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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Journal of Digital Media & Policy (Special Issue: ‘US-Based SVOD Providers in Europe: Impacts and Challenges’)
Thu May 12 20:36:49 GMT 2022
Call for Papers: Journal of Digital Media & Policy
Special Issue: ‘US-Based SVOD Providers in Europe: Impacts and Challenges’
#JDMPJournal
Deadlines:
Abstracts (400 words): 12 November 2022
Full manuscripts (6–8,000 words, including references): 6 March 2023
We will also consider short reports/commentaries with a policy focus of
between 1,500–2,000 words, as well as books reviews. All submissions
should be directed to the guest editors.
Guest Editors:
Maria Trinidad García Leiva
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain
(mtgleiva /at/ hum.uc3m.es) <mailto:(mtgleiva /at/ hum.uc3m.es)>
Heritiana Ranaivoson
Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
(heritiana.renaud.ranaivoson /at/ vub.be)
<mailto:(heritiana.renaud.ranaivoson /at/ vub.be)>
Principal Editor:
Petros Iosifidis
City, University of London, UK
(p.iosifidis /at/ city.ac.uk) <mailto:(p.iosifidis /at/ city.ac.uk)>
Read the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/66257/1/CfP_JDMP_May_2022.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/66257/1/CfP_JDMP_May_2022.pdf>
Information:
Audiovisual production, distribution and consumption have experienced
remarkable changes over the past few decades. The global market for
video-on-demand (VoD) services has particularly grown (Doyle 2018;
Johnson 2019). According to Statista, so-called over-the-top TV and
video revenue worldwide is expected to reach 210.29 billion US dollars
by 2026, more than double the 83.34 billion generated in 2019. One of
among the most popular and rapidly expanding of these services are
subscription video-on-demand services (SVoD). According to this same
source, the gross number of SvoD subscriptions worldwide amounted to 904
million in 2020 and is expected to reach nearly 1.5 billion by 2026.
In Europe, where SvoD subscriptions tripled between 2017 and 2020,
according to Ampere Analysis, the growth has been ascribed to the
presence and rapid expansion of US-based providers like Netflix or Prime
Video, which have been launched from 2012 on and dominate the scenario.
They are putting pressure on the European markets and regulators, as
their reach and their user/subscription base expanded rapidly (Arthofer
et al 2016; EAO 2018). And this in spite of the growing number of
European companies offering SvoD services. The entrance of newcomers
such as Apple TV+ or Disney+ has confirmed the key status of this type
of service.
On the one hand, US-based SvoD providers have been linked to an increase
in the number of audiovisual works available in the European markets
(Iordache 2021) and the reinforcement of more flexible ways of
audiovisual consumption (Marrazzo 2020); while they have also been
placed at the forefront of creativity and innovation (Neira 2020). On
the other hand, they have also been at the centre of many policy debates
(Ranaivoson 2019). Some of the most critical questions regarding their
role have been related to the non-transparent impact of their
recommender systems on the content displayed to their users (Ranaivoson
2020) as well as to discoverability issues (García Leiva 2020); to the
relative scarcity of local works compared to the abundance of
programming originating in the United States (Albornoz and García Leiva
2021); to the unequal conditions in which traditional media companies
must face competition from transnational providers, or to non-compliance
with obligations ranging from taxes to the promotion of European works
(García Leiva and Albornoz 2020). Their impact and role, therefore, are
thus situated within very different contexts and have, in turn,
different consequences.
This special issue seeks to consider, both empirically and
theoretically, the numerous challenges arising from the activities of
US-based SvoD providers and their economic, policy and sociocultural
impacts in Europe. It will bring together scholars of communication,
law, economics and technology, who are invited to address issues such as:
• their role in the diversity of content made available, especially
regarding their type, origin and the languages involved;
• their impact on audiovisual production and distribution, especially in
terms of deals, investment and costs;
• their relationships developed with other industry players in local
markets (creators, producers, broadcasters, etc.);
• their competition with new and traditional audiovisual media services
providers, especially public service media;
• their implementation of recommender systems, and the impact on the
diversity of suggested and displayed content (discoverability issues
included);
• their effect on consumption and reception practices, and how SvoD
consumers use them in complement or substitution of their other
audiovisual practices;
• the implications for future regulatory frameworks and policy decisions
in light, for example, of the Audiovisual Media Services Directive and
of the Council of Europe’s European Convention on Transfrontier Television;
• their eventual contribution to the development of a European
audiovisual space.
• Comparative approaches (between countries, regions, providers,
services…) will be especially welcomed.
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