20 de abril de 2020

*CFP* "FUTURE OF JOURNALISM: TECHNOLOGY-DRIVEN RECONFIGURATIONS IN THE JOURNALISM-AUDIENCE RELATIONSHIP", EDITED COLLECTION

Since the advent of the internet, the rapid development of emerging technologies has posed significant challenges and opportunities for journalism. Many of the implications, driven by a digital revolution, have been complex, latent and unforeseen. Rigorously researched and well-argued predictions can contribute to the planning and development of journalistic practice and output.

Arguably, the most crucial locus of change is the journalism-audience relationship. Or as more contemporary parlance would have it: the relationship between journalism and the “people formerly known as the audience” (Rosen 2006). The past few decades have already brought about seismic shifts of power in this relationship. Further technological advancements are likely to continue impacting on an increasingly fluid status quo.
We invite scholars from diverse disciplinary backgrounds to author chapters forming empirical, theoretical, critical, practice-reflections and policy-based contributions to an edited collection that aims to predict future trends in journalism.

The focus is to offer a range of disciplinary perspectives that analyze technological interfaces that connect the practice of journalism to publics (audiences/user engagement/content producers). The underlying question the edited collection seeks to answer is: How will journalism-audience-relationships be reconfigured in new technological environments?

Potential topics might include (but are not limited to):
  • Social and cultural impacts of new journalism technologies
  • Role of VR, iDocs, immersive documentary and AI in changing journalism
  • Future of big data, social media and journalism
  • Market implications of journalism and new user-interfaces
  • Immersive technologies and journalistic user experience
  • Enhanced audience/prosumer agency
  • New, technology-enabled monetization models
  • Role of camera drones and satellite data in future journalism
  • Audience trust in introducing novel journalistic technologies
  • Future of journalism and the digital economy
  • Role of new technology in reporting national and international crises
  • Future of handheld devices and interactive and converging tech in journalism

We especially encourage cross-disciplinary collaboration, including scholars offering perspectives across journalism, media, policy, business, information technology, computer science and future studies.

The editors are willing to help facilitate cross-fertilization for authors seeking suitable co-authors.

Chapter proposals, in the form of short abstracts (maximum 400 words), should be sent to ville.manninen@uwasa.fi by May 8th 2020. The abstracts should clearly outline the content of the chapter, including methodology and data where applicable. The submission should also include a brief introduction to the author(s) (excluded from word limit).

Acceptance will be communicated to prospective authors by the end of May. Full chapters, approximately 4000 words each, are due by January 2021. The anticipated publication date of the book is early 2022.

The book will be edited by Dr Ville Manninen, Dr Mari K. Niemi, both of University of Vaasa, and Dr Anthony Ridge-Newman of Liverpool Hope University. It is part of a Helsingin Sanomat Foundation funded project, 

Twitter: @Media_Futures

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