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[ecrea] Call for Abstracts: Challenging Media Landscapes Conference
Sun Jun 01 18:40:26 GMT 2014
EXTENDED CALL FOR PAPERS: DEADLINE NOW 20 JUNE 2014
CHALLENGING MEDIA LANDSCAPES CONFERENCE
Date: Monday 17-Tuesday 18 November 2014
Venue: University of Salford, MediacityUK, Salford, Manchester.
The theme of the Challenging Media Landscapes conference is Exploring
Media Choice and Freedom. It is hosted and organized by the University
of Salford at MediacityUK and is part of the five day 2014 Salford
International Media Festival.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Professor Milton Mueller (Syracuse University, USA)
Professor Katharine Sarikakis (University of Vienna, Austria)
Conference Aim
The aim of the Challenging Media Landscapes conference is to undertake
an exploration of a range of the main conceptual and practice based
issues which have framed the academic analysis of ideas, practical
expressions and critiques of freedom and choice in media environments
over the course of at least the last decade.
Papers may have as their focus empirical cases, conceptual and
theoretical contributions, or both. They may also report on practice
based research across the range of media scholarship. Research which is
of an exploratory and interdisciplinary orientation is welcome. Broadly
speaking, papers are invited which address the range of actors,
institutions, structures, instruments and processes in media
environments that affect and challenge in some significant way our
understanding of media freedom and choice.
Below is a set of five core themes, to be interpreted flexibly, around
which contributions might be centred, though ideas for papers which do
not sit in or across one or more of these areas, but which address the
core aim of the conference, are also welcomed.
Theme One: Freedom, Choice and Privacy in Media Environments
Debates about privacy in media environments, particularly the online
world, burn as strongly as they ever have. Some even contend that we are
already in a post-privacy age, with the envelopment of professional and
personal interactions and relations through social media and the melding
of the two spheres, manifest, for example, in forms of immaterial
labour. Concerns are expressed about surveillance, the treatment of
protest by the State, and abandonment of respect for privacy by
commercial organisations. Yet, high profile dissenting organisations
and analysts, such as Wikileaks, IndyMedia and The Invisible Committee,
for example – provide evidence of a more complex, contested environment.
Wikileaks’s maxim “privacy for individuals and transparency for
institutions” is suggestive of a new paradigm of what must be private,
and what will be public. This theme calls for papers which explore the
contemporary nature of privacy. What imperatives arise from its
protection and what challenges arise in trying to secure it?
Theme Two: Policy Choices and Freedom in Changing Media Environments
The Internet is eroding the boundaries between the press, broadcasting
and new, on-demand media services. The re-articulation of traditional
Public Service Broadcasting as Public Service Media has now arguably
been well-established. The rise of social media has created a set of new
online communications environments where the associated commercial and
governance protocols are still very much in their infancy and thus
contested. What are the different ways of considering freedom and choice
in this evolving era of media convergence? What are the key challenges
that are developing in converging communications environments in terms
of broadening and maintaining choice and what are the implications of
this? How has this been manifest in the consideration of issues such as
market regulation and the prescription of base line public service? This
theme of the conference calls for papers which evoke new thinking in
areas such as: new media market environments; possible subsidisation of
media content, copyright regulation, ‘net neutrality’, and the possible
regulation of social media.
Theme Three: The Growth of Big Data and Media Freedom
Debates about freedom, choice and control have been heightened by
exponential growth in the range and amount of digitally collected and
stored information. This has led to claims that the application of so
called “Big Data” offers unparalleled opportunities to: understand
social problems; track changes in public behaviour; and to develop more
precise, incisive and nuanced policy responses to the needs of people as
citizens, audience members, readers and consumers. More fundamentally,
Big Data has been seen as challenging what we know and how we know it.
However, superficial and deterministic assumptions that Big Data can
automaticially produce solutions to a range of social problems ignore
key questions around the interests which gather and have access to such
data; exercise control over data flows; and undertake action to analyse
and interpret such data. These concerns are already important sites of
analysis and contestation in academic, governmental and media circles
and this theme calls for contributions which will take forward the
important debates this activity has generated.
Theme 4: Journalism, Media Freedom and Democracy
The principle of journalistic freedom centres on ideas about democracy,
the Fourth Estate and the public sphere. However, the Leveson Inquiry
(2012) in the UK was a potent reminder both of the limits of those
freedoms and of their capacity to be abused. Globally, journalists are
struggling to establish and maintain their freedom in fledgling
democracies, such as the post-Arab Spring countries. The emergence of
participatory (or ‘citizen’) journalism represents another important
development, including a challenge to the professional status and values
of journalists and to their ability to foster and regain public trust.
Some argue that we are witnessing a democratisation of media through
growing interactivity in journalism and apparently decentralised social
media. This theme focuses on the range of possible responses to ideas
about freedom in journalism in a variety of contexts in the twenty-first
century. It welcomes both specific case studies of the notion of freedom
in journalism and new attempts to theorise and explain critically the
evolving and often elusive nature this idea.
Theme 5: Articulations of, and Barriers to, Creativity, Freedom and
Choice in Media Practices
Media practice has long been a core manifestation of creativity, and
the exercising of freedom and choice in the pursuit of excellence.
However, media technologies and practices, individual and collective,
commercial and non-commercial, are constantly changing. This theme
calls for contributions which explore key changes in media practice from
the perspective of creativity, freedom and choice. Papers and other
contributions (such as audiovisual materials) may train their focus on
the gamut of media practice from screenwriting to distribution and
exhibition, from performance practices to cinematographic practices,
from directing to sound design, from animation to games designs. Papers
which explore multi-disciplinary and converged media practices, creative
forms and business models are particular welcome.
Submission of Abstracts
Abstracts of no more than 400 words should be submitted in Word document
format by Friday 20 June 2014 to:
(artdes-cmlabstracts /at/ salford.ac.uk)
Your abstract should address one of the above themes (please indicate
which) and have a separate cover sheet providing your name(s),
institutional affiliation(s) and e-mail address(es). You will be
notified of acceptance by 15 July, 2014. Full papers are due no later
than 1 November, 2014.
It is the intention of the organisers to put together an edited volume
of the conference contributions.
Details on booking registration and accommodation options will follow on
acceptance of your proposal.
For further enquiries, contact:
Seamus Simpson,
Professor of Media Policy,
Director of the Communication, Cultural and Media Studies Research Centre,
University of Salford,
MediaCityUK,
Salford Quays,
Salford.
Manchester M502HE
Email: (s.simpson /at/ salford.ac.uk)
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