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[ecrea] CFP UDC 2018
Wed Jul 26 06:21:38 GMT 2017
*CFP: Union for Democratic Communications Conference*
*Media, Resistance, and Justice: The Fight for Humanity*
*May 10-13, 2018
Loyola University Chicago*
*Chicago. Illinois*
In an era of increasing authoritarianism, militarization, and continuing
media consolidation, the need for robust democratic communication and
more powerful social movements has become urgent. The new US
administration has rushed to further inequality, racism, sexism, and the
destruction of the environment, including leaving the Paris Accords,
while targeting undocumented workers, immigrants, refugees, women, and
people of color, in particular—all of which has emboldened a rabid,
white supremacist rising. Globally the US and its myriad transnational
allies actively attack any and all democratic movements from Latin
America and Africa to the Mideast and Asia, while financing and
fomenting wars and interventions that displace millions and destroy the
lives of thousands. Transnational media everywhere obscure the
instigators and realities of rising inequality, providing spectacle and
entertainment for promoting military actions, austerity, and the gutting
of civil liberty and human rights.
In the midst of these attacks, powerful resistance and inspiring social
movements continue to emerge: from Black Lives Matter and the Fight for
$15, to the North Dakota Water Protectors; from mass social movements
across Latin America to battles by organized workers in China, Greece,
and South Africa; from powerful women’s movements in India and the
women’s march in the US to the expanding international environmental
movement.
This conference seeks to traverse the intersections of Media,
Resistance, and Justice through presentations and conversations that
offer insights and suggestions for advancing and securing a more
democratic, just society.
The Union for Democratic Communications 2018 conference invites
contributions on Media, Resistance, and Justice that address our
contemporary crises and the rise of state and non-state right wing
attacks. In particular, we invite contributions that highlight the means
and methods for active resistance, democratic communication, and the
promotion of social justice. New and established scholars, graduate
students, activists, and media creators are encouraged to submit proposals.
Topics for presentations may also address:
* Race, class, gender and/or indigeneity
* Debt, precarity and austerity
* Refugees and migrants
* Intersectionality
* slavery, colonialism/post-colonialism and/or the primitive
accumulation of capital
* progressive movements, social movements, mass mobilizations and
protests
* alt-global visions
* left-state alternatives
* media reform and communication policy
* neo-fascism
* media literacy and critical media theory
* the neoliberal assault on higher education, radical scholars and
academic freedom
* critical communication pedagogy
* fake news and propaganda
* intersections of politics, morality, and communication in the
current political climate
* eco media studies
*Individual Submissions:*
Abstracts for papers should be 300-500 words and include name and
affiliation of submitter.*
Enhancing Chance of Acceptance for Individual Submission:
* Don’t reveal your identity in the title or the abstract.
* Make sure your abstract relates to either the conference theme or
the organization’s mission (and ideally, to both).
* Describe clearly and concisely (300-500 words) what your submission
does.
* Make sure it is well-edited.
*Panels, Workshops, Working Groups, and Roundtable Submissions:*
Abstracts for panel proposals, workshops, and roundtables should be
300-500 words and include title, abstract, and participants invited.*
Enhancing the Chance of Acceptance for a Panel/Workshop:
* Have one member of the panel or workshop submit an overarching panel
title and abstract.
* Each member should submit an individual abstract for their
contribution and, if appropriate, a title for their contribution.
Also, include just the panel title so they can be reviewed together.
* Don’t reveal your identity or the identity of anyone on the panel in
any of the submissions
* Make sure all abstracts relate to either the conference theme or the
organization’s mission (and ideally, to both)
* In all abstracts, describe clearly and concisely (300-500 words)
what your submission does.
* Make sure it is well-edited.
*Graduate students should submit full papers and abstracts to be
considered for the Brian Murphy Student Paper Award.**
*All submissions are given a double-blind review.
*
*
*Please send abstracts and proposals to: *
https://easychair.org/cfp/UDC_2018
*
*
*Deadline for Submissions*: 15 October 2017
*
*
*Notice of Acceptance:*
Applicants will be notified of their acceptance no later than 15 January
2018.
*Conference website:* http://www.democraticcommunications.org/
For any questions, please contact: (udc.steering /at/ gmail.com)
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