[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] call for papers: the role of advocacy in media and telecom policy
Sat Jun 29 06:44:36 GMT 2013
Call for Paper Proposals
The Role of Advocacy in Media and Telecom Policy
A by-invitation experts’ workshop
New America Foundation
September 29-October 1, 2013
What is the role of advocacy in the formation of media and telecom
policy and how do we study the engagement of advocates in policy change?
Scholars have studied the work of media policy advocates analyzing their
framing practices, mobilizing strategies, and how they create (or
hinder) political opportunities for policy reform. There seems to be a
growing need to study the structural, cultural, and cognitive factors
that shape the work of media policy advocates, the processes by which
they build capacities, and the impacts of their work on the policies
they try to shape, and on inclusive and democratic media governance
structures. Should media and telecom policy advocacy be seen as central
to the “laboring of communication” (Mosco & McKerger, 2008), a critical
form of knowledge work that seeks to redraw the material, symbolic, and
normative boundaries defining media fields and practices, or are they
merely another “pressure group” whose impact needs to be evaluated in
the analysis of the policy process? Does policy advocacy labor serve
only a taken-for-granted conception about the policy process or does it
challenge and change such conceptualizations? Can the notion of policy
advocacy work refocus attention on institutional pressures faced by
advocates and researchers of media and telecom policy?
The Institute for Information Policy at Penn State University, the
Center for Public Policy and Administration at the University of
Massachusetts, and the New America Foundation are pleased to announce
this call for paper proposals discussing the role of citizens,
grassroots organizations, community organizers, action researchers,
practitioner-advocates, consumer interest advocates and any other form
of advocacy in the media and communications policy field and their work
in this field.
Authors of the selected papers will be invited to present and discuss
them during a 2 day by-invitation-only experts workshop designed to
bring together up to a dozen experts to be held at the New America
Foundation in Washington, DC between September 29-October 1, 2013. This
workshop is part of a series of events focused on “Making Policy
Research Accessible,” organized by the IIP, with the support of the Ford
Foundation and the Media Democracy Fund. (For programs of previous
workshops see: https://blogs.comm.psu.edu/iip/?page_id=24). Presenters
at the workshop will be invited to submit their completed papers for
review by the Journal of Information Policy (www.jip-online.org).
Topics of papers may include, but are not limited to issues such as:
· Methodologies for the assessment of capacity building and/or policy
advocacy projects.
· Analysis of the configuration of advocacy networks and advocacy work.
· Case studies assessing policy advocacy efforts and initiatives
· Theories of policy advocacy and evaluation.
· Impacts of advocacy and activism on changes in media and telecom policy.
· Proposals for meaningful indicators and frameworks of policy advocacy
impacts.
· Comparative case studies of advocacy training and capacity-building
programs and activities.
· Evaluation of policy advocacy work focused on historically unserved or
underserved communities.
· Assessment of policy advocacy initiatives directed at community and
civil society institutions
· Historical assessments and lessons learned from previous policy
advocacy battles.
· Philanthropic and practitioner roles and perspectives on policy
advocacy challenges and solutions.
· Case studies of academic-advocate-practitioner collaborations.
· The niche of media activists within the political economy of U.S.
media/telecom policy.
· Funding and disclosure in media advocacy and collaborations with
political organizations.
· Policies to support media policy advocacy and organizations.
· What are the obstacles to successful media policy advocacy?
· “Best practices” for citizen media policy activist groups
· The role of social media in the process of policy advocacy.
Abstracts of up to 500 words and a short bio of the author(s) should be
submitted to (pennstateiip /at/ psu.edu) by July 31, 2013. Please write
IIPNAFCCAMTP: YOUR NAME in the subject line. Accepted presenters will be
notified by August 15, 2013
----------------
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]