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[ecrea] CFP - The Future of Media Content: Interventions and Industries in the Internet Era
Tue Feb 14 21:24:23 GMT 2017
*2017 Joint Workshop of the ECREA “Communication Law and Policy” and
“Media Industries and Cultural Production” Sections*
The Future of Media Content: Interventions and Industries in the
Internet Era
Call for Papers
The “Communication Law and Policy” and “Media Industries and Cultural
Production” Sections of the European Communications Research and
Education Association (ECREA) invite abstracts for theoretical and
empirical papers on the topic o/f The Future of Content: Interventions
and Industries in the Internet Era/. The workshop will take place in
Norwich, United Kingdom from *15-16 September 2017*. It is hosted and
organized by the University of East Anglia’s School of Politics,
Philosophy, Language and Communication Studies. With a keynote address
from *Professor Eli Noam *co-sponsored by UEA’s Centre for Competition
Policy, a planned panel with industry and regulatory stakeholders, and a
special YECREA session for early career researchers, this will be a
unique opportunity to bring together those investigating the processes
of production and distribution with those studying the policy and
regulation governing those processes.
Media and communications industries have changed dramatically over the
past decade and both businesses and policy makers are struggling to
adapt. Legacy media companies engaged in cultural and news production
are trying to change their business models in a manner that will allow
them to survive in the face of increased competition for advertising
income and the constraints of having a new breed of intermediaries
between them and their audiences. Policy makers are looking beyond the
traditional investment in public service broadcasting and content quotas
for new interventions and policy mechanisms that might encourage content
production and distribution. One of the biggest challenges is defining
the landscape of actors, markets and relationships in which content is
created and disseminated – from the YouTube star making and reaching
millions from a bedroom to the public service broadcaster (PSB) that is
now managing big data for its online audience and negotiating with
service providers for zero-rating carriage in order to reach its
audiences with sufficient speed and stability. This joint workshop
invites contributions from a broad range of disciplines, interested in
the policy, production and business of content and its carriage. We
welcome perspectives from political economy, news and cultural
production practice, policy and governance studies, media and cultural
production history, media and communication law, and other approaches
and fields. We welcome theoretical, methodological and empirical
submissions - case studies and comparative work, as well as innovative
use of methods are encouraged.
The workshop organisers invite researchers interested in the following
areas:
▪/The news and cultural production landscape:/How is content being
produced and distributed? What does the new value chain look like for
the cultural industries? What roles are legacy and new actors playing
and what are the challenges they face? To what extent are concepts such
as commercialisation, citizen/consumer, and public interest still useful
as normative frameworks for considering the production and distribution
of content? How do or should we define ‘culture’ and ‘journalism’, and
where are the boundaries, if they persist, among different types of
content? What is the future of highly resource dependent types of
content such as quality news, investigative journalism, high quality
drama, documentaries and feature films? How are public and private media
organizations adapting strategically and in their everyday work? Where
and how is innovation happening?
▪/Funding content into the future/: How is ‘value’ being conceived and
exchanged among players, and how are relationships with audiences/users
being defined? What are the ‘currencies’ of these relationships, and of
those among the various commercial and public actors? What role does
data play and what are the implications? How has the function of
copyright and intellectual property rights changed? What are the
particular challenges across different kinds of contexts and markets?
How useful are concepts such as globalization, the citizen/consumer and
‘the public’ as normative foundations for investigating issues around
the funding of content? What new ones might be? What roles are internet
intermediaries and online platforms playing in the business of content?
▪/Governance and intervention:/To what extent are traditional mechanisms
for supporting public interest or public service content, such as
quotas, subsidies, PSB, must carry obligations and others still
relevant? Who are the actors in the governance of content production and
distribution and what are their interests? How do they try to influence
policy-making? Where are the key points of policy intervention or
regulation? What are the implications of multi-level governance (e.g.
EU, WTO and ITU), of ongoing austerity, and of the rise of populist and
even new authoritarian governments? How might research contribute to key
debates around the EU’s Digital Single Market agenda, burgeoning free
trade agreements and media plurality? What are the implications for
content of the right to be forgotten, traffic management and zero-rating
carriage, and media concentration?
Abstracts of *no more than 400 words* should be submitted for blind peer
review in Word-format directly to the organizers of the conference *by
March 31, 2017* (Sally Broughton Micova (s.broughton-micova /at/ uea.ac.uk)).
/Each abstract should address one of the above topics in a sound
theoretical and methodological manner, include a title as well as the
name(s), institutional affiliation(s) and e-mail address(es) of the
author(s)./Colleagues will be notified of acceptance by May 15, 2017,
and registration is required by July 15, 2017. Full papers are due no
later than August 31, 2017. Reduced fee for ECREA recognized
“soft-currency” countries and non-waged participants will be available.
More information will be available in due time on the ECREA CLP website
https://commlawpolicy.wordpress.com/
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