Innovation, Journalism and Collective Intelligence
IJ-8 The Eight Conference on Innovation
Journalism and Communication
Stanford Center for Innovation and
Communication
Stanford University,
California.
23-25 May 2011
IJ-8 The Eight Conference on Innovation Journalism is a venue for
researchers from many disciplines and institutions to present work and
ideas relating to the interplay of journalism, communication and
innovation ecosystems.
IJ-8 is a meeting place for researchers and journalism/communication
professionals to discuss the best ways of covering innovation in the
news, or communicating innovation, the business of doing that work, and
how innovation journalism and communication interacts with each other and
with society.
The conference welcomes a varied set of participants: Working
journalists, policy-makers in innovation, academic researchers, faculty
and research students in related areas of commerce, communication and
journalism, and other professionals connected to the media
industry.
The Conference is hosted at Stanford University under the auspices of the
Stanford Center for Innovation and
Communication. The Center for Innovation and Communication
welcomes faculty and graduate student submissions on all topics related
to innovation and communication.
The Program Committee welcomes strong theoretical and empirical
contributions without regard to particular methodological approach,
professional context (including journalism, advertising, public
relations, strategy and innovation, and the standard social science
disciplines) and overall orientation of the research (theoretical,
descriptive, philosophical, pedagogical, methodological or practical).
“The Prinjos” –The Prizes for Best Innovation Journalism Conference
Paper
The best papers in each of the following three categories will receive a
recognition for “Best Paper at the Innovation Journalism Conference at
Stanford 2011”:
1. The Grand Prinjo: best conference paper among all
submissions.
2. The Junior Prinjo: best paper submitted by graduate students.
3. The Journalist Prinjo: best paper submitted by practitioners.
Manuscript Submission
Authors may submit full papers for double blind peer review before March
1, 2011. Papers should be between 5000 and 8000 words excluding
bibliography and appendices. Please make the submission documents
anonymous – author(s) identity must not be displayed. Please provide a
separate page with paper title and an abstract of no more than 75 words;
write name, affiliation and all contact information of the author(s) on
that page with the abstract. Format should be Word, citations in
Harvard Style. Paper and abstract must be sent as attachments in one
email to
(IJ8-Uskali /at/ innovationjournalism.org)
The Review Process
All papers will undergo blind peer review. The review process is humane,
including reasonable turnaround time on submissions and with firm
but polite critique. Papers are reviewed in the order they are received
and authors will receive answers as soon as the paper has been evaluated.
Authors of accepted papers are expected to present their papers at the
Innovation Journalism Conference at Stanford University. Authors of
rejected full papers are invited to participate in the conference without
presenting their work.
Conference Fee
The Conference fee is $250, including access to the conference,
conference materials and refreshments.
.
Main themes of IJ-8 Academic Track:
· The role of innovation journalism in ubiquitous society,
and in the new era of internet of things.
· The influence of the real-time web and social media in innovation
communication.
· How journalism and innovation interact in times of rapid
change.
· Towards a systems view: Public attention and attention work in
innovation communication ecosystems, the stakeholders and audiences, and
the interaction between these elements.
Examples of research topics of interest:
· Professional norms, values, codes of ethics and
principles of innovation journalism.
· How newsrooms and other professional organizations affect the
coverage of innovation.
· Democracy and governance: The role of journalism in the
innovation economy.
· Who sets the agenda for innovation journalism?
· Concept of attention work, the professional generation and
brokering of attention.
· Concept of innovation communication systems; the flow of
attention in innovation systems.
· How innovation processes and innovation ecosystems interact with
public attention, with news media as an actor.
· Interdependencies between journalism and other actors in the
innovation system.
· The roles of reputation and trust in the innovation
ecosystem.
· Business Models for innovation journalism.
· Models of innovation and media, including firm, industry and
economy-wide innovation systems.
· Governance, accountability and innovation in and by journalists
and media actors.
· State of the art as well as theory and practice in the teaching
of innovation journalism.
· Innovation journalism and feminism.
Information about the conference and accepted papers will be posted on:
http://injo.stanford.edu,
http://www.innovationjournalism.org , the general InJo site, and the
conference site
http://ij8.innovationjournalism.org
Program Committee
IJ-8 Chair: David Nordfors, Executive Director, Stanford Center for
Innovation and communication.
IJ-8Academic Program Chair: Kirsten Mogensen, Associate Professor,
Roskilde University.
IJ-8 Academic Review & Publication Chair: Turo Uskali,
University of Jyväskylä, Finland and Senior Research Scholar, Stanford
Center for Innovation and Communication.
Dr. Ibrahim Saleh, Centre for Film & Media Studies, University of
Cape Town
Program Committee Contact:
Professor Kirsten Mogensen:
(Mogensen /at/ innovationjournalism.org)
http://blog.innovationjournalism.org/2010/09/call-for-papers-innovation-journalism.html
The Review Panel:
Review Board
Professor Jari Ojala, Department of History and Ethnology, Uni of
Jyväskylä.
Professor Antti Hautamäki, Agora center, University of
Jyväskylä.
Professor Göte Nyman , University of Helsinki, Finland
Adjunct Professor Norm Meier, Boston University and President/Owner at
the Catalyst-Global BCM Consortium, California
Research Director, Dr. Jari Kaivo-oja, , Finland Futures Research
Centre, University of Turku, Finland
Associate Professor John Damm Scheuer, Roskilde University
Associate Professor Kirsten Mogensen, Roskilde University
Associate Professor Oddgeir Tveiten , University of Agder, Norge
Dr. Ibrahim Saleh, Centre for Film & Media Studies, University of
Cape Town, South Africa
Dr. Fiona Martin, University of Sydney, Australia
Author, journalist Jane Jordan-Meier, President/Owner at Jane Jordan
& Associates, California.
Doctoral student Kevin Perry, Roskilde University, Denmark.
Doctoral student Bettina Maisch, Institute for Media and Communication
Management at University of St. Gallen, Schwitzerland.
Doctoral Student Katrin Tobies, Institute of Communication and Media
Studies, University of Leipzig, Germany