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[ecrea] Conference on Investors and Entrepreneurship in Arab Media
Thu Sep 16 21:33:01 GMT 2010
The University of Westminster’s
Arab Media Centre is calling for papers for its next international
conference. The topic is ‘Investors and Entrepreneurship in Arab
Media’, the venue is the University of Westminster’s Regent Street
Campus in central London, and the date is Friday April 15th,
2011.
Suggested conference themes and other details about submission of
abstracts are included in the Call for Papers, which is pasted below and
is also available online at
http://www.westminster.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/62009/Call-for-papers-_2_.pdf
.
You might also like to know about the PhD symposium on Arab TV Fiction
and Entertainment Industries to be hosted by the Danish Institute in
Damascus in November, in collaboration with the Arab Media Centre and
others. Details of that event can be accessed at
http://www.westminster.ac.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0012/62040/DamascusArabEntertainmentResearchSchool_Announcement-_2_.pdf
.
We would be grateful if you could please circulate the following Call for
Papers as widely as possible. The deadline for abstracts is October
25th.
With kind regards,
Naomi Sakr
Professof Media Policy
Director, Arab Media Centre
Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI)
University of Westminster
CALL FOR PAPERS
Investors and Entrepreneurship in Arab Media
Conference organised by the
Arab Media Centre
Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI), University of
Westminster
in collaboration with the
New Islamic Public Sphere Programme, University of Copenhagen
and the
CAMRI Media Management Group
Date: 15 April, 2011
Venue: University of Westminster, Regent Street Campus,
309 Regent Street, London W1
What impact have global financial turmoil and regional political
struggles had on investment in Arab media and the way these media are
managed? Growth in the number of free-to-air satellite television
channels across the Arab region slowed markedly in the year to April
2010. Yet the same period saw new investment channelled into generating
films and television content, led by Abu Dhabi bodies like Imagenation
and twofour54.
Behind both trends are shifts in favoured business models, with moves
towards strategic alliances, spreading risk and, in some cases, greater
acceptance of the transparency imperatives imposed by the need to raise
capital. After News Corporation’s February 2010 purchase of a 9 per cent
stake in the entertainment group Rotana, the group’s owner, Saudi
Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, announced plans for an initial public
offering of shares in the group, and the possible launch of a news
channel.
This conference will showcase current scholarship on the processes that
underlie contemporary ownership and management practices in Arab media
organisations. It is the sixth annual international conference to be
organised by the Arab Media Centre, which is part of the University of
Westminster’ Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI), and will
be held in collaboration with CAMRI’s Media Management Group and the New
Islamic Public Sphere Programme at the University of Copenhagen.
Potential topics for conference papers include, but are not limited to,
the following:
· Management theory and
its applicability to Arab media
· Political theory (e.g.
elites, networks, clientelism) and Arab media organisations
· Horizontal and vertical
integration of Arab media firms
· Business and political
profiles of Arab media owners
· Gender dimensions of
entrepreneurship in Arab media
· Law, policy and
regulation affecting media ownership and competition in Arab
countries
· New and emerging
business models in Arab media
· Trends in Arab
investment in content production and distribution
· Transparency and
accountability in subsectors of Arab media
· Methodological issues
in researching Arab media management
PROGRAMME AND REGISTRATION
This one-day conference will take place on Friday, April 15, 2011.
The draft programme envisages at least one plenary session devoted to a
keynote speech. The fee for registration will be £85, with a
concessionary rate of £35 for students, to cover all conference
documentation, refreshments and administration costs. Registration will
open on January 10, 2011.
DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS
The deadline for abstracts is Monday, October 25, 2010. Successful
applicants will be notified by Monday, November 15, 2009. Abstracts
should be 250 words long. They must include the presenter's name,
affiliation, email and postal address, together with the title of the
paper and a 150-word biographical note on the presenter. Two copies of
the abstract should be sent, one to Professor Naomi Sakr
(
(N.Sakr01 /at/ westminster.ac.uk)) and one to Helen Cohen, Events
Administrator
(
(H.Cohen02 /at/ westminster.ac.uk)). The selection committee will comprise
members of CAMRI's Arab Media Centre and Media Management Group.
TRAVEL EXPENSES
The conference organisers will apply for funding to assist with
travel costs of selected participants whose own institutions are unable
to provide the necessary support. Since the outcome of the application
will not be known until close to the conference date, participants should
ensure they have alternative arrangements to cover their own travel and
accommodation expenses.
PUBLICATION
Opportunities will be open for publication of selected conference
papers in an edited book focusing on specific conference themes or in
academic journals whose editors or co-editors are based in CAMRI.
Articles may be submitted to the Middle East Journal of Culture and
Communication, Global Media and Communication, Westminster Papers in
Communication and Culture and Interactions.
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