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[eccr] The Impact of the Internet on the Mass Media - conference
Wed May 01 10:28:27 GMT 2002
Dear Colleagues,
Attached is a copy of the programme of a conference on `The Impact of the
Internet on the Mass Media', to be held in Tromso, Norway, 21-22 June 2002.
The conference is organised by COST, the University of Tromso and the
University of Oslo. Anyone wishing to attend the conference should contact
Borghild Gramstad ((borghild.gramstad /at/ media.uib.no)).
Best wishes
Colin Sparks
Centre for Communication and Information Studies
University of Westminster
____________________________________________________________________________
THE IMPACT OF THE INTERNET ON THE MASS MEDIA
A conference organised by the COST A20 network
June 21 - 22 2002
Conference Programme
Det humanistiske fakultet
Institutt for dokumentasjonsvitenskap
Universitetet I Troms=F8
Breivika
N-9037 Troms=F8
Norway
Welcome to the first conference of the COST Action A20 - The Impact of
the Internet on the Mass Media. There are nearly fifty papers on the
conference agenda. Together, they cover the main issues in television and
film, print media, music and radio, as well as issues that affect all of
them together. The aim of this programme is to give you a brief guide to
finding your way around Troms=F8, to help you select which papers you want t=
o
hear, and to inform you about social events at the conference.
Arrival in Troms=F8
Most conference delegates will arrive by air. The arrival hall of Troms=F8
airport has a tourist information office and an exchange bureau. The
Norwegian Kroner currently exchanges at around 7.5 to the _uro.
There is a bus to the centre of the city from immediately outside the
arrival hall. There are bus stops within easy walking distance of all of
the main hotels. The fare is NKr 40 and you pay the driver before
boarding. Alternatively, there are taxis available from the airport. They
charge about 120NKr to the centre of the city. The journey should take a
maximum of about 20 minutes. If you are lucky enough to come by boat, you
will land in the centre of the city anyway.
All of the hotels are in the centre of the city, and they are all within
about five minutes walking distance of each other and of the social events
on the programme. There are banks and cash machines in the city centre.
Getting to the Conference
The conference is in the E-wing of the building of the Social Sciences
=46aculty and School of Humanities (Hum Fak) at the University, which is in
the suburb of Breivika, a short bus ride away from the city centre. There
are three buses from the centre to the University, #20, #32 and #34. Only
the #20 runs to and from the University on both Friday and Saturday. It
takes about 10 minutes each way. Other buses can take substantially
longer. Your hotel reception will tell you where the nearest bus stop is,
and give you the departure times that will get you to the conference
punctually. Alternatively, you can order a taxi from your hotel to the
University, which will cost around NKr100. You can get a taxi back to the
centre from the University hospital, which is very near the conference
venue.
If you are travelling on the bus, get off at the Planetarium. If you are
travelling by taxi, ask for the main entrance to the Social Sciences
=46aculty and School of Humanities. The street address of the building is o=
n
the cover of this programme. We hope to be able to have some "guides" at
strategic points on the Friday morning to help you, but in any case the way
to the conference rooms will be clearly signposted.
Conference timings
The conference will open at 09.30 on Friday in the lecture theatre on the
basement level of E Wing, Room E0.101. The individual papers will be
presented in the seminar Rooms E0.103, E0.104 and E0.105. There is a
computer lab, where you can access your email, in Room E0.102. Coffee and
lunch will served in the building on both days. The price of these meals
and refreshments is included in the registration fee that you have already
paid.
Your paper has been allocated to one of four strands: Film and Television,
Print Media, Music and Radio, and Cross Media Issues. We have made every
effort to produce a coherent programme, but of course we have not managed a
perfect grouping of papers. You can find out when and where your paper is
scheduled in the section titled "The working groups in detail." Three
strands will be running most of the time. There is no obligation to follow
the strand in which your paper has been placed.
You can expect 30 minutes for consideration of your paper. Prior
experience suggests to us that it will be best if you plan to introduce
your work for 20 minutes and then take ten minutes of discussion. The
programme is very crowded. Chairs will have instructions to enforce time
limits strictly. That is the only way for everyone to get a fair and equal
opportunity to present and discuss their ideas.
The organisers regret that it will not be possible to provide mass
photocopying facilities at the conference itself. You are strongly advised
to bring copies of your paper with you, since other participants are bound
to want to see copies. We will provide a table in the conference area
where you can leave copies so that others can see them.
The social programme
We have organised three social events in the evenings, one on each day. On
Thursday evening, there is a reception, hosted by the University of Troms=F8=
=2E
It will be held at the Troms=F8 Student House S=F8ndre Tollbodgate 3b in the
centre of the city, starting at 19.00. It is at most a ten-minute walk
from any of the hotels. The reception is open to everyone attending the
conference.
On the Friday evening there is a boat trip down the fjord. There will be
an opportunity for those who wish to do some fishing. A fish supper will
be served on the boat. Unfortunately, participation is limited by the
size of the boat to 35 people. Places have been allocated on a "first
come, first served" basis, and we are sorry that some people may not be
able to participate. The fishing boat will leave at 20.00 from the quay
opposite the Comfort Hotel With, which is in the centre of the city. There
are plenty of bars and restaurants for those who don't go fishing.
