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[ecrea] Call for papers - journalism conference
Fri Oct 22 15:18:32 GMT 2010
>CONFERENCE 2011: The Future of Journalism - Developments and Debates
>Thursday 8th and Friday 9th September 2011, Venue: Cardiff University.
>
>"Following the success of the Journalism Practice and Journalism Studies
>conferences in 2007 and 2009, we are delighted to announce that the
>third in this series of biennial research-based conferences - to be
>hosted by the Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies
>(JOMEC) and sponsored by Routledge Taylor and Francis - will again focus
>on the topic: The Future of Journalism.
>
>The Plenary speakers will be:
>Emily Bell, Professor of Professional Practice and Director of the Tow
>Centre for Digital Journalism at the Columbia School of Journalism (and
>previously founder of mediaguardian.co.uk)
>Robert W. McChesney, Gutgsell Endowed Professor in the Department of
>Communication at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is
>co-author of The Death and Life of American Journalism, as well as Rich
>Media, Poor Democracy.
>
>We invite contributions from the international community of scholars of
>journalism studies, journalism practitioners, educators and trainers,
>media executives, trade unionists and media regulators; indeed everyone
>with scholarly or practitioner interests in the future of journalism.
>
>Titles and abstracts for papers (250 words max) are invited by 22nd
>December 2010".
Titles and abstracts for papers (250 words max) are invited by 22nd
December 2010 and should be submitted online at:
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/jomec/conference/futureofjournalism/submission/
Papers should address one of the following five key questions, which
constitute the conference themes:
1. Journalism practice and changing technologies - how are
developments in media technologies across all platforms shaping a new
journalism practice, especially novel routines for news reporting
which include citizen journalism, crowdfunding/sourcing, social
networking sites and (micro) blogging?
2. Global journalism developments - how are these changes
unravelling in different national settings with their distinctive
journalism cultures, audiences, media structures and histories?
3. Business models and funding journalism - what are the
implications of these changes for the revenues traditionally
available to fund journalism and what business models are emerging
(for example the use of pay walls) to resource newly emerging forms
of journalism?
4. Journalism professionalism - what are the consequences of
these developments for the education, training and employment of
journalists, as well as journalists' changing perceptions of their
professional roles and identity?
5. Journalism, democracy and ethics - in what ways do these
changes impact on journalism's wider connections with the political
and democratic life of communities locally, regionally, nationally
and internationally?
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ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Postal address:
ECREA
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Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
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