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[ecrea] CfP - Special Issue on the Changing Business of Journalism
Thu May 31 22:09:30 GMT 2012
International Journal of Press/Politics
SPECIAL ISSUE CALL FOR PAPERS: Comparative Perspectives on the Changing
Business of Journalism and its Implications for Democracy
The last decade has seen tremendous change in the commercial news media
that play a central role in political processes in democracies around
the world. Dramatic social changes, economic fluctuations, and new
technologies have all combined to transform at least in part the media
systems inherited from the 20th century. But our understanding of the
direction, drivers, and implications of these changes remains incomplete
and provisional, partially because there has been a tendency to try to
understand the transition in purely national terms without rigorous
comparison to how things have unfolded elsewhere.
This special issue of the International Journal of Press/Politics is
dedicated to international comparative research on the changing
character of commercial news media in democracies around the world at
the beginning of the 21st century, and what these changes in turn mean
for democratic politics. The motivation is our view that cross‐country
analysis is necessary to understand both the causes and consequences of
current changes, and that mass media and mass politics remain so tightly
intertwined that changes in one will have consequences for the other. We
therefore invite contributors to focus, on the basis of empirical work
in two or more democracies, on both substantive and more theoretical
issues including:
• Developments in news media industries including newspapers,
free‐to‐air broadcasting, cable television, and pure player news
provision with an emphasis on what these developments mean for their
role in democracies
• Similarities and dissimilarities between trends in the functioning of
news media in different democracies, in established versus new
democracies, and in mature markets versus emerging markets with
attention to their political consequences
• The role of public policy in responding to recent changes in the media
industries across different democracies, and the wider democratic
implications
• The changing definition and role of “journalism” and the potential
rise of new kinds of journalism (partisan media, private high‐price
subscription‐only news services, etc) in different countries and what it
means for democracy
• The development of new information and communication technologies as
used for news production, dissemination, and engagement across different
democracies, and what this means for the relations between media and
politics
• The utility of inherited conceptual vocabularies based on individual
media platforms (print, broadcasting, etc) and often assuming the
nation‐state as a unit of analysis (media systems, etc) in understanding
present changes in times some see as defined by internationalization and
convergence In each case we seek contributions that use a comparative
approach to get a firmer empirical and conceptual understanding of
current transformations in the media sector in democratic societies, and
directly address the question of what this means for politics.
The issue will be edited by Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (University of Oxford
and Roskilde University), Frank Esser (University of Zurich), and David
Levy (University of Oxford).
Authors should submit papers using the online system
(http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ijpp). The deadlyne for submission is
October 1st 2012. Submissions should not exceed 8,000 words including
tables and bibliography. All submissions will be peer reviewed, and the
editors will select 5 or 6 articles for publication. The issue is
tentatively scheduled for publication in July 2013.
Questions should be directed to Dr Nielsen
((rasmus.nielsen /at/ politics.ox.ac.uk)) or Professor Esser
((f.esser /at/ ipmz.uzh.ch)). More information is found here:
http://hij.sagepub.com/
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