European Communication Research and Education Association
August 13-15, 2025
University of Helsinki, Finland
Deadline: April 10, 2025
The 31st Nordic Network for Intercultural Communication Conference will be arranged in Helsinki on 13–15 August 2025. The NIC 2025 conference theme is "Evolutions in intercultural communication: New concepts and methodologies". With this theme, we wish to encourage discussion of conceptual and methodological development in the field of intercultural communication, drawing connections between research, teaching and practice.
In addition to those addressing the theme, we also welcome proposals that explore related aspects of intercultural communication. These are, for example,
Intercultural communication is an interest to and researched by scholars in a wide variety of fields and disciplines such as language, media and communication, multilingual and/or multicultural education, sociolinguistics, social interaction, international management, discourse studies, cultural studies, ethnic relations, and cross-cultural psychology. We welcome submissions from all.
Abstract submission
Please submit your max 250-word abstract using the abstract form below. The abstracts will be anonymously peer reviewed. Note that all submissions should be in English and those submitting the abstract should be prepared to attend the conference in person. The deadline for submitting your abstract is April 10th, 2025.
SUBMIT YOUR ABSTRACT HERE
If the abstract includes citations, please provide the appropriate references (the list of references is not included in the word count).
Welcome to Helsinki in August!
For further details and up-to-date information, see the NIC Helsinki 2025 Conference website.
Organizing committee: Saila Poutiainen (Chair), Mélanie Buchart, Yoonjoo Cho, Niina Hynninen, Janne Niinivaara
Deadline: February 26, 2025
We are planning to propose a special issue to a peer-reviewed journal on the theme of Digital Authoritarianism in the Global South, and soliciting brief abstracts from scholars working in this field to be a part of our proposal.
We consider Digital Authoritarianism to include all the ways in which digital practices, platforms, and policies contribute to maintaining or exacerbating authoritarianism. These can range from the active use of digital infrastructures by states or related entities against organized opposition or common citizens (e.g., for surveillance, disinformation, or propaganda) to prohibitions on internet access, blocking of content, restrictions on private communication driven by political motivations, and so on.
While recognizing that the Global South is an ambiguous construct, for our SI proposal we consider it to cover all parts of Asia (including the Middle East), Africa, and Latin America that have historically experienced colonialism. Studies that look at interrelations between the Global North and South in the context of digital authoritarianism will also be considered.
Abstracts may focus on states under authoritarian rule or putatively democratic nations that indulge in digital authoritarianism. While country-specific case studies are welcome, we are also interested in comparative or cross-border studies that illustrate digital authoritarianism as a transnational phenomenon. Although we expect most abstracts to be empirically driven (using qualitative, quantitative, or computational methods), conceptual articles and policy-oriented papers may also be submitted.
If you are interested in contributing to our SI proposal, please submit:
1. A 150-word abstract, including your problem statement/research question, methods and materials, and scientific/societal contribution, and
2. A 50-word bio of each author.
All submissions should be sent to Dr. Saif Shahin (s.s.shahin@tilburguniversity.edu) and Dr. Junki Nakahara (junki@stanford.edu) by Wednesday 26 February.
Please let us know if you have any questions.
Editors: Tamas Tofalvy and Igor Vobič
Routledge, 2025
https://www.routledge.com/Histories-of-Digital-Journalism-The-Interplay-of-Technology-Society-and-Culture/Tofalvy-Vobic/p/book/9781032795072
About the book:
Building on the momentum of the recent “historical turn” in digital media and Internet studies, this volume explores how digital journalism has developed from a historical perspective. With contributions from established and emerging scholars from Europe, Asia, South and North America, the book investigates not only how established journalistic systems transformed in the early days of digital but how the structural, technological, and cultural changes induced by digitization have reconfigured the trajectory of journalism.
The book argues in support of three main claims. The first is that emphasis should be given to the plurality of histories instead of one single digital journalism history, thereby acknowledging the complexities, interactions of social relations, cultural traditions, power configurations, and technological changes that have shaped journalism and digitization. The second is the decentralization and decolonization of digital journalism histories. The third refers to the need to highlight and demonstrate the idea that the evolution of digital journalism should be viewed as the co-construction of the social and technological realms.
With theoretical and methodological reflections on historicizing digital journalism along with original case studies or comparative inquiries into the phenomena over the decades-long digital revolution of journalism, this volume will shape the nascent field of digital journalism history and start a global critical exchange of various approaches to and aspects of historicizing digital journalism. As such, it will interest scholars and students of digital journalism, journalism history, digital media, Internet studies, and technology studies.
