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ECREA WEEKLY digest ARTICLES

  • 31.07.2024 20:56 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Comunicazioni Sociali: Journal of Media, Performing Arts and Cultural Studies on immersive media (Special Issue)

    Deadline: September 2, 2024

    Edited by Piermarco Aroldi, Barbara Scifo, and Francesca Pasquali 

    https://comunicazionisociali.vitaepensiero.it/news-call-for-papers-frameless-experiences-for-a-multidisciplinary-approach-to-immersive-media-6528.html  

    The development of perceptual and narrative environments enabled by immersive digital technologies – such as videomapping and extended realities (virtual, augmented and mixed) associated with increasingly high-performance artificial intelligence systems – has long been the basis for new media experiences in various fields: from entertainment (cinema, video games, theme parks, live events, etc.) to education and training; from cultural and scientific dissemination (documentaries, exhibitions, etc.) to experimentation in the visual and performing arts.

    These environments go beyond and transfigure the traditional 'framed' vision of classical art works and media screens, moving towards a synesthetic, participatory and total user experience, characterised by immediacy and presence: real environments that can be explored by users, according to the different degrees of interactivity envisaged, which can both enable the user to "immerse" himself in another world (although in a continuum with the perceptual dimensions of physical reality) and allow the digital contents to "emerge" within the physical space, integrating it with new meanings and new narratives.

    In the public debate, however, the diffusion of such technologies is often associated with both forms of 'hype' and 'moral panic', both animated by technocentric perspectives. Instead, there is a need to offer solid knowledge and reflection around the concept and experience of immersivity, reconstructing the roots and the cultural, social and economic paradigms that are driving the development of these new media and environments, in order to also fully grasp their potential for communication and other applications or, conversely, their limitations.

    This reflection can be promoted starting from the adoption of a multidisciplinary and systemic approach, able to put into historical perspective the recent technological development of the digital media immersivity paradigm. The aim is to trace the cultural, anthropological, narrative, artistic and media origins of the 'total' experience based on the interaction and physical, multi-sensorial and emotional involvement of the spectator, as well as the commercial and industrial drives.

    For this reason, this call for papers for a special issue of Comunicazioni Sociali: Journal of Media, Performing Arts and Cultural Studies is looking for contributions (capable of reading the complexity of the issues posed by the new immersive digital media on the level of cultural imaginaries, aesthetic and narrative forms, fruition and marketing. Thus, it is possible to reflect on the multiple implications (aesthetic, performative, perceptual, cognitive, social, communicative, and formative) of their diffusion.

    Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

    - The cultural, media and economic archaeologies and genealogies of immersivity

    - The fictional narratives and social imaginaries around immersive technologies

    - The theoretical conceptualisations of the notion of immersivity and immersive media

    - The creative potential of immersive technologies in artistic, industrial and cultural production

    - The multisensoriality of immersive environments and experience

    - The forms of immersive storytelling

    - The status of the audience of immersive experiences

    - The transformations and implications of using immersive environments for learning and training, for care and therapeutic practices and for others field of application

    We welcome contributions from different disciplinary perspectives, including media semiotics, science and technology studies, aesthetic philosophy, digital media, studies on the history and languages of theatre and live performance, as well as game and sound studies, etc.).

    Please send your abstract and a short biographical note by September 2nd, 2024, filling the following form: 

    https://www.vpjournals.it/index.php/comunicazionisociali/about/submissions

    Abstracts should be from 300 to 400 words of length (in English). All submissions should include: 5 keywords, name of author(s), institutional affiliation, contact details and a short bio for each author.

    Authors will be notified of proposal acceptance by September 16, 2024.

    If the proposal is accepted, the author(s) will be asked to submit the full article, in English, by November 17, 2024.

    Submission of a paper will be taken to imply that it is unpublished and is not being considered for publication elsewhere.

    The articles must not exceed 5,000/6,000-words in English (including references).

    For editorial guidelines, please refer to the section “Guide for the authors” on the Comunicazioni sociali website: http://comunicazionisociali.vitaepensiero.com

    Contributions will be submitted to a double blind peer review process.

    The issue number 1/2025 of “Comunicazioni Sociali” will be published in April/May 2025. It will be available in open access on the journal website.

    “Comunicazioni Sociali” is an OPEN ACCESS journal, indexed in Scopus, and it is an A-class rated journal by ANVUR in Cinema, photography, and television (L-ART/06), Performing arts (L-ART/05), and Sociology of culture and communication (SPS/08).

