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[ecrea] Invitation to Attend Media and the Boundaries of Disclosure: Media, Morals, Public Shaming and Privacy Conference
Thu Feb 02 21:46:58 GMT 2012
You are invited to attend the *Media and the Boundaries of Disclosure:
Media, Morals, Public Shaming and Privacy Conference *of the Reuters
Institute, University of Oxford, Feb. 23-24
Speakers and papers:
*Thursday, 23 February*
Keynote Address: "British Journalism after the News of the World", /John
Lloyd, Financial Times and Reuters Institute/
To Punish, Inform and Criticize: The Goals of Naming and Shaming, /Jacob
Rowbottom, Cambridge University, UK/
Read Me! And I will tell you a secret, /Imme Baumüller, University of
Mannheim Haus, DE/
Public interest or public shaming, /Julian Petley, Brunel University, UK/
Shame before the (big) other: Confession in the age of therapy culture,
/Jacob Johanssen, University/ of London, UK
The right of the press to know or the individual right to privacy,
/Brian Chama, Roehampton University, UK/
Privacy and the freedom of the press: A false Dichotomy, /Simon Dawes,
Nottingham Trent University/
*Friday, 24 February*
Media rationales for disclosure: Public interest in the era of
Blackberry and Twitter, /Andrew Chatora, University of London, UK/
Public shaming of individuals and companies through social media,
/Desislava Manova-Georgieva, Sofia University, BG/
Differences in self-disclosure among cultures: A comparative study in
social networking, /Jingwei Wu, Free University Berlin, DE/
Disclosure and public shaming in the digital age, /Hanne Detel, Eberhard
Karls Universität Tübingen, DE///
Comparing crime rituals in Sweden, Holland, England, and North America,
/Romayne Smith Fullerton, University of Western Ontario, CA, and Maggie
Jones Patterson, Duquesne University, US/
The DSK scandal: Mediating the Desire for Authenticity, /Julia
Lefkowitz, American University Paris, FR/
Rumours of regal importance: Credibility, profit, and media morals/,
Kristina Widestedt and Ester Pollack, Stockholm University, SE/
Public Interest and Individual taste in reporting an Irish minister’s
illness, /Kevin Rafter, Dublin City University, IE/
Public figures, privacy and co-regulation: The David Campbell affair,
/Tim Dwyer/, /University of Sydney, AU/
Naming and shaming an innocent man: Allegations against John Leslie,
/Adrian Quinn, Leeds University, UK/
Disclosing the Mechanism of German Public Shame - Politics, Media and
the Rhetoric of German Shaming on the Example of Former President of the
Bundestag Phillip Jenninger/, Jan C.L. König, University of Berne, CH/
To register for the event contact: Kate Hanneford-Smith,
(kate.hanneford-smith /at/ politics.ox.ac.uk)
<mailto:(kate.hanneford-smith /at/ politics.ox.ac.uk)>
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