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[ecrea] Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies - Social media and journalism in Africa
Mon Feb 13 12:33:48 GMT 2012
CALL FOR PAPERS
Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies - Special Issue: Social media
and journalism in Africa
Guest Editor: Chris Paterson, University of Leeds
This Special Issue of Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies will
survey the intersection of SOCIAL MEDIA and JOURNALISM in Africa. We
hope to offer a venue for new empirical research and for the development
of theory and analysis. Publication will be in early 2013.
Around Africa tensions are evident between the rapid commercialization
and deregulation of traditional media and increasing pressures for a
compliant media discourse from commercial and state media proprietors.
Social media demonstrate an unprecedented ability for the politically
engaged to both bypass and influence traditional information flows, but
social media use faces unique circumstances through much of Africa, due
to an underdeveloped telecommunications infrastructure, limited (though
rapidly increasing) extra-urban mobile access, and bandwidth limitations
in many areas. There has been a rapid escalation in the numbers of
people using Twitter to monitor and to disseminate information, and the
use of mobile devices is also skyrocketing amid massive marketing
campaigns dominated by a few multinational providers.
While use of social media may be less constrained by government control
in Africa than elsewhere, its role remains largely untested in the
context of general under-development and limited ICT penetration. Signs
of social change brought by leapfrogging mobile technology are evident
around the continent, inspiring questions about the new nature of
information exchange and citizenship. Crucial questions remain about
whether the apparent efficacy of social media as a political organising
tool beyond state control in north Africa has implications for the rest
of the continent.
Authors may address the following questions, but other approaches and
related topics are welcome:
- How have social media supplemented or replaced traditional information
sources?
- How are social media and other new media being incorporated into
processes of journalism in Africa?
- Are social media changing established flows of information in Africa
and between Africa and the world?
- How do specific cases of social media and other ICT use in Africa
compare with non-African cases?
- How are diasporic and/or exiled journalists employing social media?
- To what extent have social media been an empowering force in Africa?
- Are new forms of citizenship emerging in Africa as a result of social
media?
- What new methodological challenges to the study of journalism in
Africa are posed by social media or emerging forms of communications
generally?
We are open to a variety of methodological approaches and geographic
foci. Articles should be 6000-8000 words and proposals for shorter
commentaries are also welcome. Style guidance is available at
_http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=0256-0054&linktype=44_
<http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=0256-0054&linktype=44>.
(Articles are to be submitted directly to the editor at the email below,
not to this website).
Contact the editor of this issue with expressions of interest: Chris
Paterson, University of Leeds - (_c.paterson /at/ leeds.ac).uk_
<mailto:(c.paterson /at/ leeds.ac.uk)>. The deadline for articles is July 15
2012, but earlier submissions are welcome. All submissions will be
peer reviewed, with notification of acceptance by September 1, and any
revisions required by October 1 2012.
Authors may wish to present their work at a related panel of the UK
African Studies Association annual conference in Leeds in September
2012. Contact Chris Paterson, above, if interested.
Dr. Chris Paterson ~
Senior Lecturer for Broadcast Journalism & Director of the MA
International Journalism ~ Institute for Communications Studies ~
Clothworkers' Building North, 2.03 ~ University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT
~ +44 (0)113 3437619
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