  • 31.07.2024 20:53 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    CICANT, Lusófona University, Portugal (deadline 3 september 2024)

    Job Position: Ph.D. Research Assistant

    Job/Fellowship Reference: CEEC-COFAC/CICANT/AUX- 1/2024

    Main research field: Communication Sciences, Educational Sciences and Media and Technology

    About the recruitment process

    COFAC, Cooperativa de Formação e Animação Cultural crl/ Universidade Lusófona, hereby opens a call to recruit a Ph.D. researcher, corresponding to position 195 of the Research Career Statute, under the terms of the applicable legislation, with an Open Ended Employment Contract, within the scope of contract program between Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, I.P.(FCT), and the above-mentioned Cooperative, supported by national funds inscribed in the budget of the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) – and carried out at CICANT - Centre for Research in Applied Communication, Culture, and New Technologies. The contract to be made is scheduled to begin on November, 1st, 2024, and finish, predictably, on October, 31st 2030.

    Eligibility and Applications

    1. Position to be filled and terms of open call:

    a) The call aims to hire a Ph.D. researcher, with an open ended employment contract;

    b) National, foreign or stateless Ph.D. researchers may apply to the position.

    2. Cumulatively, the candidate should have the following academic profile:

    a) Adequate background in Communication Sciences and, secondly, in Education Sciences and in media and technology

    b) Ph.D. degree for over 5 years and track in Digital Citizenship and Digital Rights.

    c) Experience in the field of Active and Innovative Methodologies and Children and Youth will be especially valued.

    d) Leadership capacity with evidence of scientific and financial management of funded projects;

    e) Evidence of good work capacity in interdisciplinary environments, organization, and work capabilities;

    f) Up to five publications in leading international peer-reviewed multidisciplinary scientific journals and/or in leading international peer-reviewed journals, peer-reviewed proceedings and/or monographs;

    g) Experience in participating in national and international scientific networks;

    h) Experience in coordinating national and international research projects, using competitive funding;

    i) Invitations to national and international conferences and/or international universities;

    j) Experience in community dissemination activities (scientific and non-scientific), through participation in national and international scientific events, organization of scientific events and support for the dissemination of the project and its results;

    k) Experience in supervising doctoral and post-doctoral students;

    l) Be fluent in portuguese, written and spoken;

    m) Be fluent in English. Proficiency in other non-portuguese languages will be valued.

    Deadline

    The call is open from the 27 of june and 5 pm (Lisbon time) of the 3rd September 2024.

    How to apply

    Applicants to this call will address their application by email, in a PDF format, to the following email address : cicant@ulusofona.pt with the subject: CEEC-COFAC/CICANT/AUX-1/2024, along with the following documents:

    a) Cover letter mentioning the motivations which justified the application, written in English;

    b) Curriculum vitae referring the professional experience, accompanied by a list of the scientific publications;

    c) Ph.D. certificate;

    d) Personal data and contact information with their respective email addresses – of at least two leading academics who can attest the curriculum submitted;

    e) Other documents considered relevant by the applicant and which, from the candidate ́s perspective, are pertinent to attest and assess the scientific and professional history.

    Dissemination of results

    The list of admitted and rejected applicants, as well as their respective final scores, will be displayed in the facilities of Universidade Lusófona do Porto, na Rua de Augusto Rosa, 34, in Porto and, moreover, they will be posted on the websites https://cicant.ulusofona.pt/ and https://www.ulp.pt/; the applicants will be notified by email.

    Futher information

    Further information about the position and recruitment process is available for consultation at https://cicant.ulusofona.pt/careers/1295-recrutamento-emprego-cientifico-ceec-institucional-fct-recruitment-scientific-employment-fct-institutional-ceec-2

    Contact information

    For queries about this job post, please reach out at cicant[at]ulusofona[dot]pt

  • 31.07.2024 20:51 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    February 10 – 11, 2025

    Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic 

    Deadline: September 30, 2024

    The advancement of technology has significantly transformed the dynamics of media’s democratic functions and reshaped the relationship between news organizations and their audiences. It raised issues about the impacts of an increasing abundance of information, such as audience fragmentation, heightened polarization, partisan exposure, etc. Understanding these changes and their implications for democracy is crucial in navigating the intricacies of the contemporary information era influenced by the rapid arrival of generative AI. 

    Social media is one of the key distribution platforms, and this fact is changing the entire media landscape. The significant role of social media has implications for media pluralism, democracy and regulation. It is essential to strengthen the legislative framework for social media to be able to manage the content they distribute. This conference aims to explore the complexities of regulating these platforms and analyze the challenges and opportunities, focusing on algorithmization, legislation and legislature, and the preservation of democratic principles in the digital environment. 

