AlFailakawi, President of AUSACE

    yalfailakawi@ku.edu.kw

    www. https://ausace.mystrikingly.com

  • 16.03.2023 20:30 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    June, 22-23, 2023

    Bucharest, Romania (Virtual and in-person sessions)

    Deadline: April 23, 2023

    Faculty of Journalism and Communication Studies, University of Bucharest

    The Institute for International Journalism of the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism, Ohio University Yuriy Fed'kovych Chernivtsi National University of Ukraine

    The International Conference

    Communication in times of (poly)crisis and digital disruptive transformations

    The current context in Europe and around the world seems to be marked by a sense of perpetual, although uneven and differently experienced, crisis and uncertainty. On the background of (post)Covid pandemic situation, issues that have been put on hold - climate change, food insecurity, population aging and migration, to name just a few - are reappearing, with a greater force, powered by the effects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and growing inequalities. These difficult challenges have triggered populist discourses, favor nationalism and extremism, mainly because the digital informational ecosystem favors the simplicity and emotionality of those responses.

    In these boisterous times, trustworthy communication is essential; the high capacity of conspiracy theories to go viral, the threat of exposure to contradictory information and fake-news/disinformation might contribute to making people more vulnerable and confused and also might persuade them to accept and to disseminate ideologically-driven content and polarized information.

    The purpose of this conference is to consider the state of digital informational ecosystem and communications research in the times of (poly)crisis and uncertainty. The conference theme focuses on the intersection between the role of quality press, traditional journalism, political/public communication and digital technologies, all understood as potential enhancers of democracy, yet vulnerable when under attack.

    We invite participants to submit theoretical and empirical proposals that might contribute to a critical discussion on the reconfiguration of journalistic and political/public communication practices in a hybridized and polarized networked media environment.

    ·         How can the emerging disruptive forms of communication and information be meaningfully delineated?

    ·         How do strategies and tactics change in relation to the construction of (alternative) agendas, claims and politics?

    ·         How do journalists engage in (re)enforcing public confidence and accountability?

    ·         How has the proliferation of digital populism, misinformation and disinformation/fake news transformed political communication? 

    We are interested in papers on the following topics:

    @ Disinformation and misinformation in media and political/public communication;

    @the vulnerability of audiences in major crisis situations – the impact of gender, social class, age and other identity categories;

    @ Ethical and moral dilemmas of using Artificial Intelligence in public communication;

    @hate speech in digital informational ecosystem;

    @ digital communications and the re-actualization of populism and nationalism;

    @ Conceptual and methodological challenges of studying journalists’ roles in a digital environment;

    @ communication role in citizen sciences and participatory transformation of research;

    @ Marcom and creative industries strategies;

    @data-driven propaganda strategies and conspiracy theories;

    @ work, gender and new technologies;

    @organizational communication (in time of crisis), communication campaigns, types of activism and political movements in digital informational ecosystem;

    @ communication of climate change and adaptation; politics of climate;

    @ (higher) education in digital informational ecosystem.

    Special Panel: Exploring (dis)continuities in work, gender and technology

    The session seeks research that employs work-centered perspectives alongside a gender or intersectional lens to examine the current context, marked by (poly)crisis and technological disruptions. Traditionally, the media field has privileged the symbolic as an object of inquiry, but as digital technologies have become ubiquitous, it has manifested a growing, trans-disciplinary concern with understanding how the means of communication shape material life, not only how they represent it. With the rise of the platform economy, and the increasing proportion of knowledge workers who depend on communication to carry out their tasks, the media field is turning its gaze towards work-related matters. We want to contribute to this turn by exploring the (dis)continuities that digital technologies create between work, home and leisure time, while keeping in mind that the impact will differ across identities. Gender remains a core organizing principle in our society, but we acknowledge that it is influenced and often becomes less prominent in relation to other identity categories, namely, social class, age, race/ ethnicity, educational background, occupational status, job type, bodily and cognitive abilities, non-normative sexualities, and nationality. We welcome with equal interest submissions that belong to the media field and to other disciplines, both empirical and theoretical approaches connected to the following areas:

    ·      Work in communication industries

    ·      Knowledge workers and communication practices

    ·      Technology and paid/unpaid labor in the platform economy

    ·      Work and intersectional (digital) inequalities 

    ·      Designing technology and policy for digital wellbeing

    Practical information

    The abstract (300 words) will contain author’s/authors’ details, the study’s purpose, research questions, employed methodology or approach, (potential) results, including references (please, use the template attached below).

