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[ecrea] Call for papers: Paradoxes as Sources of Creative Tensions, China Media Research
Mon Sep 03 21:17:31 GMT 2018
Call for papers: China Media Research
Special issue:
PARADOXES AS SOURCES OF CREATIVE TENSIONS
Guest editor: Ivana Beveridge
**
China Media Research invites scholars from various disciplines to submit
manuscripts on the theme of “Paradoxes as Sources of Creative Tensions.”
Scholars are increasingly adopting a paradox lens as a new way of
approaching the growing complexity of the “messy, apparently
unexplainable, and often seemingly irrational contemporary world”
(Smith, Erez, Jarvenpaa, Lewis, & Tracey, 2017, p. 304). Paradoxes have
been acknowledged as a source of creative tensions and energy that can
support learning, change and development. Notwithstanding the potential
of a paradox lens to inform the increasingly equivocal reality, paradox
research remains confined to organizational behavior and strategic
management, while its application in other fields of research remains
limited at best.
China Media Research invites scholars from a wide range of academic
disciplines to explore how to apply a paradox lens across academic
fields. In addition to the research applying paradoxical approaches,
scholars are invited to submit their original manuscripts that address
the following questions, among others:
- What are some of the persistent paradoxical tensions inherent
in academic research in general, or in your research field?
- What are the current and recommended strategies for dealing
with these tensions?
-What are the most common research methods applied to study
these tensions?
- How can the findings from your research field contribute
towards addressing long-
standing tensions in other fields of science?
- How can scholars move past the oversimplified or polarized
notions in science and
embrace complexity, diversity, and ambiguity?
- How can a paradox lens enrich academic research and help to
navigate complexity
and ambiguity in the contemporary world?
*Submissions and deadlines:
-30/11/2018: extended abstract up to 1,000 words
-15/12/2018: notification of abstract acceptance or refusal
-31/03/2019: full paper submission
Manuscripts should be prepared in accordance with the APA publication
manual (6th edition) and should not exceed 8,000 words including tables
and references. All manuscripts will be peer reviewed.
*Ivana Beveridge, University of Houston
Email: (ibeveridge /at/ bauer.uh.edu) <mailto:(ibeveridge /at/ bauer.uh.edu)>;
(Ivana.beveridge /at/ sunrise-education.com)
<mailto:(Ivana.beveridge /at/ sunrise-education.com)>
China Media Research (CMR) is an official joint publication of the
American Chinese Media Research Association and Communication Studies
Institute of Zhejiang University. The journal seeks to provide a
platform for Chinese media research, as well as to serve as a bridge
between media research done in China and in other parts of the global
community. In reciprocal fashion, the journal seeks to acquaint scholars
within China with media research done outside of China.
This is a peer- reviewed journal with an editorial board of senior
scholars from major universities in China, Europe, and the U.S. China
Media Research is the first international English-language journal in
its field. The journal includes papers directly related to all the
fields of Chinese media research as well as pioneering media research
papers from other sectors.
For further information, please visit the CMR website at:
www.chinamediaresearch.net <http://www.chinamediaresearch.net>
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