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[ecrea] The Future of Journalism 2013
Wed Oct 24 22:01:49 GMT 2012
The Future of Journalism:
In an age of digital media and economic uncertainty
Thursday 12th and Friday 13th September 2013
CARDIFF, UNIVERSITY, UK
Call for Papers
Following the success of the conferences in 2007, 2009 and 2011, we are
delighted to announce that the fourth in this series of biennial
research-based conferences - to be hosted by the Cardiff School of
Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies (JOMEC) and sponsored by
Routledge Taylor and Francis - will focus again on the topic: The Future
of Journalism.
The plenary speaker will be:
Professor Robert G. Picard
Robert Picard is a distinguished and world- leading specialist on media
economics and Director of Research at The Reuters Institute for the
Study of Journalism, University of Oxford, UK. He is the author and
editor of more than 20 books including Media Clusters: Spatial
Agglomeration and Content Capabilities (2011); and Value Creation and
the Future of News Organisations: Why and How Journalism must Change to
Remain Relevant in the Twenty–First Century (2010). He is the editor of
The Journal of Media Business Studies and the founding editor of The
Journal of Media Economics. The subject of his plenary lecture will be:
Funding the Future of Journalism
Professor Picard’s plenary lecture will be published in special issues
of Digital Journalism, Journalism Practice and Journalism Studies, along
with a selection of the research-based papers presented at the conference.
This call for papers invites contributions from the international
community of scholars of journalism studies, journalism practitioners,
citizen journalists, educators and trainers, media executives, trade
unionists and media regulators. Papers focused on any aspect of the
broad theme, The Future of Journalism are welcome, although they should
address at least one of the five key conference themes
Journalism practice and digital media technologies - how are
developments in media technologies shaping a new journalism practice,
especially novel routines for the production and reporting of news using
social media and mobile devices, and by an expansive community of
bloggers and citizen journalists?
Global journalism developments - how are these changes in all aspects of
the gathering, reporting and consumption of news, unravelling in
different national settings with their distinctive journalism cultures,
audiences, media structures and histories?
Business models and funding a viable journalism - what are the
implications of these changes for the revenues traditionally available
to fund journalism and what business models are emerging (for example,
levies, crowdsourcing the use of pay walls) to resource newly emerging
forms of journalism in an increasingly digital economy?
Journalism professionalism - what are the implications of these
developments in journalism for the education, training and employment of
journalists, as well as journalists’ changing perceptions of their
professional roles and identity?
Journalism, democracy and ethics - in what ways do these changes impact
on journalism’s wider connections with the political and democratic life
of communities locally, regionally, nationally and internationally?
Titles and abstracts for papers (250 words max) are invited by Friday
4th January 2013 and should be submitted online at:
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/jomec/conference/futureofjournalism/submission/.
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