    The submission languages are Romanian and English. The time allocated to each presentation will be 15-20 minutes, and it can be delivered online/virtual and face to face (the corresponding author is expected to express this choice when submitting the abstract). The deadline for abstract submission is April, 23, 2022, at the address: conference@fjsc.ro

     NO participation fees.

    If you have further questions, please contact the organizers at the address: conference@fjsc.ro

    Scientific Committee

    Jatin Srivastava, PhD, Full Professor, Ohio University, USA

    Natalia Nechaieva Yuriichuk, PhD, Associate Professor, Yuriy Fed'kovych Chernivtsi National University

    Marian Petcu, PhD, Full Professor, University of Bucharest, Romania

    Antonio Momoc, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Bucharest, Romania

    Camelia Beciu, PhD, Full Professor, University of Bucharest, Romania

    Camelia Cmeciu, PhD, Full Professor, University of Bucharest, Romania

    Georgeta Drulă, PhD, Full Professor, University of Bucharest, Romania

    Adriana Ștefănel, PhD, Lecturer, University of Bucharest, Romania

    Pierre Morelli, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Lorraine, France

    Dana Popescu-Jourdy, PhD, Associate Professor, Université Lyon 2 Louis Lumière, France

    Delia Cristina Balaban, PhD, Full Professor, Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania

    Nataša Simeunović Bajić, PhD, Assistant Professor, University of Niš, Serbia

    Gheorghe-Ilie Fârte, PhD, Associate Professor, "Alexandru Ioan Cuza" University of Iasi, Romania

    Elena Prus, PhD, Full Professor, Universitatea Liberă Internațională din Moldova, Chișinău, Republica Moldova

    Florin Ardelean, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Oradea, Romania

    Irina Diana Mădroane, PhD, Associate Professor, West University of Timișoara, Romania

    Organising Committee

    Antonio Momoc, Dean - FJSC, PhD, Associate professor, University of Bucharest

    Romina Surugiu, Vice Dean - FJSC, PhD, Associate professor, University of Bucharest

    Jatin Srivastava, PhD, Full Professor, Ohio University, Institute for International Journalism (IIJ)

    Nicoleta Apostol, PhD, Lecturer, University of Bucharest

    Alexandra Bardan, PhD, Lecturer, University of Bucharest

    Доц. др Наташа Симеуновић Бајић

    Филозофски факултет Универзитета у Нишу

    Doc. dr Nataša Simeunović Bajić, Filozofski fakultet Univerziteta u Nišu

  • 16.03.2023 20:27 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    MLK Conference Room 527, located in Riverside Church, 91 Claremont Avenue (between Broadway and Riverside Drive) Columbia University, New York, USA

    May 1, 2023 - 10:00-13:00 EST (Hybrid event)

    Deadline: March 27, 2023

    Organisers: Columbia Global Freedom of Expression, University of Liverpool, University of Sheffield and Worlds of Journalism Study

    As part of UNESCO’s World Press Freedom Day 2023, an academic conference will take place at Columbia University in New York on 1 May 2023 as a hybrid event. The academic conference focuses on freedom of expression as a driver for other human rights, linking to UNESCO’s overall theme for World Press Freedom Day 2023. Academia has played an important role in World Press Freedom Day by hosting an academic conference that provides a forum to hear from scholars who research constraints on media freedom in all their complexity. As this is the 30th anniversary of World Press Freedom Day, the first part of this year’s academic conference will provide an opportunity to reflect on and celebrate academia’s contributions to better understanding the challenges of journalism safety and media freedom, as well as looking ahead at how it can contribute to these pressing issues in a future where freedom of expression is being threatened around the world. This interactive workshop will provide an opportunity for scholars to come together to discuss how we can continue to build stronger interdisciplinary academic capacity and greater collaboration between academia and civil society. An action statement will be produced on the next steps academia can take.

