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[ecrea] ICA Pre-Conference: Global Media and Human Rights
Tue Nov 14 15:40:34 GMT 2017
ICA Pre-Conference: Global Media and Human Rights
May 23 (1/2 day) & 24, 2018
Off-Site Venue: Autoklub ČR, Opletalova 29, 110 00, Praha 1
Conference Registration Fee: $35.00 USD
Deadline for abstract submissions is 31 January 2018
The preconference is organized by the Leading Research Environment,
“Global Media Studies and the Politics of Communication”, based at the
Department of Media Studies at Stockholm University, Sweden. The Leading
Research Environment has a focus on human rights and the media, and has
been hosting prominent guest professors focusing on socio-political and
cultural dimensions of mediation.
Sponsoring ICA Divisions
ERIC (Ethnicity in Race and Communication); Political Communication;
Environmental Communication; Global Communication and Social Change;
Philosophy, Theory and Critique
Confirmed Speakers
Prof. Lilie Chouliaraki, The London School of Economics
Prof. Silvio Waisbord, George Washington University
Prof. Kate Nash, Goldsmiths - University of London
Dr. Ekaterina Balabanova, University of Liverpool
Media and communication studies, with its history of linking human and
communication rights at crucial 20th century junctions, has a key role
in promoting human rights in the 21st century. The media cannot only
boost human rights consciousness by exposing their violations, but they
can inform civic action on unprecedented scales and mobilize
humanitarian intervention. On the flip side, media can (and do) injure
human rights through desensitization, where viewers are turned into
voyeurs of exotic victimization. Even more ubiquitous bruising of rights
is sustained through the pervasive use of surveillant technologies,
which bring with them social and historical contingencies.
Against this backdrop, this pre-conference is primarily based upon the
question of how media and communication studies has addressed and can
better address questions of justice, inequality and human rights in the
current conjuncture of contested flows and forces? To what extent has
the potential inherent in the multi-disciplinarity of media and
communication studies toward this goal been utilized or exhausted? We
consider civil, political, economic, social, environmental and cultural
rights in relation to media and communications, and intend to bring in
fresh perspectives on dynamics that underlie representation, production,
consumption as well as reception ends on a historically and spatially
expansive continuum. “Rights conflicts” constitute a key node here. Are
certain human rights positionings used as arguments for the violation of
others and Others? This pertains, for instance, to conflicts between the
media and communications-centred right to freedom of expression on the
one hand, and cultural/religious rights, on the other.
“The media” here are understood in their polysemic meanings:
institutions, corporate bodies, platforms, technologies, interfaces and
a vast array of communication venues from mobile apps to urban-space
mediations through ads, billboards and walls. The same degree of
multitude applies, historically, to the human rights discourse and
literature, where human rights and communication rights, despite the
underlying normative grounds that bind them together, are considered as
distinct concepts, thus separate areas of analysis and research,
disciplinarily ranging from legal studies to moral philosophy to media
ethics. As a “rights” framing, in both discursive and practical terms,
is intrinsically and increasingly linked with mediated voice in the
current communication milieu, this preconference aims and aspires to
host provocative debates on the state of the art on such issues and
perspectives in media and communication research.
Call for Papers: The preconference organizers invite submissions that
scrutinize the persistent and emergent intersections between media and
human rights in relation to sociocultural, political, economic, and
environmental dynamics. What roles do, for instance, citizen journalism,
and media witnessing play for strengthening human rights in the diverse
contexts of communicational and spatial crossroads? How, in relational
terms, do social movements, national governments and international
organizations weigh in the furthering of human rights, and in what ways
do media and communication (technologies) intervene and what affordances
do they bring in? In what domains of legal and cultural interventionism
do human rights organizations collaborate with media on digital
platforms? The overall objective is to contribute to knowledge and
debates on the crucial ties between human rights and the media in a
globalizing and digitalizing world. Both the challenges and
opportunities (e.g. mediated humanitarian intervention vis-à-vis the
question of desensitization of audiences to suffering) presented by such
macro dynamics are considered.
The preconference is intended to be of interest primarily to media and
communications researchers from a diverse variety of backgrounds and
disciplinary orientations. Due to the highly inter- and
trans-disciplinary nature of its theme, we also invite submissions from
neighboring disciplines as well as from activist networks and the
creative sector. We particularly encourage creative and experimental
formats and interventions such as fragments from short films,
installations and other genres of critical textual/visual mediations.
Potential topics include but are not limited to:
• Communication rights
• Racial/ethnic/gendered/sexual politics and positionalities • Cultural
politics, neoliberalism and the rise of the far-right
• Social movements
• Environmental communication and rights
• Popular culture and resistance
• The media and social justice
• Media studies, ‘rights’ discourses and intersectionality
• Social media, human rights and activism • Media strategies
• War, terrorism and surveillance
• Migration
• Humanitarianism
Selection will be based on abstract submission (min 250 words, max 500
words). The deadline for abstract submissions is 31 January 2018. The
decision on accepted proposals will be announced by February 15, 2018.
Accepted participants will circulate short position papers prior to the
preconference (deadline 30 April, 2018).
All abstracts must be written in Word, and include the following
information at the top of the page: (1) name, (2) position/title, (3)
affiliation, and (4) paper title. In the abstracts, please specify (1)
the thematic focus of the proposed contributions and (2) links to the
preconference scope.
Please email abstracts to Christian Christensen
((christian.christensen /at/ ims.su.se)) AND Miyase Christensen
((miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se)). In the subject line please write: “ICA
preconference submission (your last name)”.
Organizing committee: Christian Christensen, Miyase Christensen, Anna
Roosvall, Kristina Riegert (Stockholm University)
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