    This conference, organized by the Faculty of Social Sciences of Charles University in Prague on February 10 and 11, 2025, invites submissions that contribute to the expansion of current research from different perspectives to include topics from various disciplines such as media studies and communication, journalism studies, political science, law and legislation, sociology, computer science and technology, strategic communication, social media and audience studies. Even though the main focus is European, we welcome broader perspective, particularly from the global south. The conference will include three online panels that will allow the participation of selected scholars who cannot attend in person. 

    About the broad topic of the conference, here are other themes, including but not limited to:

    • The role of technology in transforming the media markets and the impact of the changing media’s democratic functions in the hybrid media system
    • The changes in the media market shares and market sizes of old and new media brands in the European context
    • The evolution of the main types of the applied business model in media, in particular, news organizations, to compensate for the losses in subscriptions and advertising and ensure the necessary capital to preserve the quality of the journalism
    • The effect of the broader diversity of news products and how it has impacted the interest of the citizens in public issues
    • The issue of how professional journalists, alternative media content producers, and media managers balance the required commercial and financial aims with goals of journalistic freedom and media freedom in a democratic society
    • The risks of a dominant position of social media platforms and search engines in the advertising sector
    • The analysis of legal frameworks for media pluralism, including a comprehensive examination of regulations on media ownership, content dissemination and access to information
    • Proposals for fact-checking in the fight against disinformation, including the use of technology
    • Regulating social media as crucial platforms for media production and consumption
    • Use of generative AI in journalism and media business

    This list is not exclusive, and we call for papers which, in a broad sense, deal with the political economy of traditional media and alternative media, including both theoretical and analytical perspectives on the challenges, perceptions, risks, impacts, opportunities and regulatory framework involved, concentrating on the advanced technology, communication creators, alternative media content creators, itself or its audiences. 

    The conference is financed by the ReMeD project HORIZON-CL2-2022-DEMOCRACY-01-06; therefore, no conference fee will be charged). For this conference, ReMeD thematically collaborates with another Horizon Europe project MeDeMAP.

    We invite abstracts between 300-500 words (excluding references) submitted in English by 30 September 2024 via email to Dr. Suchibrata Roy, PhD (remed.conference@fsv.cuni.cz). The submission must be anonymized as follows.

    The abstracts for both individual papers and panel proposals can be submitted. Each abstract must be attached as an anonymized file to the email (all authors' names and affiliations will be in the email's body). Each panel proposal must include an abstract of the cover topic and the titles of 5 involved papers (names and affiliations of the proposed panel chair and all the authors of the involved papers will be in the email's body). A maximum of 3 papers from the same institution in one panel is allowed (and each paper in a panel has to be presented by a different presenter). Please indicate clearly whether the abstract is for an individual paper or a panel proposal and if it is for an onsite or online presentation.

    Abstracts will go through a double-blind peer review process, and the authors will be notified about acceptance by 31 October 2024. 

  • 25.07.2024 15:17 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Edited by: Manuel Puppis, Robin Mansell & Hilde Van den Bulck

    This state-of-the-art Handbook provides unique insights into the governance practices and institutions shaping digitalized public spheres. Focusing on the power relations involved, it presents diverse approaches to key debates in media and communication governance, showcasing groundbreaking advances in the field.

    https://www.elgaronline.com/edcollbook/book/9781800887206/9781800887206.xml

  • 25.07.2024 10:53 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    USI Università della Svizzera italiana, Institute of Media and Journalism

    Deadline: 10 August 2024

    The Institute invites applications for an overall 60% per annum pro rata research and teaching PostDoc position available for one year, starting on the 1st of September, 2024 until 31st of August, 2025.

    The PostDoc Position

    The successful candidate will be offered the possibility to work in a dynamic research team and in a multidisciplinary and international scientific environment.

    The PostDoc candidate will assist in the development of the Institute’s research agenda.

    The job description encompasses both research and teaching responsibilities. The successful candidate will have shared responsibilities in the design and implementation of research projects in the fields of media and journalism studies. The Institute plans to submit research projects to funding institutions in one or more of the following areas: media history, digital journalism, digital cultures, and climate change communications. Therefore, expertise in one or more of these fields is important as well as qualitative and/or quantitative methods experience. 

    The successful candidate will prepare and teach courses at both the Bachelor and Master level, including supervising dissertation students. Specifically, the candidate will teach a Bachelor-level course of 6 ECTS (56 hours of lectures) in the field of Sociology of Communications (in Italian) from Spring 2025. 

    The successful PostDoc candidate is expected to present papers at scientific conferences and produce publications in high-impact journals.

    Candidates’ profile

    Ideal candidates should satisfy the following requirements:

    •             A PhD in media or communication studies, or related disciplines.

    •             High personal interest in collaborative work in both teaching and research.

    •             Expertise in the field of media and journalism studies. The Institute particularly welcomes candidates in one or more of the following areas: media history, digital journalism, digital cultures and climate change communications.

