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[Commlist] cfp - The Global Promotion and Mediation of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals
Wed Jun 05 19:21:19 GMT 2019
Following April's MDC/LCPR Jakarta conference on the UNSDGs, please find
a CFP for the Media Discourse Centre's follow-up event
*The Global Promotion and Mediation of the UN's Sustainable Development
Goals*
*Monday**16th September 2019*
/*Organisers*: Stuart Price and Ben Harbisher/
/*Submission* email for all contributors:///*(mdcevent /at/ dmu.ac.uk)*
*Eventbrite registration link*: to register is
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/2-the-global-promotionmediation-of-the-uns-sustainable-development-goals-tickets-58351597198
250 Word Abstract and Bio are required by *1st July 2019* - send to
*(mdcevent /at/ dmu.ac.uk)*: authors will be notified by the *15th July*, and
successful contributors will be asked to submit full papers by *30th
August*.
*Essential Details
*The *Media Discourse Centre*, in collaboration with the /International
Journal of Media Discourse/ (http://www.ijmd.org.uk) and the London
School of Public Relations (Jakarta), is pleased to announce the second
stage of its Call for Papers [keynotes to be announced]
This phase of the event will consist of a full-day MDC conference on the
UNSDGs, paying particular attention to the rhetorical composition and
discursive framework of the Goals, the response of governments and
public authorities, and the empirical evidence produced by the
Jakarta/Bali case studies.
_*CFP - The Global Promotion and Mediation of the UN's Sustainable
Development Goals
*_
On 1 January 2016, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development came into force. The UN
describes its Sustainable Development Goals as 'a shared blueprint for
peace and prosperity for people and the planet, now and into the
future'. Consisting of 17 inter-connected fields of activity, the UNSDGs
are framed as a moral intervention, and couched in the language of
development. It is this perspective - an apparently progressive
commitment to justice combined with adherence to the expansion of the
economy - that has encountered both support and some criticism from
academic commentators. While Kopnina believed that the UNSDGs will lead
to 'a greater spread of unsustainable production and consumption'
(2015), the sheer scale of the UN's ambitions prompted Biermann et al
(2017) to note that '[the Goals] collective success will depend on a
number of institutional factors such as the extent to which states ...
translate the global ambitions into national contexts'.
The SDGs address a number of 'stakeholders'- ranging from multinationals
to Governments; NGO’s and of course are regarded as objectives that
should apply to all citizens of the world. Over the next fifteen years,
the UN intends to mobilise efforts to end all forms of poverty, fight
inequalities and tackle climate change, while ensuring that 'no one is
left behind'. Three years into this programme, the conference examines
the progress made in the fight to end poverty, to promote health, to
develop sustainable smart cities, to prevent further climate change, to
facilitate economic growth, to protect the oceans, and to end world hunger.
*Conference themes include:
*
how the objectives above are communicated or promoted within 'developed'
and especially 'developing' nations
the extent to which these goals being encouraged, measured, enacted or
resisted
the local, autonomous, grassroots initiatives that may embrace or go
beyond the framework set by the UN
the social, political, cultural and economic barriers to the successful
attainment of the UNSDGs
the application of discourse/multi-modal approaches to the textual
material produced within a material/symbolic environment
the representation of those groups identified as vulnerable and in need
of support
the ways in which the rights of women, notions of gendered identity,
descriptions of class location, and ideas about race/ethnicity are
articulated (or not) within the UNSDGs
the use by state and corporate authority of discourses that attempt to
reproduce the symbolic references employed by the UN
who, within the various DAC territories and within 'developed' nations,
are presented as the main proponents, actors, or opponents of the UNSDGs
the relationship between the UNSDGs and the concept and practice of
globalisation
the role of policing, surveillance, regimes of border-control, and other
barriers and impediments to collective social action
the relationship between the Goals and the activity of social movements
how 'existential' and other threats are constituted through the language
and images used in the SDGs
the media ecology/context of the call and the responses it creates
case studies covering the successes or failures of the initiatives
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