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[ecrea] CFP - Signal Strength: women & media practice in conflict and crisis situations
Tue Jan 16 08:22:25 GMT 2018
*We are delighted to be able to announce an extension to the cfp for
this event. Abstracts are now welcome until Monday 22 January 2018. *
**Call for Papers**
*Theme: ‘Signal Strength: women & media practice in conflict and crisis
situations’*
Thursday *8th March 2018* (International Women’s Day)
Deadline for abstracts: *EXTENDED TO MONDAY 22nd **JANUARY 2018.*
*Speakers confirmed so far include: *Caroline Vuillemin, CEO, Fondation
Hirondelle, Lausanne; Dr Helen Turton, University of Sheffield; Tala
Halawa, Palestinian Journalist, Ramallah Occupied Palestinian Territories.**
This symposium
(https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/journalism/events/signal-strength/cfp
<https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/journalism/events/signal-strength/cfp>)
aims to examine the extent to which radio – and other forms of media –
provides a platform for women who are, or have been, in conflict and
crisis. Drawing on practice and academic research, discussions will
explore multiple angles such as:- gendering media strategies to improve
the recognition and representation of women in peril; issues surrounding
the safety and protection of women journalists and aid workers; and the
limits and limitation of media freedoms.
We invite contributions from academics and practitioners with experience
in radio and international conflict with the aim of exchanging knowledge
and best practice. We welcome papers related to these themes or to the
broader topic:
·Use of radio and media in conflict environments
·Use of radio to support women
·Local and/or community radio in conflict/crisis
·Women as (radio/media) audience in conflict/crisis
·Empowering of women – and local communities – through radio (and media)
·Radio in society in conflict-affected areas
·Safety and protection of women journalists
·Representation of women in conflict/crisis by the radio
·Women and broadcasting technologies
·Media freedoms – the limits and limitations of media strategies and
policies, domestic and foreign
·Stereotyping on air and in the media
·Resourcing women's radio journalism in conflict/crisis environments
·Women in radio and on air - pedagogy and practice
*The context: *According to the United Nations Refugee Agency (2017),
women comprise approximately 50 per cent of refugees worldwide, mostly
as a result of conflict, and are often put at greater hardship than men
in these situations based upon their gender. With men either killed or
at war, women become the heads of households, conservers of the
community and rebuilders of the economy. The significant impact of
conflict and crisis on women, who have also often become targets of
sexual violence, is recognised in the UN Security Council’s resolution
1325. As media coverage of women in conflict and crisis is increasing,
the role of radio within this merits further exploration. Of all forms
of media, radio occupies a particular place in conflict-affected areas,
providing a low-tech and low-cost public space, being cheap and
portable, not relying on a mains source of electricity and being able to
target illiterate or orally-based cultures.
In certain circumstances, digital technologies also provide for the
production and circulation of audio and visual media material. Such
access to online communication channels facilitates conversation and
dialogue from the comfortingly mundane to life-saving. For women in
unstable societies, the intimate nature of radio also ensures a safe
haven, away from male or mixed environments, in which to seek comfort,
advice and helplines. It also provides the opportunity for women, as
practitioners, to represent their female audiences and reach out to them.
When conflict and crisis necessitate migration, and when women and
families are forced to move and live in foreign countries, media – and
radio in particular – can play a significant role in the settling-in
process. Not only can digital technologies enable the tuning-in online
to estranged stations and the familiar voices of home, but local
services can proffer the welcoming hand of friendship and provide
opportunities for empowerment through cultural and linguistic guidance,
as well as moral support.
Drawing on practice as well as academic research, this symposium aims to
provide a platform not just for the theory but for voicing lived
experiences too.**
*Submission guidelines: *
Please send 150-200-word abstracts, with short bio, to
(e.heywood /at/ sheffield.ac.uk) <mailto:(e.heywood /at/ sheffield.ac.uk)> *by** 22
JANUARY 2018* Speakers will be notified of acceptance by 30th January 2018.
Registration fee – £35 (£25 for early bird booking). The symposium is
open to anyone interested in this topic, regardless of whether they are
presenting a paper.
https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/journalism/events/signal-strength/cfp
<https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/journalism/events/signal-strength/cfp>
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