    •             Skills in qualitative and/or quantitative methods are desirable.

    •             Excellent command of English and Italian, both written and spoken.

    •             A strong desire for research and publishing at high-level conferences.

    •             Ability to work independently and to plan and direct one’s own work.

    •             Ability to work in a team and autonomy in scheduling research steps. Interest for teaching and tutoring students and availability to collaborate with colleagues (engage in scientific dialogue, listen and think critically) are required

    General terms

    Workplace is USI Università della Svizzera italiana, located in Lugano, Switzerland. Availability to travel to other parts of Switzerland and abroad (for purposes of collaboration and research) is required.

    The starting date for this position is 1st of September 2024. The position will be kept open until a suitable candidate has been found.

    The Application

    Applications should contain: (1) a cover letter in which the applicants describe their research interests and reason to apply, (2) a complete CV, (3) copies of relevant diplomas, certificates as well as the full transcript of records, (4) a complete list of publications with details on the candidate’s contributions, (5) the candidate’s three strongest publications, (6) a short description of no more than 300 words for a course entitled “Sociology of Communication” to be taught in Italian from Spring 2025. 

    Applications received before 10th of August 2024, will be given priority. However, applications will be received until the position is filled.

    Requests for further information to Gabriele Balbi (gabriele.balbi@usi.ch).

    The application should be done following the link and criteria explained at this link: https://content.usi.ch/sites/default/files/storage/attachments/imeg/imeg-postdoc-2024.pdf

  • 23.07.2024 12:58 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    February 5-7, 2025

    CERN, Switzerland

    Deadline: July 31, 2024

    The 2025 ECREA Communication History Workshop will be hosted by CERN (Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire / European Council for Nuclear Research), where the World Wide Web took its first steps between the end of the 1980s and the early 1990s. 

    This special location inspired us to choose the theme of communication networks from long-term and historical perspectives as the key topic of the workshop. “Network” is one of digital literacy’s most symbolic and obsessively repeated keywords and metaphors. However, communication networks are not exclusively digital. From telegraphy to telephony and wireless communication in the 19th century, from radio and TV networks in the 20th, the concept of network has been used even before the Internet and, specifically, the Web. Communication networks seem to transform the sense of speed, space, and place, creating new connections and erasing others. Networks enable the exchange of communication or limit it; new networks are launched, and old ones are abandoned or have to be maintained.

    Interrogating communication and networks from a diachronic perspective can be approached from numerous angles: networked communication and its infrastructures, communication through networks, and within networks, networks of communication, and communication on networks, to name but a few. This inquiry should encompass discourses, imaginaries, modalities, infrastructures, governance, and many other dimensions. Three main historical perspectives on communication networks are suggested:

    1. Communication and networks before the digital age:

        Potential topics for exploration include, but are not limited to letters, press, telegraph and telephone networks, radio, and TV networks, but also other forms of communication networks, through for example learned societies or rumor. The legacy of these models, their physical or symbolic persistence, their stakeholders, and their structure are topics of interest as well as issues of regulation and governance.

    2. Imaginaries, representations, and narratives related to networks:

        This may include cultural imaginaries and narratives surrounding networks in a long-term perspective, their representations in media, the controversies that may have arisen through time, utopia, and mythologies related to networks and networked societies. A reflection on the word per se, its emergence and eventual disappearance, and its metaphorical history is also welcomed.

    3. Digital communication networks: from socio-technical origins to platformization:

        Genesis and evolution of digital networks, communication dynamics and changes through digital networks, online communities and their modalities of communication, and past discourses and approaches surrounding the development of networked communication are only a few topics that may be diachronically addressed. The history of social network sites, even the disappeared ones or the failed European attempt to create alternatives to US platforms, can be considered. The digital dimension of networks should always be considered from a historical perspective, in line with the focus of the section. 

    Other transversal topics such as the role of networks in shaping communication and community, their impact on societies, or network analysis for studying the history of communication may be proposed. The study of networks in communication and media studies is also welcome: media studies, for example, have often advanced theories about small or large networks, their social role, the power of media in creating or breaking social networks, the strong or weak ties created by networks, etc.

    We invite scholars from various disciplines to freely submit abstracts for papers addressing these themes. Submissions should be in English and have a clear historical approach. Abstracts of 300 words should be submitted no later than 31 July 2024. Proposals for full panels (comprising 3 or 4 papers) are also welcome: these should include a 300-word abstract for each individual presentation and a 150-word rationale for the panel. Send abstracts to: comnet@usi.ch. Authors will be informed regarding acceptance/rejection for the conference no later than 13 September 2024. Early career scholars and graduate students are highly encouraged to submit their work (please indicate if the research submitted is part of your thesis or dissertation project).

