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[ecrea] Call for Discussants Academy Colloquium 'The Audience Turn in Journalism Studies'

Wed Oct 17 13:49:03 GMT 2018






Deadline extended!

New deadline: 1 November

*Call for Discussants: **/Academy Colloquium The Audience Turn in Journalism/**, **Amsterdam January 22-25, 2019*

We invite discussant applications for /The Audience Turn in Journalism/colloquium, a focused conference organized by Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and the University of Groningen and hosted by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. The colloquium is the final part of /The New News Consumer/ project (http://www.news-use.com/?page_id=718), a collaborative research project funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research and conducted by the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and the University of Groningen with twelve news industry partners.

*Call for Discussants*

The Academy Colloquium will be held*from 22 to 25 January 2019 in Amsterdam*. If you are interested in participating as a discussant in one or more of the panels of /The Audience Turn in Journalism/ /Colloquium/ (see Program, panel 1 to 4), please send an e-mail to (audienceturn /at/ news-use.com) <mailto:(audienceturn /at/ news-use.com)>with your motivation (250 words), including a brief discussion of how your work aligns with one or more of the panel themes. *The deadline for this call is November 1, 2018. *Early November applicants will hear from us.**

*Program *

The program consists of four focused panels in which the speakers share and discuss key findings and challenges from their work on (digital) news use and media habits. The panel presentations are followed by a discussion led by selected discussants. The discussants will reflect on the panel presentations based on their own research expertise.

_Day 0: Tuesday, January 22_

/19h: Opening reception/

_Day 1: Wednesday, January 23_

/Introduction: /The Audience Turn in Journalism Studies (Irene Costera Meijer, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam/University of Bergen)

/Panel 1: /Capturing and making sense of everyday news use: Heather Horst (University of Sydney), Heikki Heikkilä (University of Tampere), Ike Picone (Free University Brussels), Stephanie Edgerly (Northwestern University)

/Panel 2: /Connective news in everyday life: Elizabeth S. Bird (University of South Florida); Hallvard Moe (University of Bergen); Kim Schrøder (Roskilde University); Stephen Coleman (Leeds University)

_Day 2: Thursday, January 24_//

/Panel 3. /How young people understand and engage with news: Lynn Schofield Clarke (University of Denver); Paul Mihailidis (Emerson College); Sonia Livingstone (London School of Economics and Political Science)

/Panel 4. /Audiences and journalists: (how) do they know each other?: Seth Lewis (University of Oregon), Steen Steensen (Oslo Metropolitan University), and Wiebke Loosen (Hans-Bredow-Institut Hamburg)

/Panel 5. /Future of audience research in Journalism Studies:Unpacking current dilemmas, ambivalences and contradictions in audience research (moderator: Marcel Broersma, University of Groningen)

_Day 3: Friday, January 25_

/Extended Colloquium Session. /Engagement and Trust: James G. Robinson (The New York Times) and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Oxford University)

/Masterclass PhD’s and research master students. /Measuring changing news use and fragmented audiences: Kim Schrøder (Roskilde University) and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Oxford University)

*Aim*

The aim of this focused conference is to further knowledge of how the digitalization of journalism has changed and continues to shape news user practices, experiences and public engagement. As evident from the title, the colloquium takes a user-perspective to gain a better understanding of changing news habits in a digital era. Thus far, the audience perspective has received limited attention within journalism studies. If we want to capture and understand how digitalisation, globalisation and the increasing participatory nature of journalism have shaped people’s engagement with news, new theories, concepts and research methods are needed that put the news user center-stage.

This colloquium will theoretically and methodologically guide future studies on digital news uses and practices by bringing together 50 internationally renowned audience and journalism researchers from the fields of political communication, anthropology, social psychology, media and journalism studies to share, discuss and connect insights from their work. The outcome of this effort will be a research agenda that incorporates the different approaches and research findings brought forward by this colloquium. **

*Practical information*

The venue for the colloquium will be the Trippenhuis (Kloveniersburgwal 29, 1011, JV Amsterdam), seat of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Full registration is €150. This includes reception on Tuesday, dinner on Wednesday and Thursday, daily lunch, and tea and coffee breaks.  Please note that travel to Amsterdam and accommodation are not included. Limited funding might be available for candidates for whom the registration fee is an obstacle. The masterclass for PhD-students is free of charge.

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