    The second half of the conference will be a panel session. We invite contributions that discuss current challenges to freedom of expression as a driver for other human rights. The academic consultations on the 10th anniversary of the UN Plan on the Safety of Journalists and the Issue of Impunity identified six areas posing significant challenges to freedom of expression: digital safety; gender-specific safety issues; workplace safety issues; improving monitoring; understanding impunity; and the weaponisation of the law. Papers addressing any of these areas while highlighting the link with protection or curtailment of freedom of expression are welcome.  

    Submission requirements:

    Abstracts of 250 words and an author bio of 100 words should be submitted by 27 March 2023 via the following link - https://liverpoolcommsmedia.fra1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5mRz1iojzBgDKFU

    detailing the research area being considered and its links to freedom of expression. The event will be hybrid with the option to attend either in person or online. There will also be a chance for abstracts to be published on both the Journalism Safety Research Network’s (JSRN) website and University of Liverpool’s DigiPol: Centre for Digital Politics, Media and Democracy website. Academics who would like to attend without presenting at the event in person or online, can also register their interest via the link.

    If you have any questions, please get in touch with Dr Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova (vpetkova@liverpool.ac.uk) or Dr Gemma Horton (gemma.horton@sheffield.ac.uk).

    We look forward to seeing you at the academic conference as part of UNESCO’s World Press Freedom Day! 

    Best wishes 

    The Organising Committee 

    Professor Jackie Harrison, UNESCO Chair on Media Freedom, Journalism Safety and the Issue of Impunity

    Dr Vera-Slavtcheva Petkova, Reader in Global Journalism and Media, University of Liverpool, UK / Worlds of Journalism Study Executive Committee Member

    Catalina Botero, Columbia Global Freedom of Expression

    Dr Gemma Horton, Impact Fellow, Centre for Freedom of the Media

    Dr Emily Harmer, Senior Lecturer in Media Studies, University of Liverpool, UK

    Dr Rosalynd Southern, Senior Lecturer in Political Communication, University of Liverpool, UK

    Dr Christos Kostopoulos, Research Associate, University of Liverpool, UK

  • 16.03.2023 20:25 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    September 28-29, 2023

    The University of Sydney 

    Deadline: April 16, 2023

    Policy innovation for inclusive internet governance 

    https://internet-policy-meco.sydney.edu.au/

    The task of internet policy making has changed markedly over the past two decades. The ‘move fast, break things’ era—during which a central policy concern was how to manage economic disruption across industry sectors from entertainment to journalism, retail, transport and hospitality—has evolved into a digital era characterised by complex and interconnected social, political and economic global challenges. Today, internet policy must confront issues relating to embedded interests, monopoly power, geopolitics, colonisation, warfare, automation, the environment, misinformation, safety, security and more. As DeNardis (2014) has argued, conflicts within internet governance involve critical negotiations over economic and political power and how these conflicts are resolved “will determine some of the most important public interest issues of our time”. 

    In seeking to resolve these conflicts, there is a risk that the dominant economic and geopolitical actors will structure outcomes in their interest. An inclusive approach to internet governance is needed if we are to achieve an equitable distribution of digital resources and opportunities. Inclusive internet governance requires that the voices, interests and values of the maginalised are included in policy making processes, so that dominant ideologies can be challenged and alternative imaginaries realised (Gurumurthy & Chami, 2016). 

    Novelty and innovation in internet policy is itself challenging. Typically, policy making is driven by past experiences (Schot and Steinmueller, 2018) and constrained by institutional formalities, hierarchies and procedures (Bauer, 2014). Innovation, on the other hand, requires space for exploration and experimentation with opportunities “only partially known” (Bauer & Bohlin, 2022). How does policy innovation occur? 

    This conference seeks to bring together a range of international voices to demonstrate how varying approaches towards internet policy are established, embodied and engaged with by a variety of stakeholders. It also aims to bring together scholars and policymakers to discuss current practices, alternative designs and the ‘unknowns’ that are required for inclusive internet governance. The conference will invite scholars, civic interest groups, platform providers and regulatory bodies to discuss the tensions of internet policy and will consider a future research agenda for the field. 