On the Saturday evening, we have reserved space in the Troms=F8 Student Hous=
e
between 19.00 and 23.00. The House serves drinks and food, and there will
be space and time for informal social interaction at the close of the
conference.
COST sessions
Those people who are members of the COST Action have Working Group meetings
at 16.00 on the Thursday evening. The Groups will meet in Rooms E0.103
(Television and Film), E0.104 (Print Media) and E0.105 (Music and Radio).
The conference will finish its formal programme on Saturday afternoon.
There will be a meeting of the COST Action Management Committee in the
Lecture Theatre, E0.101, after the close of business. People who are not
members of these bodies are very welcome to attend the sessions as
observers. To find out more about the Action, visit our web site:
http://cost-a20.iscte.pt
A practical note
The tourist brochures stress that Troms=F8 is in the land of the midnight
sun. This is true, but you might like to remember two things when packing.
Troms=F8 faces the Atlantic Ocean and is exposed to westerly winds carrying =
a
lot of moisture. It sometimes rains. Troms=F8 is also well north of the
Arctic Circle. Even when it is sunny for 24 hours, it is likely still to
be quite cool.
CONFERENCE OUTLINE
Thursday 20 June
16.00
17.30 Meeting of the three Working Groups at the University
19.00
23.00 Reception hosted by the University of Troms=F8
Troms=F8 Student House S=F8ndre Tollbodgate 3b
Friday 21 June
09.30 Welcoming addresses Lecture Theatre E0.101
Professor Jarle Aarbakke (Rektor of Troms=F8 University)
Professor Niels Windfeld Lund (Head of the Department of Documentation Studi=
es)
10.30 Coffee
11.00 Cross Media Issue One Print Media One Television and Film One
12.30 Lunch
13.30 Presentation by the Department of Documentation Studies
University of Troms=F8 Lecture Theatre E0.101
14.00 Cross Media Issues Two Print Media Two Television and Film Two
15.30 Coffee
16.00 Music and Radio Print Media Three Television and Film Three
18.00 Close of Business
20.00
23.00 Fishing Boat Trip
Departing from the quay opposite the Comfort Hotel With
Saturday 22 June
09.30 Cross Media Issue Three Print Media Four Television and Film
=46our
11.00 Coffee
11.30 Cross Media Issues Four Print Media Five Television and Film
=46ive
13.00 Lunch
14.00 Cross Media Issues Five Print Media Six
15.00 Round Table: The Future of Online Media Lecture Theatre E0.101
=46arrel Corcoran, Lucy K=FCng, Robert Picard, Ruth Towse
16.00 Coffee
16.30 COST A20 Management Committee
18.00 Close of Business
19.00
23.00 Informal Social Gathering
Troms=F8 Student House S=F8ndre Tollbodgate 3b
THE WORKING GROUPS IN DETAIL
Working Group One Television and Film Room E0.103
=46riday
11.00 Television and Film One
Chair: Charo S=E1daba
Peter Goodwin (University of Westminster)
Digital television, interactivity and the Internet: lessons from the UK
Farrel Corcoran (Dublin City University)
The Irish information society and the non-arrival of digital television
Lucy K=FCng (University of St Gallen)
Redefining the public service broadcasting model for the Internet Age
14.00 Television and Film Two
Chair: Mihaly Galik
Charo S=E1daba (University of Navarre)
Digital television in Spain: stimulating the advertisers' interest (and mone=
y!)
Hagi Shein (Concordia International University Tallinn)
Estonian digital television
16.00 Television and Film Three
Chair: Farrel Corcoran
Trine Syvertsen (University of Oslo)
The changing relationship between television and its publics
Lars Holmgaard Christensen (Aalborg University)
Letting a viewer loose on the television screen real estate is not painless
Eugenia Siapera (University of Amsterdam)
=46rom couch potatoes to cybernauts? The expanding notion of the "audience"
in television channels web sites
Espen Ytreberg (University of Oslo)
Continuity in environments: television scheduling as a pre-history of new
media design
Saturday
09.30 Television and Film Four
Chair: Trine Syvertsen
Mihaly Galik & Ildiko Kovats (Budapest University of Economics)
Online video services: a report on a VOD pilot project in Hungary
Piermarco Aroldi & Fausto Colombo (Catholic University of Milan)
TV audiences and web users: a report of research on four generations of
Italians
11.30 Television and Film Five
Chair: Fausto Colombo
Anders Henten & Reza Tadayoni (Technical University of Denmark)
Internet TV: the articulation of markets
Joss Hands (Anglia Polytechnic University)
Identity in the Matrix: the Internet on film and the intensification of
the bourgeois subject
Peter Flood (Dublin Institute of Technology)
Internet TV/Webcasting
Working Group Two Print Media Room E0.104
=46riday
11.00 Print Media One
Chair: Leopoldina Fortunati
Eric Maigret (University of Paris 3)
When everything changes, nothing changes: Internet and the newspaper
industry in the French context
Tim Rathman (University of Amsterdam)
Determinants of online newspaper use: the relationship between reading a
local print newspaper and its online equivalent
Constanze Hess & Edmund Lauf (University of Amsterdam)
Virtual success? How publishers' Internet activities affect newspaper
circulation
14.00
Print Media Two
Chair: Eric Maigret
Marc Lits (Catholic University of Louvain)
Journalism on the web and polyphonic enunciation
Gary Quinn (Dublin City University)
Evidence of an emerging model in online news delivery
Donald Matheson (University of Wales Cardiff)
News weblogs: an invitation to abandon the craft?