    Fees and accommodation: The conference registration fee is 150 Swiss francs/about 150 euros (100 Swiss francs/about 100 euros for Ph.D. and M.A. students), and participants are asked to cover their travel expenses. This fee includes apero at the get-together, coffee breaks, and two lunches. A special rate has been arranged for lodging near CERN: a single room with a private bathroom for 58.00 Swiss francs. Further information will be sent to all the accepted presenters.

    Local organizers: James Gillies and Jens Vigen (CERN, Geneva), Deborah Barcella, Martin Fomasi, and Gabriele Balbi (USI Università della Svizzera italiana, Lugano).

    For the section management team: Christian Schwarzenegger (University of Bremen), Valérie Schafer (C2DH, University of Luxembourg), Marie Cronqvist (Linköping University).

  • 23.07.2024 12:53 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    October 9-12, 2024

    Timișoara (Romania)

    Deadline: August 25, 2024

    The annual conference of the University Network of the European Capitals of Culture (UNeECC) in organized between October 9-12, 2024, in Timișoara (Romania) in a "face-to-face" format, by UNeECC jointly with the Alliance of Timisoara Universities (ATU), with the support of the Timisoara Project Center. The conference discusses the "Impact and legacy of the European Capital of Culture program", proposing plenary sessions, thematic sections, a workshop for PhD students and a rich cultural program. Thematic sections are dedicated to discussing culture and participation, the link between art and technology, the development of sustainable practices, increasing organizational capacity, etc. Registration is open until August 25, 2024. The description of the sections, the registration form and further information can be found on the conference page, https://uneecc2024.org/.

  • 23.07.2024 11:39 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    December 14-15, 2024

    University of Salford (UK)

    Deadline: September 20, 2024

    In the 1970s Anglo-American feminist scholars in a variety of disciplines began to explore the problematic representations of women in Hollywood cinema, issues and concerns over female spectatorship, as well as the history of women’s cinema in Hollywood and beyond. Two seminal works Marjorie Rosen’s 1973 Popcorn Venus: Women, Movies and the American Dream, and Molly Haskell’s 1974 From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies, pointed to stereotypical portrayals of women mostly in Hollywood films. The conclusions were epitomised by Haskell when she said, “You’ve come a long way baby … and it’s all been downhill.” Meanwhile, at the same time in Britain several female scholars developed ideas grounded in psychoanalysis, semiotics and Marxist ideology, some offering a pessimistic account of female representations on screen, while others were more optimistic. Such accounts raised questions about female spectatorship and the male gaze, but they also questioned the female gaze and the male body.  

    At the end of the millennium, for cultural commentators like Susan Faludi (1999), it was curiously Western masculinity that had apparently reached an apocalyptic state. Its apparent traditional markers (a breadwinner status; social dominance; emotional self-efficacy and regulation) and that men should be adventurous, and risk seeking, even if this means the endorsement of (or participation in) violence – had been pathologised. In the wake of this cultural evolution, old jobs were lost; so-called masculine spaces once filled with miners, dockers and engineers were left barren or converted to penthouse homes and middle-management sites for the newly saturating white collar (so went the rhetoric), while the modern western male was increasingly under pressure to conform to commercial cultures of style, celebrity, and consumption. Ros Coward (1999) asked: when looking back on the achievements of feminism, “Is it now holding us back?” Is it demonising men and denying them the right to understanding and equality in a world that is perhaps far harsher for them than ever before?  

    These questions of course were not entirely new. In fact, media diatribes on underachieving boys, deserting fathers, Viagra, the boom in male plastic surgery and cosmetics, the apparent explosion of young male suicide, crime and youth delinquency, were dominant themes of the 90s. Hollywood soon joined the tirade and by the final year of the millennium seemingly had its biggest outpouring of ‘masculinity in crisis’ cinema. From Fight Club and The Matrix, to American Psycho, American Beauty, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut (amongst many more), Hollywood seemed to turn its lens on the rhetoric of apparent despair. Away from this (though in ways that have yet to see any sustained kind of analysis), a number of films featuring overtly strong (“career”) women were also making waves on the big screen in 1999 and early 2000 (seeElection, Drop Dead Gorgeous, The Bone Collector, Erin Brockovich, Gloria, Cruel Intentions, Dick, Stir of Echoes, Double Jeopardy, The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc, and Girl Interrupted for example), providing collective accounts of dangerous and threatening girls and women. 

    Now, exactly 25 years after this outpouring (and exactly 50 years on from Haskell’s seminal From Reverence to Rape), we are looking to explore this cinema and its legacy.  

