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[Commlist] call for abstracts for the workshop "Communicating the wealth inequality challenge in hybrid media systems"
Wed May 10 15:11:25 GMT 2023
call for abstracts: workshop on "Communicating the wealth inequality
challenge in hybrid media systems"
The International Inequalities Institute invites scholars to submit
abstracts for a workshop on 'Communicating the wealth inequality
challenge in hybrid media systems' from 5 - 6 October 2023.
Deadline for abstract submission: 27 May 2023
More information below and at:
https://www.lse.ac.uk/International-Inequalities/Research/Wealth-Elites-and-Tax-Justice/Communicating-the-wealth-inequality-challenge
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Workshop call for abstracts - "Communicating the wealth inequality
challenge in hybrid media systems"
The International Inequalities Institute invites scholars to submit
abstracts for a workshop on 'Communicating the wealth inequality
challenge in hybrid media systems' from 5 - 6 October 2023.
Increasing wealth inequality is a core challenge for democracies,
shaping the life trajectories of individual citizens as well as the
cohesion of the political communities they inhabit (Savage, 2021). The
growing concentration of wealth has been identified as a key factor
contributing to the increasing polarization of society across the globe,
giving rise to substantial societal and political problems. For
instance, growing scholarly literature focuses on the super-rich as a
global, transnational class with their own, distinct lifestyles and
consumption habits and possibilities to avoid the tax code (Muzio, 2015;
Pow, 2011). Others have documented that the high concentration of wealth
and income is closely related to the ability to influence processes of
democratic decision-making (Bartels, 2016; Rehm & Schnetzer, 2015).
Recently, research has also pointed to the link between economic
inequality and the climate crisis (Barros & Wilk, 2021; K. S. Nielsen et
al., 2021).
Communication is critical to the possibility for politicising wealth
inequality, not just by shaping individual-level information and
attitudes, but also by enabling meso-level coordination by political
organisations and structuring macro-level public sphere dynamics. There
is a growing literature about the role of legacy news media in debates
about wealth inequality (Grisold & Theine, 2017; Shifferes and Knowles
2022; Theine & Grisold, 2022; Waitkus & Wallaschek, 2022). Yet there is
also an extensive literature on the ways in which media systems are
undergoing profound transformations which disrupt the traditional
centrality of legacy news, such as hybridisation, fragmentation, and the
increasing role of platform intermediaries (Chadwick, 2017; Mancini,
2013; R. K. Nielsen & Ganter, 2022).
This workshop asks how contemporary media systems shape the politics of
wealth inequality:
How are contemporary transformations in media systems like
hybridisation, fragmentation and digitalisation affected by and
affecting the politics of wealth inequality?
How are discourses of wealth inequality, wealthy people and their
practises (lifestyles, tax evasion, etc) and associated reforms (e.g.,
wealth taxation) framed and communicated in different types of media?
How do changes to media industries, such as patterns of ownership,
influence communication around wealth inequality?
What is the role of social movements and contentious politics in
these changing media-inequality dynamics?
What methodological innovations can expand our understanding of the
mediated politics of wealth inequality?
Timeline:
27 May 2023: 300 word abstracts due
13 June 2023: selection notifications
Abstracts can be sent to (M.K.Vaughan /at/ lse.ac.uk) and will be reviewed by
the workshop organisers - Michael Vaughan (International Inequalities
Institute, LSE), Hendrik Theine (Vienna University of Economics and
Business), David Schieferdecker (Freie Universität Berlin) and Nora
Waitkus (International Inequalities Institute, LSE and Tilburg University).
The workshop will be conducted primarily in-person with the option of
hybrid participation. We welcome abstracts from researchers at any
career stage including doctoral students.
This workshop is co-hosted by the “Wealth, Elites and Tax Justice” and
“Politics of Inequality” programmes at the International Inequalities
Institute, and co-sponsored by the Department of Media and
Communications at LSE.
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