16.00
Print Media Three
Chair: Marc Lits
John O'Sullivan (Dublin City University)
Delivering Ireland: online newspapers search for a role
Dimitra Dimitrakopolou (Aristotle University Thessaloniki)
The factor of time on the Internet and its impact on journalistic practice
Gerd Kopper (University of Dortmund)
Effects of the Internet on the work of foreign correspondents and the use
of rationalisation options in the media industry
Steve Paulussen (University of Ghent)
Online journalism and new media in Flanders: examining interactivity,
hypertext and multimedia in online news production
Saturday
09.30 Print Media Four
Chair: Richard van der Wurff
Leopoldina Fortunati (University of Trieste)
The adventures of newspapers online: the Italian case
Ramon Salaverr=EDa (University of Navarre)
An immature medium: strengths and weaknesses of the online newspapers on 11
September 2001
Maria Bella Palomo Torres (University of Malaga)
The impact of the Internet on Spanish newsrooms
Working Group Two Print Media Room E0.104 Continued
11.30 Print Media Five
Chair: John O'Sullivan
Carol MacKeogh and Barbara O'Connor (Dublin City University)
Online/offline -- women's magazines finding their niche
Richard van der Wurff (University of Amsterdam)
The impact of the Internet on trade journal markets
Edgardo Garcia (University of Westminster)
Online newspapers in Argentina: a study of Clar=EDn and La Naci=F3n
14.00
Print Media Six
Chair: Ramon Salaverr=EDa
Tanja Oblak (University of Ljubljana)
Slovenian newspapers and the online public sphere
Colin Sparks (University of Westminster)
What works online? British news sites and the public sphere
Working Group Three Music and Radio Room E0.105
=46riday
16.00
Music and Radio One
Chair: Colin Sparks
Piet Bakker (University of Amsterdam)
Online music distribution - treat or challenge?
Gunn Enli (University of Oslo)
=46rom radio station to digital media house? An analysis of the Norwegian
commercial radio broadcaster P4 Radio Hele Norge and its strategies for
technological convergence
Des Freedman (Goldsmiths College University of London)
A "world wide web of theft and indifference"? The "problem" of music and
the Internet
Ruth Towse (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
Rewarding creators through copyright
Special Working Group Cross Media Issues Room E0.105
=46riday
11.00 Cross Media Issues One
Chair: Anders Fagerjord
Robert Picard and Mikko Gr=F6nlund (Turku School of Economics)
The impact of the Internet on media advertising expenditure in the EU
Kieran Kelly (University of the West of England)
What if the Internet does not have any recognisable impact on new media?
Elvira Garcia de Torres (Cardinal Herrera University Valencia)
Spanish multimedia groups go to cyberspace
14.00 Cross Media Issues Two
Chair: Robert Picard
Anders Fagerjord (University of Oslo)
A model for describing web media
Niels Windfeld Lund (University of Troms=F8)
The notion of the "document" as an analytical tool in mass media studies
Harald Pfannhauser (London School of Economics)
=46rom Gutenberg to Marconi: why electronic media are still a secondary
source of information
Saturday
09.30 Cross Media Issues Three
Chair: Ruth Towse
Lilia Raycheva (St Kliment Ohridsky University Sofia)
Overcoming the digital divide in the process of social transformation
Aukse Balcytiene (Vytautus Magnus University)
Shaping the Internet: a perspective from Lithuania
Dominic Busch (Viadrina University)
Initiations of intercultural mediation discourse in the mass media via the
Internet: reflections from a teaching project in South Eastern Europe
11.30 Cross Media Issues Four
Chair: Des Freedman
Pilar Guerrero (London School of Economics)
The Internet usages of students in everyday life
Laura Wolf (London School of Economics)
Beyond access: an alternative understanding of social exclusion and new medi=
a
Hugh Mackay (The Open University in Wales)
Uses of the Internet in Wales
14.00 Cross Media Issues Five
Chair: Lilia Raycheva
Jeff Taylor (University of Lapland)
Potentials and hazards for authentic cultural representation through new
media for indigenous and other minority cultures
Ivan Zassursky (Moscow State University)
Portals as interactive media
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University Brussels
Studies on Media, Information & Telecommunication (SMIT)
Pleinlaan 2 - b-1050 Brussels
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