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[ecrea] Call for Papers - ECREA Communication Law and Policy Section
Tue Feb 05 17:29:07 GMT 2013
2013 Workshop of the ECREA’s Communication Law and Policy Section
Communication & Media Policy in Europe:
Assessing the Past, Setting Agendas for the Future
Call for Papers
The Communication Law and Policy section of ECREA invites abstracts for
its 2013 workshop on Communication & Media Policy in Europe: Assessing
the Past, Setting Agendas for the Future. The workshop will take place
at MediaCityUK, Salford, Greater Manchester, UK, on October 25-26, 2013.
It is hosted and organized by the University of Salford.
This workshop has two inter-related objectives. The first is to
undertake an exploration of a range of the main conceptual and practical
issues which have framed the academic analysis of communication and
media policies in Europe over the course of at least the last decade.
Second, the workshop will draw on this experience to explore key issues
that can set the agenda for the short to medium term in communication
and media policy in Europe. The workshop thus invites proposals for
papers in a wide range of areas which, in their different ways, have in
common the goal of addressing this dual purpose. Overall, the workshop
aims to draw together policy lessons from the past and, in so doing,
frame an agenda for the future. Papers may have as their focus empirical
cases or conceptual and theoretical contributions, or both.
Contributions may take a number of diverse foci individually or in some
combination. These might range across the role and significance of
policy actors, institutions, structures, instruments and processes in
communication and media policy.
Below is a set of themes around which contributions might be centred,
though ideas for papers which do not sit across one or more of these
areas, but which address the core objectives of the conference, are also
welcomed.
1) The Continued Role of Regulation
Issues of regulatory governance have sat at the heart of policies for
the communications and media sector for decades and are now as strongly
evident as ever. The regulatory governance of communications aims to
evolve to keep pace with developments in technologies, services and
markets, but often faces many challenges in so doing. Issues of
regulation touch a broad range of areas concerned with the functioning
of the communications sector: market making and monitoring; competitive
relations between market protagonists; the nature and extent of public
subsidies given to providers of communications media infrastructures and
services; issues of equality of access and treatment; data protection
and privacy. In particular, new developments in media – not least new
social media and social networking activity which this has spawned –
call forth particular challenges in terms of regulatory agendas. There
is increasing evidence in the media sector of the emergence in new
contexts of self- and co-regulation. Alongside this, the much studied
convergence of media continues to raise major questions around the
effective design of convergent regulation often drawing on the
experience of different regulatory traditions and trajectories. What are
the key current regulatory governance challenges in Europe and how have
they become manifest? What regulatory solutions have been put forward
nationally and internationally and what role have key actors such as
governments, regulatory authorities, market actors and agents from civil
society quarters played in the evolution of regulation? To what extent
have regulatory solutions proved novel? To what extent have they
displayed efficacy? What lessons can be learned from the experience and
are these more widely applicable across the communications sector and
beyond?
2) New Networks and Services Infrastructures
The development of infrastructures for electronic network communication
media has been a core policy issue ever since the inception of
telephonic and mass media communications. Today and looking to the
future, policy debates at the national and European levels are
addressing the current and future requirements of communications
infrastructures. Whilst the creation of high speed, capacious networks
is generally agreed to be a policy imperative, there is a debate on how
precisely such networks might be delivered. This unresolved matter has
tended to focus on actors, patterns of development, and timescales. What
are the current key new network roll-out policy issues at national and
European levels? What shape are the debates currently taking and which
are the key policy actors? What kind of policy agendas for the delivery
of new and upgraded communications should be developed into the future
and what is the likelihood of them being realised?
3) Media Convergence
Technological and market convergence, until now much discussed in
theoretical and speculative terms, is beginning to register a major
impact on the media sectors. The Internet is eroding the boundaries
between the press, broadcasting and new, on-demand media services.
Broadcasters are offering press-like services and on-demand services.
Newspapers are offering audiovisual content. New entrants from the
telecoms are offering broadcast services. Faced with fragmenting
audiences and readerships, media companies are trying to embrace
convergence, and sustain their profitability, by re-using content across
different media platforms. The re-articulation of traditional Public
Service Broadcasting as Public Service Media has now arguably been
well-established. The rise of social media has created a set of new
online communications environments where the associated commercial and
governance protocols are still very much in their infancy and thus
contested. Issues of data protection, privacy, and advertising are
salient among these. What are the key regulatory and policy challenges
that are developing in the converging communications? What kind of
policy responses have been out forward in key areas such market
regulation, the continuation or otherwise of public subsidy, the
prescription of base line public services, data protection and privacy?
To what extent have these policies proven successful and how do they
need to be developed further? This theme of the conference calls for
papers which cover a range of policy issues salient to convergence and
which call forth new policy thinking, such as subsidies for media
content, ownership regulation, copyright regulation, spectrum
allocation, ‘net neutrality’, and the regulation of social media.
