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[ecrea] CfP: Public service objectives in communications (IJDT)
Sun Nov 16 10:54:42 GMT 2014
Call for Papers
International Journal of Digital Television, Issue 6.2
Public service objectives in communications: Shifting paradigms (June 2015)
Guest edited by Michael Klontzas (University of Huddersfield, UK)
Deadline for Proposals: 1 December 2014
Deadline for Full Papers: 16 March 2015
In different parts of the world, the establishment and sustained
development of electronic media has been intrinsically associated with
national institutions delivering public service purposes to constructed
mass audiences. Public service media were understood as performing
important political, cultural and economic functions. On the back of
widespread public and political support for much of the 20th century,
public service broadcasters in a number of national contexts became
political communication platforms, production powerhouses, innovation
hubs, communications and industrial policy instruments, and household
brands. Their remit centred on changing definitions of diversities,
access and entitlements.
Globalising markets, shifting political and economic paradigms, and the
obsolescence of scarcity in the technical capacity of ICTs have been
progressively eroding the privileged position of public service media.
Their legitimacy and relevancy are questioned as audiences, revenues and
investment fragment, while intense lobbying from commercial players
supports public policies that seek to contain publically funded operations.
In this context, public service media further enjoying preferential and
protected access to resources is under constant scrutiny. Diverting such
resources away from longstanding, relatively integrated organisations
with explicit public service remits is increasingly seen as the way to
open up public service provision to market competition in on-demand
environments. Sharing out resources often involves top-slicing of
funding previously ring-fenced for public service media, and making
their output and production facilities available to third-parties.
Contestable funding has also been proposed to stimulate desirable
content and services in line with prescribed criteria.
In line with this theme, indicative perspectives include, but are not
limited to the following:
* Diffusion of the delivery of public service objectives
* Alternative models of funding public service content and services
* Case studies from different national contexts
* Technology and public service media
* Implications of redistribution of resources for traditional public
service media and their responses
* Strategies by third-party players and impact on independent content
producers
* EU state aid, competition and public service communications framework
* Media and information literacies for audiences and users
* Public service ethos, professionalism and the sense of public service
mission
* Linear, on-demand and converged media
* Public service objectives and the transition from public service
broadcasting to public service media and public service communications.
Please send an abstract of up to 500 words or questions to the guest
editor by 1 December 2014: Michael Klontzas (M.Klontzas /at/ hud.ac.uk) .
Invited authors will be notified by 15 December 2014 and full articles
of up to 8,000 words will be due on 16 March 2015. All submissions will
be subjected to double-blind peer review.
More information about the Journal and Notes for Contributors:
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=175
The International Journal of Digital Television will describe and
explain the transition to digital TV and wider trends in television. As
switchover happens across the globe and television's operations and
audiences are transformed, the International Journal of Digital
Television will be at the forefront of efforts to understand the changes
and developments. The Journal will bring together, and share, the work
of academics, policy-makers and practitioners, offering lessons from one
another's experience. Content will be broad and varied, evolving as the
focus shifts from switching off analogue TV to the challenge of
exploiting digital television's convergence with the Internet and
telecommunications. National case studies and comparative studies will
be a feature, accumulating the evidence for authoritative global
analysis of the economic, political and cultural factors accounting for
common principles and national differences.
University of Huddersfield inspiring tomorrow's professionals.
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