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[ecrea] CfP Media Industry Studies: Current Debates and Future Directions
Wed Aug 30 06:46:22 GMT 2017
MEDIA INDUSTRY STUDIES: CURRENT DEBATES AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
18-20 April 2018   King’s College London
International conference hosted by the Department of Culture, Media and 
Creative Industries, King’s College London
Jointly organized by:
Media Industries Scholarly Interest Group, Society for Cinema and Media 
Studies (SCMS)
Media Industry Studies Interest Group, International Communication 
Association (ICA)
Media Production Analysis Working Group, International Association of 
Mass Communication Research (IAMCR)
Screen Industries Work Group, European Network for Cinema and Media 
Studies (NECS)
Media Industries and Cultural Production Section, European Communication 
Research and Education Association (ECREA)
European Media Management Association (EMMA)
Screen Industries Special Interest Group, British Association of Film, 
Television and Screen Studies (BAFTSS)
AG Medienindustrien, Gesellschaft für Medienwissenschaft (GFM)
Media Industries journal
HOST COMMITTEE
Paul McDonald (conference chair), Sarah Atkinson, Bridget Conor, 
Virginia Crisp, Jeanette Steemers
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Hanne Bruun (ECREA), Elizabeth Evans (Media Industries), Tom Evens 
(EMMA), David Hesmondhalgh (ECREA), Derek Johnson (SCMS), Skadi Loist 
(GFM), Amanda Lotz (ICA), Alisa Perren (Media Industries), Roel Puijk 
(IAMCR), Kevin Sanson (Media Industries), Andrew Spicer (BAFTSS), Petr 
Szczepanik (NECS), Patrick Vonderau (GFM)
FOCUS
Studies of media industries have formed a distinctive strand of media 
scholarship. Foundational traditions in this field are marked by the 
political economy of communications, sociology of media occupations and 
institutions, media economics, media industry historiography, and 
critical and cultural studies. Subsequently, insights drawn from 
critical legal studies, cultural policy studies, economic geography, 
creative labour, cultural economy, Internet studies, production cultures 
and informal media economies have diversified and enriched the field.
In part this interest arises from contemporary changes within the media 
industries themselves, with the global extension and integration of 
media markets, digitalization of media production and distribution, 
changing business models, proliferation of supply channels, patterns of 
corporate convergence, and the blurring of producer/consumer relations. 
These are only the most recent development, however, of industries built 
on complex and contested histories.
With the boom in media industries scholarship and emergence of dedicated 
degree programmes or single modules, studies of industry have gained a 
visible place in media curricula. This conference is therefore providing 
an international and interdisciplinary forum for reviewing the past and 
present state of media industry studies, and defining the future of the 
field.
Papers, panels and workshop are invited from all traditions in media 
industries scholarship. We welcome work across the full breadth of media 
industries – print, publishing and journalism, advertising, recorded 
music, film/cinema, radio, television, video, games, mobile 
communications and social media - and in all international or historical 
contexts.
Thematic concerns include but are not limited to:
•	•	critical and conceptual perspectives
•	methodological approaches
•	cultural and creative industries
•	political economy
•	production cultures and studies
•	economic sociology
•	de-westernizing media industry studies
•	distribution studies
•	gatekeepers and intermediaries
•	cultural and economic globalization
•	impacts of digitalization
•	independent and alternative media institutions
•	media industries historiography
•	cooperative and competitive inter-industry interactions
•	law and the shaping of media industries
•	marketing and branding media content
•	media management
•	media markets and flows
•	retail and sales of media
•	networks, infrastructures and ecologies
•	ownership and concentration
•	policy and regulation
•	politics of media labour
•	teaching media industries
•	media technologies as these relate to media industries
SUBMISSIONS
Deadline: 23.00hrs GMT 15 September 2017
Submissions are welcomed in three categories: open call papers, 
pre-constituted panels, or pre-constituted workshops. Detailed 
requirements below.
Delegates can contribute to the conference in up to different two 
capacities, i.e. presenting both a paper and contributing to a workshop 
but not presenting two papers. Chairing a panel or workshop will NOT 
count as one of these roles.
To submit your paper, panel or workshop, please access the submission 
portal.
1) Open call papers
Format: solo or jointly presented research papers lasting no more than 
20mins. Submissions in this category must provide the following details:
Type:		State this is an open call research paper
Title:		Paper title
Name(s): 		Speaker(s)
Contact: 		E-mail address(es) for the speaker(s)
Abstract:		Description of the paper not exceeding 300 words
Sources:		List up to 5 sources relevant to the paper
Biography:	Brief professional biography/ies for the speaker(s) not 
exceeding 100 words
Keywords: 	Up to 5 terms identifying the focus of the paper
2) Pre-constituted panels
Format: 90mins panel of 3 x 20mins OR 4 x 15mins thematically linked 
research papers followed by questions. Submissions in this category must 
provide the following details AS A SINGLE SUBMISSION.
Type:		State this is a pre-constituted panel
Title:		Panel title
Name(s): 		Chair(s)
Contact: 		E-mail address(es) for the chair(s)
Abstract:		Description of the panel not exceeding 300 words
Biography:	Brief professional biography/ies for the chair(s) not 
exceeding 100 words
Keywords: 	Up to 5 terms identifying the focus of the panel
In addition, the submission must provide the following for EACH paper on 
the panel.
Title:		Paper title
Name(s): 		Speaker(s)
Contact: 		E-mail address(es) for the speaker(s)
Abstract:		Description of the paper not exceeding 300 words
Sources:		List up to 5 sources relevant to the paper
Biography:	Brief professional biography/ies for the speaker(s) not 
exceeding 100 words
3) Pre-constituted workshops
Format: 90mins interactive forum led by 4 or 5 x 8mins thematically 
linked informal presentations designed to energize collective discussion 
and participation amongst the speakers and the audience of matters 
relating to the practices of researching or teaching media industries. 
Submissions in this category must provide the following details AS A 
SINGLE SUBMISSION.
Type:		State this is a pre-constituted workshop
Title:		Workshop title
Name(s): 		Chair(s)
Contact: 		E-mail address(es) for the chair(s)
Abstract:		Description of the workshop not exceeding 300 words
Sources:		List up to 5 sources relevant to the workshop
Biography:	Brief professional biography/ies for the chair(s) not 
exceeding 100 words
Keywords: 	Up to 5 terms identifying the focus of the workshop
In addition, the submission must provide the following for EACH 
presenter in the workshop.
Name(s): 		Presenter(s)
Contact: 		E-mail address(es) for the presenter(s)
Abstract:		Description of the presentation not exceeding 150 words
Biography:	Brief professional biography/ies for the speaker(s) not 
exceeding 100 words
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