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[Commlist] cfp: Community and Activist Media: Resistance and Resurgence (JACM)
Wed Sep 30 16:13:43 GMT 2020
Journal of Alternative & Community Media (Journal)
ISSN 26344726 , ONLINE ISSN 22065857
The Journal of Alternative & Community Media (JOACM) publishes research
that helps explain the shifting media environment, and the ways in which
people use alternative forms of media and communication. Issues of
concern to the journal include the nature and distribution of media
power; access to and participation in media; media practices of
communities and social movements; and the possibilities of emerging
technologies and new media.
Volumes 1–4 of JOACM are available Open Access
Call for Papers
Journal of Alternative & Community Media
Special Issue: ‘Community and Activist Media: Resistance and Resurgence'
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/51565/1/Alternative_media2.pdf
Journal of Alternative & Community Media (JOACM) publishes research that
helps explain the shifting media environment and the ways in which
people use alternative forms of media and communication. Issues of
concern to the journal include the nature and distribution of media
power; access to and participation in media; media practices of
communities and social movements; and the possibilities of emerging
technologies and new media. This Special Issue of Journal of Alternative
& Community Media is inspired by papers from the OURMedia gathering in
Brussels, 2019; and the planned (but cancelled) post-conference to the
ICA 2020, to submit papers on the theme, ‘Community and Activist Media:
Resistance and Resurgence’.
Planned publication is September 2021. We call for academic papers
alongside contributions from alternative media practitioners who will
contribute to a Special Section, ‘Essays from the Frontline’.
From the resurgence of white supremacy and authoritarian rule to
rapidly changing technologies and the rise of social media; and from the
precarious state of journalism to state crackdowns on dissent and the
‘free press’, community and activist media face multiple ‘disruptions’
and challenges. While the twenty-first-century media environment offers
increasing opportunities for ‘voice’, the challenges for community and
activist media are practical, political and fundamental. At the same
time that this is occurring in community and activist media, scholars in
this field are often working at the intersection of research and
activism, a theme explored in the 2019 OURMedia gathering.
This Special Issue will bring together engaged scholars to explore the
challenges and opportunities for community and activist media at a time
of unprecedented pressures – considering new resurgences and enhanced
opportunities for resistance. Additionally, paper proposals at the
intersection of research and activism are most welcome; and by
extension, papers that draw connections between scholarly activism
(scholactivism) and media activism, emanating from a key theme of the
OURMedia conference, are also sought.
Key questions to be explored include: • What is the role of activist and
community media in contemporary social justice struggles – including
anti-racist work in the context of resurgent racisms and intersectional
work in the context of anti-feminist backlash? What are the
possibilities for resistance and transformation? • How can we best
analyse and respond to white supremacist and far-right media?
How do community and alternative media enable voices that are
marginalized or excluded from the ‘mainstream’ to be heard – what can we
learn (or not ) from their practices?• What is the role and value of
established ‘community’ media when social media platforms enable a
proliferation of voice?• What have we learned from the legacy of
platforms such as Indymedia, and how can this inform our structures,
agendas and goals for the future?• How does one integrate activism and
scholarship? What are the tensions between the ‘scientific’ needs of
research and commitments to social change and social justice?• What is
the state of news and current affairs – including news journalisms and
issues-based talks programming – at a time of both technological and
professional ‘disruption’?• What does ‘community’ or ‘alternative’ media
mean in the current digital media environment, which features a
proliferation of non-mainstream voices?
The Special Issue welcomes participation from researchers and
practitioners across community and activist media very broadly defined –
including alternative media in all its guises, community media
interventions, alternative journalism initiatives, citizens media, media
activism and more. No APCs are charged. Media activists and other
practitioners who wish to contribute should contact Susan Forde directly
((s.forde /at/ griffith.edu.au)) to discuss an alternative ‘Essays from the
Frontline’ format to complement the suite of academic papers to be
published in this Special Issue.
Abstracts should be submitted by 1 October 2020
Full articles are due 10 December 2020
Reviews will be sent to authors by 15 February 2021
Revised manuscripts are due 30 April 2021
Article acceptances notified 30 June 2021
Publication September 2021
Please send your abstracts to the guest editors.
Guest Editors
Tanja Dreher
University of New South Wales, Australia
(t.dreher /at/ unsw.edu.au)
Pieter Maeseele
University of Antwerp, Belgium
(pieter.maeseele /at/ uantwerpen.be)
Susan Forde
Griffith University, Australia
(s.forde /at/ griffith.edu.au)
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