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[ecrea] Anti-Austerity and Media Activism - an IAMCR 2016 pre-conference
Tue Feb 02 22:22:07 GMT 2016
You are warmly invited to join us for:
Anti-Austerity and Media Activism - an IAMCR 2016 pre-conference at
GOLDSMITHS, University of London
Austerity refers to the specific sets of policies designed ostensibly to
reduce public debt through a decrease in government expenditure on
public services and welfare systems. Austerity programmes have, however,
been heavily criticized for facilitating the growth of corporate welfare
at the expense of a safety net for the poorest, for bringing about the
systematic entrenchment of a market logic into as many areas of public
life as possible, and for being precisely the wrong approach to
stimulate economic growth.
The media are implicated in creating and circulating this narrative
about the current crisis in many ways. All over the world publicly
funded media are facing increasing deregulation and privatisation as
well as growing political interference, declining budgets and even
outright closure. News media have also been some of the most vociferous
cheerleaders for austerity.There has also been a growth in populist
television programmes that have been criticised for attacking the
principle of welfare and demonising the poor. Alongside the popular
presentation that austerity makes good economic sense, despite arguments
to the contrary, there has, perhaps unsurprisingly, been a surge in
anti-austerity protests from those groups who bear the brunt of
austerity policies and want to resist a future of cuts, privatization
and commercialization. Frequently such groups have turned to social
media as a means both of mobilisation of protest but also of information
sharing.
The conference will seek to highlight the connections between austerity
and the media and, in particular, to highlight the role of
communications in fostering anti-austerity movements. We invite papers
that illustrate how:
Media outlets have helped to construct contemporary narratives of austerity
Mainstream media have related to discourses of austerity
Non-mainstream media have attempted to counter austerity narratives
Activists and campaigners have sought to mobilise against both media and
political elites in order to press for media reform, to secure
democratic gains and to protect public spaces.
Date and time: Saturday 23 July 2016. 10:00 - 17:00
Proposal requirements: Proposals can be made for single papers or
panels. Abstracts for single papers must be no more than 300 words. A
complete panel proposal will include four (4) abstracts of up to 300
words each plus a supporting rationale of up to 300 words.
Proposals must be submitted by 15 February 2016 at midnight GMT here:
http://iamcr.org/leicester2016/preconf/anti-austerity
We look forward to welcoming you to Goldsmiths in the summertime!
All best
Natalie Fenton
PLEASE NOTE THIS PRE-CONFERENCE WILL BE FREE!
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