[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] ICA Preconference on the 'Chindia' challenge to global communication
Thu Nov 12 17:44:03 GMT 2009
International Communication Association, Singapore 2010
Preconference on the 'Chindia' challenge to global communication
22 June 2010
Conceived and organized by:
Daya Thussu, Professor of International
Communication and Director of India Media Centre
at the University of Westminster, London
Supported by:
Mass Communication Division of the ICA and by
the Center for Global Communication Studies,
Annenberg School for Communication, University for Pennsylvania
Call for papers:
The transformation of communication and media in
China and India - the world¡¯s two most populous
countries and fastest growing economies - has
profound implications for what constitutes the
¡®global¡¯. Jairam Ramesh, currently India¡¯s
Environment Minister, is credited with the
notion of ¡®Chindia¡¯, representing what has
been termed as the ¡®rise of the rest¡¯. Trade
between the two Asian neighbours - negligible at
the beginning of the 1990s - grew to $40 billion
by 2008, with China becoming India¡¯s largest
single trading partner. Such economic exchanges
have coincided with cracks within the
neo-liberal model of US-led Western capitalism.
The combined economic and cultural impact of
¡®Chindia¡¯, aided by their worldwide diasporas,
is creating globalization with an Asian accent,
a phenomenon that is likely to influence globalized media and its study.
With more than 70 dedicated news channels, India
has one of the world¡¯s most linguistically
diverse media landscapes, while China has
emerged as the planet¡¯s biggest mobile
telephone market, having the world¡¯s highest
blogger population and as the largest exporter
of IT products. The study of media and
communication is rapidly growing in both
countries: more than 700 communication and media
programmes are operational in Chinese
universities, while the opening up of the media
and communication sector in India has led to
mushrooming of media institutes. In addition,
both countries provide a considerable number of
media and communication postgraduate and
research students to Western universities.
Though both countries have experienced different
trajectories of growth in recent decades and
represent two distinct political and media
systems, they also demonstrate interesting
similarities. The rise of ¡®Chindia¡¯ offers
exciting opportunities as well as challenges to
media and communication researchers. This
preconference - a pioneering intellectual
venture - aims to bring together scholars from
around the world, especially from China and
India, to examine and explore this phenomenon.
Among the topics we wish to cover are: The rise
of ¡®Chindia¡¯ and its impact on international
media research; globalization of Indian media
and cultural industries; China¡¯s soft power;
communication and cultural exchange between
China and India; re-envisioning diasporic and
developmental communication; Chindia - cooperation or competition?
The Communication and Media Research Institute
(CAMRI) of the University of Westminster, which
was officially rated in 2008 as the UK¡¯s top
media research department, is home to both the
China Media Centre and the newly established
India Media Centre. This unique combination of
expertise should ensure high-quality
international participation, especially from
China and India. A selection of papers presented
at the preconference will be published in a
special themed issue of the Sage journal Global Media and Communication.
Speakers to include: Professor Yuezhi Zhao,
Simon Fraser University, Canada; Professor Daya
Thussu, University of Westminster, UK; Professor
Ang Peng Hwa, Nanyang Technological University,
Singapore; Professor Bella Mody, University of
Colorado in Boulder; Professor Hu Zhengrong,
Communication University of China, Beijing;
Professor Vibodh Parthasarathi, Jamia Millia
Islamia, New Delhi; Dr Xin Xin, University of
Westminster; Professor Oliver Boyd-Barrett,
Bowling Green State University, USA and
Professor Joseph Chan, Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Registration: Participants are required to pay a
fee of $100, which includes tea, coffee and
lunch, and the payment goes through ICA.
Prospective participants should submit an
abstract (200-300 words) to Professor Daya
Thussu
(<mailto:(D.K.Thussu /at/ westminster.ac.uk)>(D.K.Thussu /at/ westminster.ac.uk))
and Ranita Chatterjee
(<mailto:(R.Chatterjee /at/ westminster.ac.uk)>(R.Chatterjee /at/ westminster.ac.uk))
by 7 December 2009.
----------------
ECREA-Mailing list
----------------
This mailing list is a free service from ECREA.
---
To unsubscribe, please visit http://www.ecrea.eu/mailinglist
---
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Postal address:
ECREA
Université Libre de Bruxelles
c/o Dept. of Information and Communication Sciences
CP123, avenue F.D. Roosevelt 50, b-1050 Bruxelles, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
----------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]