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[Commlist] Call for papers: Reinventing science communication? Challenges for the post-truth era
Tue Feb 22 10:48:10 GMT 2022
Call for papers
*REINVENTING SCIENCE COMMUNICATION? CHALLENGES FOR THE POST-TRUTH ERA*
*An international conference*
Ljubljana, 13-14. 10. 2022
Submission of Abstracts:*30 April 2022*
**
Science communication has witnessed an unprecedented yet regionally
uneven growth in the last two decades. But although the formats and
actors of science communication are diversifying, the
professionalisation of science communication through trainingand
qualifications and its institutionalisation in research centres, higher
educationinstitutions and state agencies tend to support more or less
standardised strategies (cf. Bucchi and Trench, 2021).
Have recent and not so recent public crisis, most notably the pandemic
and the climate crisis, shown the inefficiency of these strategies; or
are they just calls for wider public engagement of science? Has science
communication successfully responded to the opportunities and challenges
of digital environments? How are recent practices of science
communication related to the rise of promotional culture, branding,
entrepreneurial university, and wider transformations in the role of
science and knowledge production in societies (cf. Väliverronen, 2021)?
How to respond to populist demands towards science and science-related
populism (cf. Mede and Schäfer, 2020)? In other words, does science
communication need reinventing in the post-truth era?
The conference,organized by the University of Ljubljana,
Alternator(www.alternator.science <http://www.alternator.science>)and
the Museums and Galeries of Ljubljana aims to bring together experts
active in science communication research, practice, training or
education. The conference organizers invite conference papers based on
either theoretical research or on case studies to address, among others,
thefollowingthemes:
·Science communication, crisis communication, and trust in science
·Conceptualizing science communication: between research and practice
·Trends in public communication of science and technology
·Science communication and the pandemic
·Science communication and the climate crisis
·Communicating sciences of the future (artificial intelligence,
biotechnology…)
·Digital humanities and the role of communication of humanities
·Science communication and/withinthe academic field: structural cha(lle)nges
·Science communication and inclusivity: from class to gender
Participantsare welcome to submit a proposal outside of this list if the
topic broadly fits the conference theme. *Graduate students*are also
encouraged to contribute to a *special students session* on the
conference theme.
Please submit your proposal of a paper or a session (300-500 words),
together with a short biography (maximum 100 words) and affiliation
information to the organizing comitee*via
email****(science.communication /at/ uni-lj.si)*
<mailto:(science.communication /at/ uni-lj.si)>*by 30 April 2022.***
The official language of the conference is English: all the proposals
should be submitted in English. The presentations will also be in
English.There will be no conferene fee, a book of abstracts will be
published by the time of the conference and oppurtunities for the
publication of an edited volume of selected papers after the conference
will be sought.
*Confirmed keynote speakers*:
Prof. *Sarah R. Davies *is Professor of Technosciences, Materiality, &
Digital Cultures at the Department of Science and Technology Studies,
University of Vienna. Her work explores the relationship between science
and society, and how this is mediated through digital spaces and
practices. She has published a number of books, including Hackerspaces
(2017, Polity), Science Communication (2016, Palgrave, with Maja Horst),
and Exploring Science Communication (2020, SAGE, with Ulrike Felt).
*Mićo Tatalović*is a news editor, Research Fortnight. He has worked as a
science news editor at Nature, New Scientist and SciDev.Net
<http://SciDev.Net>. He completed the Knight Science Journalism
fellowship at MIT, in Cambridge, US in 2018-2019. He is originally from
Rijeka, Croatia, and is still actively involved in promoting science
journalism in the region, through initiatives such as the Balkan School
of Science Journalism and Balkan Science Beat.
*Marianne Achiam*is an associate professor at the Department of Science
Education, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, where she leads the
research group on science communication. Her research and teaching focus
on how to employ interdisciplinary methods to create effective science
communication for sustainability. She has participated in a number of
national and international research projects about inclusive science
communication, including Hypatia, CRSC, and Our Museum.
*Nico Pitrelli *is the director of the Master's Course in Science
Communication “Franco Prattico” at SISSA, Trieste, Italy and Head//of
the Communications Office in the same institution. He has acted as
Communication Manager of the EuroScience Open Forum - ESOF2020 Trieste.
His last book is /Il giornalismo scientifico/ (Carocci, Rome).
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