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[ecrea] CFP comparing children's media around the world, University of Westminster, London, 3-4 September 2015
Sun Jan 18 10:19:45 GMT 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS AND PANELS
Comparing Children’s Media Around the World:
Policies, Texts and Audiences
Conference organised by the
Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI)
University of Westminster, with support from the
· Arts & Humanities Research Council
Date: Friday 4 September, 2015
Venue: University of Westminster, Marylebone Campus,
35 Marylebone Road London NW1 5LS
Preceded on Thursday 3 September by:
· Half-day workshop in association with the European Communication
Research and Education Association (ECREA) Temporary Working Group on
Children, Youth and Media
· Evening event in association with the Children’s Media Foundation and
Voice of the Listener & Viewer
Conference themes and questions
Where in the world are children best served by media available to them,
and who judges the meaning of ‘best’? In March 2015 it will be 20 years
since advocates from around the world agreed the first Children’s
Television Charter calling for adequately funded, well produced content
that both affirms children’s sense of self, community and place and
promotes their appreciation of other cultures. In today’s multiplatform
environment, where children’s use of individualised social media
challenges the status of professional players, and the expansion of US
and other transnational networks fuels concerns about the viability of
domestic production, the same calls for quality, representation and
diversity persist. That much was clear at the 7th World Summit on Media
for Children in Malaysia in 2014.
Yet opinions divide over the levels of regulation and intervention
required to improve media provision for children, and over the most
urgently needed improvements, such as reducing access to harmful content
or ensuring that public policy and discourse are informed by ample and
rigorous research.
Meanwhile, researching children’s media use remains challenging and,
like local media production for children, costs more than some industry
players are ready to afford. Children often know how to navigate into
unregulated transnational media arenas, accessing horror movies and
graphic reporting of wars and catastrophes, with or without dubbing or
subtitling. Can analysts hope to conduct a child-informed and
child-centred analysis that grasps the multiplicity of children’s
everyday media practices?
This one-day conference will seek to take a fully international approach
to all forms of children’s media irrespective of delivery platform. The
comparative dimension applies to the conference as a whole, as a prompt
for discussion; individual papers are not required to be comparative,
although comparative studies are encouraged.
We welcome papers and pre-constituted panels from scholars and media
practitioners that engage critically with children’s media in different
countries. Themes may include, but are not in any way limited to, the
following:
· Definitions of childhood and media segmentation of child audiences
· Media implications of the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child
· Content generated by children
· Development of child-friendly media policies
· Defining cultural value in children’s media
· Aspects of positive regulation: e.g. quotas, incentives, educational
requirements
· Aspects of negative regulation: e.g. restrictions on advertising,
scheduling, access
· Performance of public service media in generating children’s content
· Production issues and producing for multiple platforms
· Prizes, festivals and other systems for evaluating children’s media
· Genre issues in children’s media
· Gender issues in children’s media
· Methodological issues in research with child media users
· Media literacy among children
PROGRAMME AND REGISTRATION
This is a one-day conference, taking place on Friday, 4th September
2015. It will include a keynote address, plenary sessions and parallel
workshops. The fee for registration for all participants, including
presenters, will be £50, to cover conference documentation, refreshments
and administration costs. Registration will open in May 2015, at which
point participants will be asked to indicate whether they wish to attend
either or both the pre-conference events. Participants fund their own
travel and accommodation expenses. Lower cost University Accommodation
is available at our Baker Street Campus.
DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS
The deadline for abstracts is Monday, February 9th, 2015. Successful
applicants will be notified early in mid-February 2015. Abstracts should
be 300 words. They must be accompanied by the presenter’s name,
affiliation, email and postal addresses, together with the title of the
paper and a 100-word biographical note on the presenter. Please send all
these items together in a single Word file, not as pdf, and give the
file and message the title ‘Children & Media Conference’ followed by
your surname. The file should be sent by email to the Events
Administrator, Helen Cohen, at (journalism /at/ westminster.ac.uk)
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