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[Commlist] CFP: "Children and Media: Emerging Issues", Special Issue of Communications, The European Journal of Communication Research
Tue Jan 21 17:35:14 GMT 2020
Communications, The European Journal of Communication Research
https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/comm
Special issue: "Children and Media: Emerging Issues", planned for
publication in August-September 2021
The role of media in the lives of children and youth has long been the
subject of research attention within the media and communications
scholarly community to the extent that there now exists a defined
sub-discipline specialism dedicated to the subject, drawing on a full
range of methodologies, research traditions and disciplinary formations.
To a great extent, research attention has followed patterns of media and
communications research more generally, focusing in particular on
children as consumers and related patterns of consumption as well as
contexts, effects and consequences of media use and media repertoires.
The wider socio-political environment and the technological landscape of
global internet connectivity as it impacts on children and youth have
also received much attention, with reference to the shaping of policies
that take children’s views and children’s lives into account.
Consequently, with a growing evidence base and greater critical
awareness of the heterogeneity of children’s and youth’s media
experiences, the research agenda has moved from a generalized
characterization of children and media as a fixed or holistic
relationship to a much more nuanced and complex understanding of the
mediated nature of life-worlds for children as for members of the adult
world.
Against this background, the aim of this Special Issue of
Communications, The European Journal of Communication Research, is to
take stock of the emerging issues for children and media as we enter the
second decade of the twenty-first century. Looking back on the research
carried out over the last decade on the changing media environment for
children, as well as children’s engagement with the internet and
connected media, what are some of the key issues or challenges that are
likely to persist in the coming years? In addition, what emerging issues
for children and media are likely to warrant researchers’ attention,
given the pace of technological evolution, and shifts in the regional
and global economic structure of media production against the wider
background of challenges facing sustainable development, climate action
and global cohesion? Finally, what research methods are required (e.g.,
longitudinal, comparative, mixed, etc) to adequately address and to
advance the field?
This Special Issue seeks to publish excellent recent research and
invites submissions from both theoretical/conceptual and empirical
perspectives on the emerging research agenda for media, children and youth.
Possible topics might include, but are not limited to the following:
• Distinctive cultures of media consumption for children and youth
• Children’s active agency and media engagement
• Privacy, security and data protection issues and challenges with
specific reference to children and youth
• The datafication of children’s and youth’s lives
• Digitization and provision for children’s media content
• Social media in children’s lives (the role of influencers, sharenting,
etc)
• New media literacies (including information or data literacy)
• Social mediation (parental, peer and teachers’ mediation)
• Cross-cultural differences in children’s media access and use
• Children’s rights in the digital environment
• Gender differences in children’s media experiences
• Digital health, welfare and well-being
• Harmful online experiences and evidence-based solutions
• Advances in research methodologies for children and youth
• Policies, regulations and guidelines
Guidelines and instructions:
Abstracts of two pages should be sent to the guest editors:
(brian.oneill /at/ TUDublin.ie) and (veronika.kalmus /at/ ut.ee) by March 15, 2020.
‘Communications’ allows for two formats: research articles (up to 8000
words) and Research-in-Brief contributions (up to 4000 words). Please
specify your preferred format in the abstract proposal. Further
guidelines for articles in ‘Communications’ (e.g. the APA quotation
style) can be found on the journal’s website:
https://www.degruyter.com/view/supplement/s16134087_Instructions_for_Authors.pdf
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