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1: Why historicize digital Journalism? Disentangling the relationship between journalism, technology, and history
Tamas Tofalvy & Igor Vobič
PART 1: Theories and methods of digital journalism histories
Chapter 2: Conceptualizing change in digital journalism: Three key theories in comparison
Thomas Schmidt
Chapter 3: "I tape therefore I am": Excavating digital journalism’s lieux de memoire through oral history
Christopher Silver
Chapter 4: Bridging boundary work theory and the social construction of technology from a historical perspective: On the construction of socio-technical boundaries of digital journalism
Tamas Tofalvy
PART 2: Professionalism and meta-discourses of digital journalism
Chapter 5: The short history of naming journalism in the digital era
Laura Ahva
Chapter 6: Inquiry into the digital sublime: Interrogating the major narratives concerning new technologies in journalism research between 1980 and 2013
Igor Vobič, Jernej Amon Prodnik & Boris Mance
Chapter 7: Digital disruption or union neutralization? A diachronic history of tensions between the figures of the professional and the worker in the history of a Canadian newspaper
Samuel Lamoureux
Chapter 8: “A whiff of panic”: How journalists in the UK and Germany articulated their professional beliefs and identity in crisis times
Imke Henkel
Chapter 9: From bytes to bylines: A history of AI in journalism practices
Carl-Gustav Lindén & Laurence Dierickx
PART 3: Cultures of data, organizations, and journalism practices
Chapter 10: From audience clicks to time spent: Evolution of audience analytics and metrics in Norwegian newsrooms
Ana Milojević
Chapter 11: No crisis but cooperation: Construction of online newspapers in Nepal
Harsha Man Maharjan
Chapter 12: A singular public model: A history of online journalism through DiarideBarcelona.com
Javier Díaz Noci
Chapter 13: Digital journalism in Brazil: A history of diversity in products and research
Suzana Barbosa & Otávio Daros
Chapter 14: History of digital journalism in Egypt: Between institutionalism and individualism
Nagwa Fahmy & Maha Abdul Majeed Attia
CODA
Chapter 15: Historiography and digital journalism
John Nerone
Teresa Sofia Castro, Maria João Leote de Carvalho, and Maria José Brites
We are excited to share the open-access new book, "Let’s Talk About Ethics in Research with Children and Young People? What Nobody Shared Online… Until Now", published by Edições Universitárias Lusófonas. This publication is part of the project YouNDigital – Youth, News and Digital Citizenship (https://doi.org/10.54499/PTDC/COM-OUT/0243/2021) based at CICANT, Lusófona University, Portugal. You can learn more about YouNDIgital on the website youndigital.com.
This book brings together researchers from different geographies and their invaluable insights and discussions on the ethical challenges and considerations in research involving children and young people. Born from a series of thought-provoking conversations, the book offers a deep dive into real-world experiences, dilemmas, and best practices in the field.
To make these conversations even more accessible, we have also launched a series of podcasts, allowing researchers, educators, and students to engage with these discussions in a dynamic and convenient format.
Get the book here: https://cicant.ulusofona.pt/agenda-news/news-events/1454-ynd-book-ethics
Listen to the podcasts on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Wx2WjrgEMxT8ustab7XcS
We invite you to explore, share, and engage with this work. Your support in spreading the word will help extend this crucial discussion to a wider audience.
Let’s keep the conversation going! If you have any thoughts, feedback, or would like to collaborate, feel free to reach out.
Teresa Sofia Castro, Maria João Leote de Carvalho, and Maria José Brites (Authors)
Hossein Kermani
This book investigates Twitter activism in authoritarian regimes, with particular attention to Iran. Twitter provides citizens around the globe with a free and quick way to engage in politics and public discourses. The role of Twitter, alongside other social media, is even more critical in authoritarian regimes where official media is systematically monitored and censured. Thus, social media is vital in restrictive (non-democratic) societies for people to seek their liberty, raise their voice, and create counter-narratives and discourses. There is substantial research into Twitter and democracy, both in democratic and non-democratic regimes. However, Iran, as a country with a high population of tech-savvy users who actively participate in political discussions online, remains understudied to a great extent. Twitter in Iran has been blocked since the 2009 presidential election and its subsequent protests, the Green Movement. Nevertheless, Iranians have been continually using it to date.Recently, another significant hashtag movement unfolded in Iran after the death of Mahsa Amini. But it is only an instance of how Iranians employ Twitter to fight a dictatorship. Given the unique context of Iran as a non-democratic society with a high number of Twitter users, this book tries to explore how Iranian users participate in politics, challenge the regime, mobilize their protests, and shape anti-regime discourses. It also examines the strategies that the Iranian regime takes to dismantle Twitter activism. Therefore, this work will fill some gaps in the existing literature on Twitter and democracy, which is relatively Western-centered.