    This two day conference is inviting papers that address, but are not necessarily limited to, the following topics:

    • What is policy innovation in this moment? What are its ecosystems? Are they fit for purpose? How can they be reimagined?
    • Achieving diversity, justice and inclusion in internet governance
    • Case studies from diverse jurisdictions that address core internet governance problems
    • Case studies in innovative approaches to digital platform governance
    • Policies of digital sovereignty, security and conflict 
    • Global response to automation and artificial intelligence 
    • Policy and governance implications of emerging tech e.g. web3, AI, extended reality, the Internet of things and 5G 
    • Emerging cultural practices and related regulatory tensions
    • Internet business models that challenge the status quo

    Competition and other economic policies for a more competitive internet 

    Instructions

    Email a 300-500 word abstract, excluding references, to milica.stilinovic@sydney.edu.au by April 16, 2023 with subject line “P&I Conference 2023 Submission”. 

    All accepted papers are required to be presented in person. 

    Abstracts will be assessed according to the following criteria: 

    1) quality of research and analysis 

    2) originality 

    3) relevance to conference theme and Policy & Internet Journal audiences.  

    Notifications of acceptance will be provided by 1 May, 2023.  

    A selection of presenters will also be invited to submit a full paper for a special issue of Policy & Internet. 

    References:

    Bauer, J. M. (2014). Platforms, systems competition, and innovation: Reassessing the foundations of communications policy. Telecommunications Policy, 38(8-9), 662-673.

    Bauer, J. M., & Bohlin, E. (2022). Regulation and innovation in 5G markets. Telecommunications Policy, 46(4), 102260.

    DeNardis, L. (2014). The global war for internet governance. Yale University Press.

    Gurumurthy, A., & Chami, N. (2016). Internet governance as' ideology in practice'–India's' Free Basics' controversy. Internet Policy Review, 5(3), 1-17. 

    Schot, J., & Steinmueller, W. E. (2018). Three frames for innovation policy: R&D, systems of innovation and transformative change. Research policy, 47(9), 1554-1567

  • 15.03.2023 20:06 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    March 22-23, 2023

    University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication, USA/online

    You are warmly invited to attend our free hybrid symposium, Doing Global Media Studies: Theories, Practices, Reflections. This event will take place in person and via Zoom at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication between March 22nd and 23rd. Colleagues within commuting distance from Philadelphia are welcome to attend the symposium in person. The roundtable events will be made accessible as hybrid webinars.  

    They include:

    • Materialities of the Global South (Ahmed Alrawi, Simran Bhalla, Daniella Gáti, Ennuri Jo, moderated by Tupur Chatterjee) 
    • Global Media Territories (Stephen N. Borunda, Tony Cho, FengYi Yin, Tinghao Zhou, moderated by Rahul Mukherjee) 
    • Transnational Activism and Archival Practices (Sima Kokotović, Amal Shafek, Yidong (Steven) Wang, Yilan Wang, William Lafi Youmans, moderated by Heather Jaber) 
    • (Re)Shaping Global Markets Through Cultural Production (Bizaa Zeynab Ali, Yasemin Y. Celikkol, Madison Mellon, Jaana Serres, moderated by Celeste Wagner) 
    • Exporting Global Nationalisms (Veronika Hermann, Seung-Hoon Jeong, Nisarg P., Nansong Zhou, moderated by Chenshu Zhou)

    For the full program including abstracts and speaker bios, please see our symposium website: https://cargc-fellows-conference.mailchimpsites.com/

    The CARGC Fellows' Symposium is held biennially. This year's symposium celebrates the 10 year anniversary of the Center and reflects on evolving concepts and methodologies of “the global” in the field of communication and media studies.

    You can RSVP for our free hybrid symposium by following this link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/doing-global-media-studies-theories-practices-reflections-tickets-549735532777

    Please note that portions of this event will be recorded.

    Warm wishes,

    Eszter Zimanyi on behalf of CARGC Fellows’ Symposium Organizing Committee

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