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[ecrea] International PR 2011 Conference, Competing Identities: PR in the 2010s
Tue Nov 23 18:50:08 GMT 2010
Dear colleagues,
The first wave of applications for the Barcelona
Meeting Com #1: International PR 2011 Conference,
Competing Identities: PR in the 2010s on 2829th
June, is in. The organizers are delighted to
report that it has already attracted major
speakers and a truly international set of presenters.
Plenary speakers include Professor Bob Heath and
Professor Krishnamurthy Sriramesh and
participants, with abstracts accepted to date,
come from all over the world including Australia,
Britain, Denmark, Germany, New Zealand, Poland,
Switzerland, and the U.S as well as Catalonia and Spain.
Deadlines:
· First opportunity to submit an abstract: Sunday, October 31, 2010
· Second and final opportunity to submit
an abstract: Saturday, January 15, 2011
· Acceptance notification (by email) will
be no later than Monday, January 31, 2011
· Early bird payment: Tuesday, March 1st, 2011
· Submission of selected papers: Wednesday, June 1st, 2011
Details for attending and for paying registration
(costs included) are now available on the website.
<http://www.uoc.edu/symposia/meetingcom2011/index_eng.html>http://www.uoc.edu/symposia/meetingcom2011/index_eng.html
BARCELONA MEETING COM#1: INTERNATIONAL PR 2011
CONFERENCE, COMPETING IDENTITIES: PR IN THE 2010s
The end of the first decade of the 21st century
has been marked by significant shifts in the
power, practice, and theory of public relations.
Alongside the continuing global expansion of
connectivity, ecological degradation, and social
media, more recent events ? such as the global
economic downturn and changing public attitudes
to business ? are creating different operating
conditions. Academically, the rise of different
voices in journals, books, and research has been
paralleled by the declining power of the ruling
paradigm of late 20th century public relations.
The old centre has not held and a diversity of
opinion that is less insular, and more socially
concerned, continues to emerge. These newer
voices differ on perceptions of present, past,
and future ? not only are there disagreements on
what public relations is now, but on what public
relations has been, and on what public relations
might be. In examining public relations and
identity construction in these more visibly
competitive, and uncertain, times, this
conference looks beyond business competition to
competition between nations and cities, between
practitioners in different professions, and
between different academic disciplines.
Accordingly, the conference invites a wide range
of contributions: that reflect, and that reflect
on, the spectrum of possibilities of these
conditions; that address current issues and
trends; and that speculate on future pathways.
Proposals addressing ? and even challenging ? the
overall theme are warmly invited. Please feel
free to contact the organisers directly if you
wish to discuss the relevance of any proposal. We
offer the following questions not as a definitive
list, but as prompts for a spread of responses:
· What role does, or might, PR play in
city, region, and national identity construction?
· How is the rise of activist, critical,
and radical PR changing the field?
· As PR strives for academic recognition,
how can it become more competitive (e.g., in
journal rankings, research grants, discipline assessment exercises)?
· What can PR do to survive and thrive as
some core business (e.g., CSR, event management,
reputation) faces encroachment from marketing and other fields?
· What is the existing, or desired, role
of PR practitioners in different competitive
arenas (e.g., organisational leadership, social media development)?
· Should PR link strategically with other
knowledge clusters (e.g., anthropology,
pragmatics, semantics, neuroscience) rather than
develop its own body of knowledge?
· What is the state of play with regard to
the relevance of PR in such areas as arts
promotion, cultural and public diplomacy, social marketing, sport, and tourism?
· How might new research in the history of
PR impact on the field as it goes forward?
---------------------------------------------------------
David McKie
Waikato Management School
The University of Waikato
Private Bag 3105
Hamilton (New Zealand)
(64) 78384197
Email: <mailto:(dmckie /at/ mngt.waikato.ac.nz)>(dmckie /at/ mngt.waikato.ac.nz)
Ferran Lauleza
Open University of Catalonia
Rambla del Poblenou, 156
08018 Barcelona (Spain)
(34)933263600
Email:
<https://hwebmail.upf.edu/horde/imp/message.php?mailbox=Sent&index=2536>(flalueza /at/ uoc.edu)
Jordi Xifra
Department of Communication
Pompeu Fabra University
Roc Boronat, 138
08018 Barcelona (Spain)
(34)935421484
Email: <mailto:(jordi.xifra /at/ upf.edu)>(jordi.xifra /at/ upf.edu)
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