https://link.springer.com/book/9783031815379
The International Journal of Games and Social Impact (Special issue)
Deadline: May 15, 2025
Guest Editors: Rikkie Toft Nørgård (Aarhus University, Danish School of Education) & Conceição Costa (Lusófona University, CICANT
This special issue of The International Journal of Games and Social Impact invites contributions that delve into the manifold theoretical, practical, and methodological dimensions of game jams, game-making and games as cultural expression, engagement, practice, transformation, or invention.
Submissions may address (but are not limited to) the following questions:
Publication Timeline
Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere. Dates are indicative.
Full Paper Submission Deadline: 15-05-2025
Notification of Acceptance for Full Paper Submissions: 30-07-2025
Publication Date: Second semester of 2025
Contact
For inquiries about the special issue or submission process, please contact Rikke Toft Nørgård (rtoft@edu.au.dk)
Join us in exploring how games and game-making practices can reshape our engagement with cultural heritage, values, and culture, creating new spaces for cultural expression and social transformation.
For more information: https://revistas.ulusofona.pt/index.php/ijgsi/announcement/view/225
July 7-10 , 2025
ULB (Université Libre de Bruxelles), Brussels
Deadline: February 28, 2025
Website: www.discourseanalysis.net/DNC6
Contact: contactdnc6@gmail.com
Important dates:
Language policy:
DiscourseNet is a multilingual association. At DNC6 we welcome contributions in the following languages: French, English, Spanish, and Portuguese. We highly recommend providing a visual aid in English if you decide to present in Spanish or Portuguese. This is likely to facilitate interaction in multilingual panels.
Topic:
Discourse and the imaginaries of past, present and future societies: media and representations of (inter)national (dis)orders)
The 6th DiscourseNet Congress (DNC6) focuses on the discursive construction of social and political imaginaries. It offers a forum to discuss how social actors imagine and articulate past, present and future societies in a world marked by multiple and overlapping crises.
DNC6 welcomes contributions of authors who explore ontological, theoretical, and methodological aspects of imaginaries that may (re)shape our societies. We also welcome analyses and case studies of specific imaginaries circulating in our mediatized societies. These may focus on linguistic, textual, narrative, visual, multimodal, and/or ideological articulations of social and political imaginaries.
This conference is open to discourse scholars from all disciplines, as well as to other scholars in the humanities and social sciences working on (aspects of) the imaginaries that allow us to make sense of and shape our realities. DNC6 offers an interdisciplinary forum for discussing imaginaries and the discursive construction of old and new (inter)national (dis)orders.
A non-exhaustive list of questions that may be addressed at this event is provided below:
DNC6 invites scholars to submit papers that may enrich our understanding of social and political imaginaries, through explicit theoretical discussions and/or through relevant case studies and discourse studies.
Concepts of the ‘imaginary’ have so far occupied a relatively marginal position in the field of discourse studies. While the notion is not absent in (critical) discourse studies, other meta-concepts such as narrative, ideology, hegemony tend to be used more frequently.
The concept of the imaginary currently figures more prominently in sociology, political philosophy, psychoanalysis, and media studies. In these disciplines we find competing and overlapping notions of the imaginary that merit discourse theoretical and analytical attention.
What place can we give to the concept of the imaginary in the field of discourse studies? What concepts and methods can discourse scholars offer to investigate social and political imaginaries? DNC6 invites discourse scholars to present relevant research and/or explicit reflections on such matters.
The imaginary has been conceptualized in a variety of ways. Imaginaries have been thought of as background horizons providing tacit and pre-reflective social meanings that prefigure the way subjects relate to themselves and to the world. They have been treated as images of self and society that infuse reality with imaginary significations. Authors have also drawn attention to the interpretive functions of imaginaries.
Imaginaries play a key role in fictional and non-fictional types of discourse. They also play a role in the construction of social identities and ideologies. Psychoanalysis has stressed the importance of the imaginary in constituting subjects and subjectivity. The imaginary has been theorized in relation to ideology, as well as in relation to specific ideologies such as nationalism.