4) The Role of the EU and the National Level
The European Union has emerged as a key institution in the development
of communication and policy within the last 20 years. EU policies have
spanned a raft of often controversial policy areas. Research on EU
communications and media policy has highlighted the interplay between a
range of often competing interests comprising variously: EU
institutional actors in the European Commission and the European
Parliament, national level policy makers and politicians and regulatory
interests, civil society interests, and nationally based and
multinational business interests in the media and communications
industries. Papers are called for highlighting policy case areas which
address one or more of the following issues: How significant an actor
has the EU been in developing communications policy? What has the
interplay between national and EU level been and what have been the
consequences of this? What are the current key issues that the EU faces
in communications policy and what policy measures are being taken? What
are the chances of the EU being successful in achieving its policy goals
in the key areas of communications policy with which it is currently
concerning itself? In what ways might/should EU policies for the
communications sector be developed and what are the likely policy
constraints on this occurring? How might these be overcome?
5) Perspectives from Outside Europe
A key feature of research on communications policy in Europe has been
the development of comparative analysis with non-European cases. This
might take the form of cross-country, or inter-regional comparison.
Comparative communications media public policy analysis has proven
fruitful in understanding Europe in a number of ways. It allows the
degree to which there are characteristically European approaches to
matters of communications policy to be determined. Second, it can
illuminate how European nations or, by contrast, the representative
political bodies such as the European Union or the Council of Europe,
operate in international/global policy environments, including
institutional contexts. Finally, this kind of analysis allows us to
understand better how Europe, be it in specific national contexts, or
representative bodies such the EU, is viewed from outside. This can
allow an enriched understanding of the significance of European
perspectives on, and actions taken in, communications media policy to be
established. Papers are invited in the full range of communications,
media and cultural fields which address one or more of these broad criteria.
6) New Theoretical and Methodological Approaches
Communications and media policy is a dynamic field constantly in search
of refined and new ways of determining causal relationships,
characterising complex phenomena and providing enriched and new
conceptual and theoretical models to deliver better understandings of
fast evolving communications environments. Theoretical and conceptual
analyses focus on the position, role and dynamic interplay between key
actors, interests and institutions of communications policy. Often
theoretical analyses of recent and current communications policy matters
lead to conceptual problematisation and, thence, new explanations which
bring the state of the art forward. This theme calls for papers which
articulate such developments in topic areas right across the field of
policy studies in communications and media. Have new/enriched
theoretical and conceptual understandings emerged to explain recent and
current phenomena? How are these constituted? To what extent, and how,
are they incremental or path-breaking in nature? What has their key
contribution been and to what extent are they robust and flexible enough
to help us understand other areas of communications policy now and into
the future?
7) Commercialisation and Ownership
As has been well-established in the literature and beyond, recent
decades have witnessed a structural shift in the communications sector
and its sub-parts in the direction of commercialisation. The expansion
of traditional broadcast media along commercial lines and the
marketisation of telecommunications has occurred alongside the
development of a new Internet based sector of communications
underpinned, primarily, though not exclusively, by market values and
practices. The consequent shape of the European communications sector
highlights the significance of a raft of commercial issues pertinent to
the current and likely future functioning of the sector, on which papers
are invited. For example, well established issues of media ownership and
concentration are still strongly relevant to our understanding of the
evolving media landscape and are sharpened by developments such as
online cross-media platforms. What are the current issues and
controversies in media ownership and concentration and to what extent
are these manifest at the national and European levels? Are there new
explanatory models being developed to help us understand better key
commercial changes across the European media sector? What new regulatory
challenges exist from such developments and to what extent are we
witnessing the emergence of appropriate solutions nationally and at the
EU level?
Abstracts of no more than 400 words should be submitted in Word document
format directly to the conference organizer, Seamus Simpson
((s.simpson /at/ salford.ac.uk)) by May 15, 2013. Your abstract should address
one of the topics mentioned above and have a separate cover sheet
providing your name(s), institutional affiliation(s) and e-mail
address(es). You will be notified of acceptance by June 30, 2013. Full
papers are due no later than October 1, 2013.
It is the intention of the organiser to put together an edited volume of
the conference contributions.
The Registration fee for the workshop is £25.
Details on booking accommodation will follow on acceptance of your proposal.
Organizer
Seamus Simpson,
Professor of Media Policy,
School of Media, Music and Performance,
University of Salford,
MediaCityUK,
Salford Quays,
Salford.
Manchester M50 2HE
Email: (s.simpson /at/ salford.ac.uk)
Seamus Simpson
Professor of Media Policy| Vice Chair, International Communication
Association, Communication, Law and Policy Division|
School of Arts and Media,
Floor 2, Desk 30, MediaCityUK, University of Salford, Salford M50 2HE
t: +44 (0) 1612956206
(s.simpson /at/ salford.ac.uk) | www.salford.ac.uk
MASTER_Salford logo.jpg
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