    We invite contributions that deal with the above issues from a broad variety of perspectives. From researchers and scholars, from outreach initiatives to practice-based research among others, we welcome a diversity of approaches on how film is grappling with contemporary portraits of gender in contemporary cinema in and beyond Hollywood.

    Topics may include, but are not limited to:

    • The status of cinematic masculinity nowadays
    • The status of cinematic femininity nowadays
    • Challenging male or female dominance on screen
    • The female spectator then and now
    • The female gaze then and now
    • The male gaze then and now
    • The male spectator then and now
    • An exploration of (this/ selected) cinema made 25 years ago at the end of the millennium
    • Interpretations of the end of millennium social and cultural moment
    • The more recent appropriation of some of these cinematic texts into the “manosphere” (by individuals such as Andrew Tate) and/or far- and alt-right communities 
    • Advances in cinematic technologies and time fracturing in this end of millennium cinema (or of later cinema influenced by/indebted to examples in this canon)
    • Equality in contemporary cinema 
    • The evolution of Gender and sexual diversity over the last 25 years
    • Toxic masculinity as a cinematic theme
    • Gender and empowerment on screen
    • Gender and social change on screen
    • Women’s and/or men’s weaknesses on screen
    • Women’s and/or men’s strengths on screen

    Please submit abstracts for individual papers (max 250 words) with presentation title, up to 5 key words, your full name, affiliation, 50 word biography, and email address tomenandwomenonscreen@gmail.com

    We support the presentation of practice-as-research, with papers and screenings. We also welcome abstracts from early career and postgraduate researchers.

    All or a selection of papers will be considered for publication. 

    Submission deadline for abstracts: Friday 20th September 2024

    Registration fee: £75

    Conference venue: Media City, University of Salford, UK

  • 18.07.2024 15:09 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Project leader: Feijoo, Beatriz

    Researchers: Vizcaíno-Verdú, Arantxa, Sádaba, Charo

    This report presents the findings of the research project “Between Healthiness and the Cult of Physique: The Impact of Fitfluencers’ Content on Adolescents’ Body Care”, known as TEEN_ONFIT. The project is funded by the Institute of Research, Transfer, and Innovation (ITel) of the Vice-rectorate of Transfer at the International University of La Rioja (UNIR), under reference number BE23-008. Additionally, it has received support from the PantallasAmigas association.

    https://zenodo.org/records/12755822

  • 18.07.2024 15:01 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Edited by: Daniel Jackson, Katy Parry, Emily Harmer, Darren Lilleker, Julie Firmstone, Scott Wright, and Einar Thorsen

    We are very pleased to announce the publication of UK Election Analysis 2024: Media, Voters and the Campaign, edited by Daniel Jackson, Katy Parry, Emily Harmer, Darren Lilleker, Julie Firmstone, Scott Wright, and Einar Thorsen.

    Featuring 101 contributions from over 130 leading academics and emerging scholars, this free publication captures the immediate thoughts, reflections and early research insights on the 2024 UK General Election from the cutting edge of media and politics research.

    Published just 10 days after the election, these contributions are short and accessible. Authors provide authoritative analysis of the campaign, including research findings or new theoretical insights; to bring readers original ways of understanding the election and its consequences. Contributions also bring a rich range of disciplinary influences, from political science to cultural studies, journalism studies to geography.

    The publication is available as a free downloadable PDF, as a website and as a paperback report.

    Website URL: http://www.electionanalysis.uk

    Direct PDF download: https://bit.ly/UKElectionAnalysis2024_Jackson-et_al_v1-COMPRESSED 

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Democracy and representation

    1. Public anxiety and the electoral process (Prof Barry Richards)

    2. How Nigel Farage opened the door to No. 10 for Keir Starmer (Prof Pippa Norris)

    3. The performance of the electoral system (Prof Alan Renwick)

    4. Tory downfall is democracy rectifying its mistakes (Prof Stephen Barber)

    5. Votes at 16 and decent citizenship education could create a politically aware generation (Dr Ben Kisby, Dr Lee Jerome)

    6. “An election about us but not for us”: the lack of communication for young people during GE2024 (Dr James Dennis)