Concepts of the imaginary may help us to understand how social actors construct discourses of social (dis)order. Empirical studies have focused on topics as varied as the way scientists imagine the future of climate change, the construction of plans for the future of urban environments, migration, cyber- and energy security, university education, and so on.
We only started to scratch the surface of the literature on social and political imaginaries here. DNC6 invites scholars from all subfields of the transdisciplinary field of (critical) discourse studies to submit papers and to explore what lies under the tip of the iceberg. We also explicitly welcome scholars from other disciplines and perspectives in the humanities and social sciences:
May 5, 2025
Södertörn University, Sweden
Deadline: May 2, 2025
Symposium arranged by the Knowledge Center for Public Service Media (Kpub), the Center of Excellence for Digital Transformations (DigiTrans) and the ECREA Section for Media Industries and Cultural Production.
Public service media (PSM) in Europe are undergoing significant transformations over the last decade. Some of these are necessitated by technological shifts, such as the dominance of digital platforms within contemporary media ecologies. Others are precipitated by political and geopolitical developments. Some actors are questioning the overall need for public service media in a transforming media landscape, and others dispute if they still carry a democratic role.
How can we imagine a future for public service media in Europe? How can contemporary challenges understood and met? And what should be the role of PSM in the future media- and political landscapes of Europe?
This symposium will tackle these issues drawing on current international and comparative research, as well as insights from the Swedish broadcasting companies themselves.
Programme
José van Dijck, Professor of Media and Digital Society at Utrecht University
Public Service Media in the age of platformization and Big Tech
Catherine Johnson, Professor of Media and Communication, University of Leeds
Content distribution and independence: a comparative study of European Broadcasters
Jannie Møller Hartley, Professor in Communication and Journalism, Roskilde University
Datafication of Journalistic Practices – An Ethnographic Inquiry
Victor Picard, Edwin Baker Professor of Media Policy and Political Economy, the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania
Funding democracy: Public media and democratic health in 33 countries
K-pub (sh.se/kpub) is a knowledge and research center on public service media at Södertörn university, Sweden.
K-pub is takes as its starting point the rapid technological and industrial shifts as well as the (geo)political challenges for public service media in Sweden and Europe. K-pub seeks to stimulate research and disseminate knowledge in order to enhance evidence-based policy and development.
K-Pub offers:
K-pub is funded by the research environment Digital Vulnerabilities in Automated Welfare: Infrastructures, Citizens’ Experiences and Public Values (Swedish Research Council, 2024-01837_VR), the ECREA Section for Media Industries and Cultural Production. and the research platform on Digital Transformations at Södertörn university.
Registration until 2 May - see link HERE.
https://www.sh.se/english/sodertorn-university/calendar/events/2025-05-05-the-future-of-public-service-media
February 25, 2025
We are pleased to announce an ECREA OSC online event on Tuesday, 25 February, 18:00 CET (Central European Time), where we will present recent publications based on the best papers presented at the ECREA OSC Conference in Lisbon 2023. Both publications provide a comprehensive exploration of ethical challenges in organisational and public communication:
Ethics and Society: Challenges in Organisational and Public Communication
Book co-edited by Evandro Oliveira (Associate Professor at EAE Business School, Barcelona) and Gisela Gonçalves (Associate Professor at the University of Beira Interior, Portugal). https://labcom.ubi.pt/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Ethics-And-Society.pdf
Navigating the Ethical Landscape: Organizational Dynamics, Engagement, Authenticity, and Societal Impact
Journal special issue edited by Gisela Gonçalves with the contribution of Evandro Oliveira, Shannon Bowen (Professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of South Carolina) published in Vol. 1 N.º 39 (2024) in Estudos em Comunicação / Estudos de Comunicação explores critical ethical issues within organisational contexts. https://ojs.labcom-ifp.ubi.pt/ec/issue/view/73
How to participate: The event will take place online. Please sign up via this form (https://forms.gle/Q1x1pQ1qGtyuCVMYA) by Friday, 21 February, and we will send the link to registered attendees.
Book co-edited by: Evandro Oliveira (Associate Professor at EAE Business School, Barcelona) and Gisela Gonçalves (Associate Professor at the University of Beira Interior, Portugal).
https://labcom.ubi.pt/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Ethics-And-Society.pdf
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