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[Commlist] CFP: Teaching journalism in the Global South: constraints and opportunities
Thu Apr 16 15:29:04 GMT 2020
Call for Chapters
Teaching journalism in the Global South: constraints and opportunities
Deadline for abstracts: 22 May 2020
The proposed edited collection aims to explore the possibilities and
limitations of teaching journalism in countries with strong media
control. Target publisher: Palgrave Studies in Journalism and the Global
South, Palgrave Macmillan.
Recent scholarship has expressed increasing concern over the importance
of acknowledging the varieties of journalism and its teaching around the
world. It has been suggested that universalistic assumptions of what
constitutes journalism should be challenged and domestic cultural
standards and diverse political configurations should be taken into
account (Mensing and Franklin, 2011; Hanitzsch et al., 2019; Bebawi,
2016; Mikal, 2014; Obijiofor and Hanusch, 2011; Berger, 2011; Schiffrin,
2011; Josephi, 2010; Hossein, 2007; Friedman, Shafer and Rice, 2006). An
interdisciplinary, cross-geographical approach has been advocated as a
way to spur discussion and criticism of the theoretical and practical
principles underpinning journalism education. Collaborative work, at the
global level among journalism educators, could foster the reciprocal
exchange of ideas promoting innovation in practice, curriculum design
and research (Mensing and Franklin, 2011). A focus on countries with
robust media control, in times when the relationship between education
and profession is being debated at a global level, might foster a
discussion on the paradoxical features characterizing the tension
between theory and practice. Typical questions arising are, for
instance, whether journalism educators can teach effectively in a
restrained media environment without compromising the very principles
they are trying to abide by (Thompson, 2007). Existing studies note how
in countries with strong governmental influence journalism programs face
contradictory priorities over ideological impositions and commercial or
educational imperatives (Obijiofor and Hanusch, 2011). For example, many
universities in the Global South face the challenge of having to teach
students how to write engaging content to meet audience and market
demands whilst demonstrating loyalty to the state and adhering to its
principles (Dombernowsky, 2016; Long and Zeng, 2016; Hao and Xu, 1997;
Repnikova, 2017). Thus, it is crucial to understand how teachers and
students make sense of, negotiate and reinterpret the clashing interests
of state ideological infusions and public demands, and translate them
into practice and reporting models.
The proposed edited collection aims to discuss how to teach journalism
in countries with limited freedom, including those which are in
transition from authoritarianism to freer modes of government. The book
has four main purposes: to illustrate and contextualize the challenges
of journalism education under governmental control; to problematize
transplanting a Western Anglo-American model into non-Western countries;
to assess both the limitations and creative opportunities arising from
teaching journalism under constraints; and, to broaden our understanding
of the meaning and forms that journalism can take and the consequences
that such a fluid understanding might have for future journalists.
We would like the focus of the edited collection to be on China but we
are open to contributions regarding other countries as well. Possible
themes include but are not limited to:
• Theoretical frameworks
• Emerging learning models
• The application of Western teaching principles in
non-Western countries
• Teaching journalism in transnational universities
• Teaching journalism law/ethics
• Accreditation standards of journalism education
• Journalism training in countries that are making a
transition to democracy
• History of journalism training
• The gap between academia and the industry
• Fieldwork policies and learning outcomes
• Teaching in collaboration with the industry
• The structure of journalism curricula
• Student awareness of politics
• Managing student expectations
• Technology-enhanced teaching
• Community-based educational projects
• Aesthetic journalism
• Student media
• Education as an agent of change
• Education as a way to maintain the status quo
• Internationalization of educational strategies
• Journalism as a reservoir of transferable skills
• Political and market influences on journalism curriculum
design
• Journalism training and ideological/political indoctrination
• Illustrated Journalism
Key dates
Abstract submission deadline: 22 May 2020
Notification of acceptance: 1 June 2020
Full paper submission (min 6, 500 - max 7, 500 words): 14 September 2020
Please send in abstracts of max 500 words to:
(Diana.Garrisi /at/ xjtlu.edu.cn) (Lecturer, Department of Media and
Communication, Xi’an-Jiaotong Liverpool University, China), and
(Xianwen.Kuang /at/ xjtlu.edu.cn) (Lecturer, Department of Media and
Communication, Xi’an-Jiaotong Liverpool University, China).
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