    7. Election timing: masterstroke or risky gamble? (Prof Sarah Birch)

    8. The dog that didn’t bark? Electoral integrity and administration from voter ID to postal votes (Prof Alistair Clark)

    9. A political gamble? How licit and illicit betting permeated the campaign (Dr Matthew Wall)

    10. Ethnic diversity in politics is the new normal in Britain (Prof Maria Sobolewska)

    11. Bullshit and Lies on the campaign trail: do party campaigns reflect the post-truth age? (Prof Darren Lilleker)

    12. Stoking the culture wars: the risks of a more hostile form of polarised politics (Dr Jen Birks)

    Voters, polls and results

    13. Forecasting a multiparty majoritarian election with a volatile electorate (Dr Hannah Bunting)

    14. The emerging infrastructure of public opinion (Dr Nick Anstead)

    15. A moving target? Voter segmentation in the 2024 British General Election (Prof Rosie Campbell)

    16. Don’t vote, it only encourages them? Turnout in the 2024 Election (Prof Charles Pattie)

    17. Cartographic perspectives of the 2024 General Election (Prof Benjamin Hennig)

    18. Gender and vote choice: early reflections (Dr Ceri Fowler)

    19. Changing Pattern amongst Muslim voters: the Labour Party, Gaza and voter volatility (Dr Parveen Akhtar)

    20. Religion and voting behaviour in the 2024 General Election (Dr Ekaterina Kolpinskaya, Dr Stuart Fox)

    21. Failure to connect: the Conservative Party and young voters (Dr Stephanie Luke)

    22. Youthquake for the progressive left: making sense of the collapse of youth support for the Conservatives (Prof James Sloam, Prof Matt Henn)

    23. Values in the valence election (Prof Paula Surridge)

    24. Tactical voting: why is it such a big part of British elections? (Thomas Lockwood)

    The nations and regions

    25. Have voters fallen out of love with the SNP? (Dr Lynn Bennie)

    26. The spectre of Sturgeon still looms large in gendered coverage in Scotland (Melody House, Dr Fiona McKay)

    27. The personalisation of Scottish politics in a UK General Election (Dr Michael Higgins, Dr Maike Dinger)

    28. Competence, change and continuity: a tale of two nations (Dr Will Kitson)

    29. Election success, but problems remain for Labour in Wales (Dr Nye Davies)

    30. Four ways in which Northern Ireland’s own seismic results will affect the new Parliament (Prof Katy Hayward)

    31. Bringing People together or pulling them apart? What Facebook ads say about the NI campaign (Dr Paul Reilly)

    32. A New Dawn For Levelling Up? (Prof Arianna Giovannini)

    33. Who defines Britain? National identity at the heart of the 2024 UK General Election (Dr Tabitha Baker)

    Parties and the campaign

    34. A changed but over-staged Labour Party and the political marketing weaknesses behind Starmer’s win (Prof Jennifer Lees-Marshment)

    35. To leaflet or not to leaflet? The question of election leafleting in Sunderland Central (Prof Angela Smith, Dr Mike Pearce)

    36. Beyond ‘my dad was a toolmaker’: what it’s really like to be working class in parliament (Dr Vladimir Bortun)

    37. The unforced errors of foolish men: gender, race and the calculus of harm (Prof Karen Ross)

    38. Election 2024 and rise of Reform UK: the beginning of the end of the Conservatives? (Dr Anthony Ridge-Newman)

    39. The Weakening of the Blue Wall (Prof Pete Dorey)

    40. The Conservative party, 1832-2024: an obituary (Dr Mark Garnett)

    41. Bouncing back: the Liberal Democrat campaign (Prof Peter Sloman)

    42. The Greens: riding two horses (Prof Neil Carter, Dr Mitya Pearson)

    43. Party organisations and the campaign (Dr Danny Rye)

    44. Local campaign messaging at the 2024 General Election (Dr Siim Trumm, Prof Caitlin Milazzo)

    45. The value of getting personal: reflecting upon the role of personal branding in the General Election (Dr Jenny Lloyd)

    46. Which constituencies were visited by each party leader and what this told us about their campaigns (Dr Hannah Bunting, Joely Santa Cruz)

    47. The culture wars and the 2024 General Election campaign (Prof John Steel)

    48. “Rishi’s D-Day Disaster”: authority, leadership and British military commemoration (Dr Natalie Jester)

