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[Commlist] Call for papers: Annual Conference ZEMKI: Communication History of International Organisations and NGOs. Questions, Research Perspectives, Topics
Tue Jun 30 07:40:30 GMT 2020
*Call for papers: Annual Conference ZEMKI, Bremen, 2021 - Submission
date Sept. 1st: Communication History of International Organisations and
NGOs. Questions, Research Perspectives, Topics*
*Subject*
The International ZeMKI Conference 2021 will focus on a topic that has
thus far received little attention from historians of communication and
media: the communication history of international organizations. Since
the second half of the 19th century, for numerous and diverse areas of
social life, globally active international organizations of varying
degrees of institutionalization and scope, both non-governmental and
intergovernmental, have been founded and have dedicated themselves to
the global challenges of the first modern age. The most famous of these
is certainly the League of Nations, which was established in 1919 as the
predecessor institution of the UN.
>From a communication and media-historical perspective, international
organizations played a highly visible role in the transnational
intertwining and consolidation processes of journalism, culture, media,
politics, technology and the public sphere in the 19th and 20th
centuries. Against the background of the much-discussed boundaries
between secret diplomacy and public diplomacy, especially after the
First World War, such organizations contributed to the development of
the first arenas and forms of international and transnational public
spheres whose orientation was towards global governance. In order to
spread their concerns and goals globally: they constantly used the
latest communication technologies and the growing diversity of the media
for their communication; organized and professionalized their
information work and; developed specific information-policy instruments
and strategies for that purpose. Woodrow Wilson's idea of Open Diplomacy
(in fact, the early forerunner of today's “Public Diplomacy”), for
example, was the idea on which the League of Nations based its
information policy.
Effects of the differentiation and organization of international
organizations’ communication, such as the emergence of institutionalized
public relations and PR in these specific contexts, the development of
international summit and conference journalism, the creation of
publicity for international politics and, in parallel, the genesis of
structures of inter- and transnational public spheres conveyed by the
media, are issues and topics within this field of research, which from
the perspective of communication and media history has been by and large
neglected.
The aim of the conference is to discover and systematically develop
international organizations as a communication and media history
relevant field of research. In doing so, the conference will lay the
foundations for research in communication history as well as offering
the discipline as a whole a historical perspective that will enable
communication studies to reflect on international organizations of the
present day.
*Confirmed keynote speakers are Prof. Dr. Madeleine Herren-Oesch
(University of Basel) and Dr. Torsten Kahlert (Aarhus University).*
*Problem areas and focal points of the conference*
To illuminate and discuss issues, research perspectives and the thematic
spectrum of the communication history of international organizations,
the organizers request submissions which, using concrete international
organizations as examples, address one or more of the problem areas and
thematic focuses outlined below:
*1. The communication and communication management of
international organizations*
How did non-governmental and intergovernmental international
organizations design their (media-mediated) communication to reach and
inform the media and the public? Which actors and groups of actors did
they address and how? What were the expectations regarding media and
public attention? What ideas existed about the relationship between
media and politics? What forms, infrastructures, instruments, concepts
and strategies were developed to generate the public and medial
visibility of international organizations? How and by whom was
information and public relations work institutionalized and
standardized? How were relations with individual media and their
representatives organized and professionalized?
*2. International organizations, media and journalism*
What influence have international organizations had on trends in
globalization, and in the inter- and trans-nationalization of journalism
and media communication? In these contexts how did new forms of foreign
journalism such as summit and international conference journalism
develop? What position did journalistic and media practices occupy
within the context of international organizations? Which international
media policy agenda developed in the interaction between international
organizations and media institutions, for example, with respect to:
ensuring the free movement of global news; tendentious reporting and
dissemination of false reports; unimpeded activity of correspondents;
and international standards of press freedom and copyright? Which
international organizations were established, especially in the media
context?
*3. International organizations in the public sphere and public
debates*
What notions of a global or inter- and trans-national public sphere were
generated in the context of international organizations? How were
conferences involving international or-ganizations publicly staged? What
public image did international organizations have? On which topics and
with which objectives did international organizations try to address and
reach the public (e.g. disarmament, gender justice, health, nature and
environmental pro-tection)? How were International Organizations
perceived beyond the mass media (e.g. in film, photography, caricature,
art, literature and posters)?
*4. Theories, methods, sources*
How can the communication histories of international communications be
embedded theoretically and methodologically? Which sources can be used,
and which methodological approaches and triangulations are possible and
necessary to deal with the usually immense quantity and variety of
handed-down sources?
Optionally, within the framework of an "Open" panel, research conducted
by young scholars or work-in-progress research from the entire range of
communication and media history can be presented.
*Submissions*
We are requesting submissions on the conference topic and for the "Open
Panel" in the form of detailed "Extended Abstracts" (preferably in
English, German is possible; 4,000 to 5,000 characters including spaces,
exclusive bibliography) *by September 1, 2020*. Abstracts must be
submitted in pdf format and anonymized by means of a detachable cover
sheet and removal of all author identifying information from document
settings and text. Submissions and questions concerning this call for
papers should be sent exclusively to: (ekoenen /at/ uni-bremen.de)
<mailto:(ekoenen /at/ uni-bremen.de)>
Submissions will be peer-reviewed according to the following criteria:
theoretical founda-tion; relevance of the question; appropriateness of
the method/procedure; novel-ty/originality; clarity and conciseness of
presentation. The results of the review process will be announced by
November 10, 2020.
*Organization*
The conference will take place on April 22 and 23, 2021 in Bremen. The
host institution is the ZeMKI of the University of Bremen. Erik Koenen
and Stefanie Averbeck-Lietz are responsible for the organization.
ZeMKI, Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research,
University of Bremen
Dr. Erik Koenen, (ekoenen /at/ uni-bremen.de)
Prof. Dr. Stefanie Averbeck-Lietz, (saverbec /at/ uni-bremen.de)
togehter with:
The Communication History Section of the German Communication
Association (DGPuK),
Institute for Newspaper Research Dortmund
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