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[Commlist] CFP Sustainable Screenings: Economic, Touristic and Cultural Impact of Audiovisual Productions on the Host Locations in the Post-Lockdown Era
Tue Nov 16 20:38:13 GMT 2021
CFP Sustainable Screenings: Economic, Touristic and Cultural Impact of
Audiovisual Productions on the Host Locations in the Post-Lockdown Era
Edited by Marco Cucco, Massimo Scaglioni, Anna Sfardini, Gertjan Willems
In the last twenty years, the relationship between media production and
places has been a key topic in the field of media studies. Despite that,
in the post-lockdown world this relationship still needs to be properly
investigated since nowadays it embodies new meanings that invite media
scholars to redefine their understanding of how media may serve and/or
impact places and vice versa.
It is widely known that film and audiovisual shoots can have a positive
impact on the host location economy: more tax revenues, new employment
and facilities, etc. Sometimes, film and audiovisual products stimulate
tourism too, which implies once again economic benefits. In both cases,
they feed local pride and contribute to re-define the image and status
of the host places. In the framework of the post-pandemic recovery,
these two capabilities are receiving even more attention than in the
past: tourism, for instance, was one of the sectors that suffered most
due to the health emergency, and its relaunch is at the top of the
agenda of many public institutions. Thus, the current scenario moves
film and audiovisual production at the center of the action plans for
the post-pandemic economy and society. However, all the current recovery
policies base themselves on the concept of sustainability, and this
raises the question how film and audiovisual production meet the concept
of sustainability.
In the (post-)pandemic world, the capability of film and audiovisual
production to serve places needs to be reconsidered through the lens of
sustainability and its three pillars: economic sustainability,
environmental sustainability, and social sustainability. This
reconceptualization challenges the widely accepted idea of a win-win
relationship between audiovisual production and places. In doing that,
it invites to distinguish between good and bad practices, to investigate
complex networks of stakeholders that pursue different goals, to adopt
new research perspectives and research tools that allow media scholars
to fruitfully address the most urgent issues on the political agenda.
Starting from these considerations, this special issue of Comunicazioni
Sociali invites international scholars to discuss the economic,
touristic, and cultural impact of audiovisual productions (films,
documentaries, scripted and unscripted TV products) on the host places
considering both the contemporary unprecedented scenario and the concept
of sustainability. Case studies able to enrich or contest the achieved
understanding of the relationship between media and places are
particularly encouraged. We invite abstracts from different research
perspectives (a.o. Film and Television Studies; Media Industry Studies;
Sociology) that address the following topics:
* Good and bad practices in the relationship between different
stakeholders: production companies, local institutions, population
* Green protocols in the audiovisual production
* Sustainable screen-induced tourism practices and apps
* Local people’s reactions to audiovisual shoots and screen-induced
tourism
* The impact of audiovisual products in defining local reputation and
in promoting/branding places
* Circulation of national media products and national brand image
* Media induced tourism and media pilgrimages
* Audiovisual place and local tourism: national or local data, trends,
opportunities, good or bad case studies
* European and national green policies for the audiovisual industry
* Methodologies for investigating sustainable screen-induced tourism
*Submission details*
Please send your abstract and a short biographical note by *January 10,
2022 *to:
(redazione.cs /at/ unicatt.it) <mailto:(redazione.cs /at/ unicatt.it)>
(m.cucco /at/ unibo.it) <mailto:(m.cucco /at/ unibo.it)>
(massimo.scaglioni /at/ unicatt.it) <mailto:(massimo.scaglioni /at/ unicatt.it)>
(anna.sfardini /at/ unicatt.it) <mailto:(anna.sfardini /at/ unicatt.it)>
(gertjan.willems /at/ uantwerpen.be) <mailto:(gertjan.willems /at/ uantwerpen.be)>
Abstracts should be from 300 to 400 words of length (in English). All
submissions should include: 5 keywords, name of author(s), institutional
affiliation, contacts details and a short bio for each author. Authors
will be notified of proposal acceptance by *January 28, 2022*.
If the proposal is accepted, the author(s) will be asked to submit the
full article, in English, by *April 3, 2022*.
Submission of a paper will be taken to imply that it is unpublished and
is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
The articles must not exceed 5,000/6,000-words.
Contributions will be submitted to a double blind peer review process.
The issue number *2/2022* of Comunicazioni Sociali will be published in
*September 2022.*
“Comunicazioni Sociali” is indexed in Scopus and it is an A-class rated
journal by ANVUR in: /Cinema, photography and television/ (L-ART/06),
/Performing arts/ (L-ART/05), and /Sociology of culture and
communication/ (SPS/08)
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