    49. Party election broadcasts: the quest for authenticity (Dr Vincent Campbell)

    Policy and strategy

    50. It’s the cost-of-living-crisis, stupid! (Prof Aeron Davis)

    51. The last pre-war vote? Defence and foreign policy in the 2024 Election (Dr Russell Foster)

    52. The 2024 UK general election and the absence of foreign policy (Dr Victoria Honeyman)

    53. Fractious consensus: defence policy at the 2024 General Election (Dr Ben Jones)

    54. The psycho-politics of climate denial in the 2024 UK election (Prof Candida Yates, Dr Jenny Alexander)

    55. How will the Labour government fare and what should they do better? (Prof Rick Stafford and team)

    56. Finding the environment: climate obstructionism and environmental movements on TikTok (Dr Abi Rhodes)

    57. Irregular migration: ‘Stop the boats’ vs ‘Smash the Gangs’ (Prof Alex Balch)

    58. The sleeping dog of ‘Europe: UK relations with the EU as a non-issue (Prof Simon Usherwood)

    59. Labour: a very conservative housing manifesto (Prof Becky Tunstall)

    60. Why the Labour Government must abolish the two-child benefit limit policy (Dr Yekaterina Chzhen)

    61. Take the next right: mainstream parties’ positions on gender and LGBTQ+ equality issues (Dr Louise Luxton)

    The digital campaign

    62. Local news and information on candidates was insufficient (Dr Martin Moore, Dr Gordon Neil Ramsay)

    63. The Al election that wasn’t – yet (Prof Helen Margetts)

    64. Al-generated images: how citizens depicted politicians and society (Niamh Cashell)

    65. The threat to democracy that wasn’t? Four types of Al-generated synthetic media in the General Election (Dr Liam McLoughlin)

    66. Shitposting meets Generative Artificial Intelligence and ‘deep fakes’ at the 2024 General Election (Dr Rosalynd Southern)

    67. Shitposting the General Election: why this campaign felt like one long meme (SE Harman, Dr Matthew Wall)

    68. Winning voters’ hearts and minds… through reels and memes?! How #GE24 unfolded on TikTok (Dr Aljosha Karim Schapals)

    69. Debating the election in “Non-political” Third Spaces: the case of Gransnet (Prof Scott Wright et al)

    70. Which social networks did political parties use most in 2024? (Dr Richard Fletcher)

    71. Facebook’s role in the General Election: still relevant in a more fragmented information environment (Prof Andrea Carson, Dr Felix M. Simon)

    72. Farage on TikTok: the perfect populist platform (Prof Karin Wahl-Jorgensen)

    News and journalism

    73. Why the press still matters (Prof Steven Barnett)

    74. When the Star aligned: how the press ‘voted’ (Prof Dominic Wring, Prof David Deacon)

    75. Visual depictions of leaders and losers in the (still influential) print press (Prof Erik Bucy and Dr Nathan Ritchie)

    76. Towards more assertive impartiality? Fact-checking on BBC television news (Prof Stephen Cushion)

    77. The outsize influence of the conservative press in election campaigns (Prof Dan Stevens, Prof Susan Banducci, Dr Ekaterina Kolpinskaya and Dr Laszlo Horvath)

    78. GB News – not breaking any rules… (Prof Ivor Gaber)

    79. Vogue’s stylish relationship to politics (Dr Chrysi Dagoula)

    80. Tiptoeing around immigration has tangible consequences (Dr Maria Kyriakidou, Dr Iñaki Garcia-Blanco)

    81. A Taxing Campaign (Prof David Deacon et al)

    82. Not the Sun wot won it: what Murdoch’s half-hearted, last-minute endorsements mean for Labour (Dr John Jewell)

    83. Is this the first podcast election? (Carl Hartley, Prof Stephen Coleman)

    84. A numbers game (Paul Bradshaw)

    85. Election 2024 and the remarkable absence of media in a mediated spectacle (Prof Lee Edwards)

    86. 2024: the great election turn-off (Prof Des Freedman)

    Personality politics and popular culture

    87. Ed Davey: Towards a Liberal Populism? (Dr Tom Sharkey, Dr Sophie Quirk)

    88. Why Nigel Farage’s anti-media election interference claims are so dangerous (Dr Lone Sorensen)

    89. Nigel Farage and the political circus (Dr Neil Ewen)

    90. Binface, Beany and Beyond: humorous candidates in the 2024 General Election (Prof Scott Wright)

    91. What Corbyn support reveals about how Starmer’s Labour won big (Prof Cornel Sandvoss, Dr Benjamin Litherland, Dr Joseph Andrew Smith)

    92. “Well that was dignified, wasn’t it?”: floor apportionment and interaction in the televised debates (Dr Sylvia Shaw)

    93. TV debates: beyond winners and losers (Prof Stephen Coleman)

    94. Is our television debate coverage finally starting to match up to multi-party politics? (Dr Louise Thompson)

    95. Tetchiness meets disenchantment: capturing the contrasting political energies of the campaign (Prof Beth Johnson, Prof Katy Parry)

    96. “We’re just normal men”: football and the performance of authentic leadership (Dr Ellen Watts)

    97. ‘Make the friendship bracelets’: gendered imagery in candidates’ self-presentations on the campaign trail (Dr Caroline Leicht)

    98. Weeping in Wetherspoons: generative Al and the right/left image battle on X (Simon Popple)

    99. An entertaining election? Popular culture as politics (Prof John Street)

    100. Changing key, but keeping time: the music of Election 2024 (Dr Adam Behr)

    101. Truth or dare: the political veracity game (Prof John Corner)

ECREA WEEKLY DIGEST

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