Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta innovación. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta innovación. Mostrar todas las entradas

13 de septiembre de 2021

*CFP* "BODIES OF WATER IN AFRICAN AMERICAN FICTION & FILM", BOOK CHAPTER

We invite abstracts for a new book of original essays which explore the meaning and/or function of still or moving bodies of water -- lakes, rivers, the sea, gulfs, streams, ponds, canals -- in narratives by African Americans.  In particular, we seek other innovative and provocative critiques of images of water in 20th and 21st Century African American fiction and film, poetry and drama.  At once, a few pieces of literature and film come to mind:  August Wilson’s Gem of the Ocean; Zora Neal Hurston’s Janie Crawford in the Everglades; Michelle Cliff’s short story collection, Bodies of Water; so much of Toni Morrison’s fiction; readings of Julie Dash’s Daughters of the Dust; Spike Lee on Hurricane Katrina; and, Kasi Lemmons’ Eve’s Bayou, for example.  Our volume wants analyses which acknowledge the legitimacy of but move beyond the familiar or conventional interpretations of the Atlantic Ocean Middle Passage and/or Transatlantic Slave Trade.  

Some possible questions for African American analysis, including environmental or ecocritical contemplation:

  • What roles do bodies of water play in African American literary and filmic creative imagination?  In particular, how does the trope of water/waterways get interwoven into works by African American authors and filmmakers?  

1 de septiembre de 2021

*CFP* "METHODOLOGICAL INNOVATIONS AND CHALLENGES OF RESEARCH ON DIGITALLY CONNECTED HOMES", SPECIAL ISSUE, DIGITAL CREATIVITY JOURNAL

The past few years have seen a rapid increase in the number and variety of technologies embedded in and passing through home environments. Researchers increasingly recognize the distinct nature of the home as a site of research. The past four decades have seen a significant shift in the technology environment from the "media home" (Spigel, 2001) to the "smart home" (Woods, 2021). We have seen significant additions to the abundant digital ecology of the home, increasing the number of digital access-points and available services, and intensifying the data-circulation in connected homes. The home is a site of mundane, private, usually hidden but highly significant everyday practices (Pink et al. 2017). Yet it is also increasingly becoming a part of national healthcare infrastructures through the deployment of welfare technologies, and energy policy through smart meters. During the "global lockdown" caused by the Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19) pandemic, technologies took a prominent role as the home transformed itself into a site in which activities such as learning, parenting, work, entertainment, and remote medical care intermingled.

The increasing complexity of the digital infrastructures and the experiences, spaces, visions of the home in a current era of connected homes and connected living poses particular challenges for conducting research in such an environment. This also calls for methodological innovations that shape how we see the home as a research site and how we engage with it.

31 de agosto de 2021

*CFP* "MEDIOS DE COMUNICACIÓN PÚBLICOS, CIUDADANÍA E INFLUENCIA DIGITAL EN LA ERA DE LA DESINFORMACIÓN", COMLOC 2021 XVI CONGRESO INTERNACIONAL DE COMUNICACIÓN LOCAL

“Medios de comunicación públicos, ciudadanía e influencia digital en la era de la desinformación”

ComLoc 2021. XVI Congreso Internacional de Comunicación Local

Universitat Jaume I

4 y 5 de noviembre de 2021

 

En los últimos años, se constata la pérdida de relevancia de los medios de comunicación públicos, en un escenario muy complejo en el que han coincidido diversos factores. Por un lado, una fuerte crisis económica que ha reducido notablemente los presupuestos de las corporaciones públicas. En segundo lugar, la irrupción de las plataformas digitales, que ha alterado los hábitos y formas de consumo de la ciudadanía. Asimismo, una fuerte pérdida de credibilidad de los medios públicos –y también privados–, por la falta de independencia del poder político y económico que muchos ciudadanos perciben. Y, finalmente, la expansión de las redes sociales ha cambiado las prácticas periodísticas, así como los modos de producción de contenidos de entretenimiento y de ficción audiovisual. En el caso de la Comunidad Valenciana, estas circunstancias han contribuido a debilitar, de manera bastante notable, el sistema comunicativo y audiovisual valenciano, sumido en una profunda crisis desde hace más de una década.

17 de agosto de 2021

*CFP* "OPORTUNITIES FOR INNOVATION", IMMERSIVE STORYTELLING SYMPOSIUM

Immersive Storytelling Symposium: Opportunities for Innovation

2nd and 3rd November 2021,

Lakeside Arts, Nottingham, UK, and online

 

A huge amount of R&D talent is focused on the global immersive technology market, which is estimated to be worth $95-105 billion by 2023. In the United Kingdom the Creative Industries Sector Deal draws on £72 million government funding to support this new wave of innovation. The national network of Creative Industries Clusters includes XR Stories (York), StoryFutures Academy (London) and XR+D (Bristol and Bath). The Audience of the Future demonstrator programme is producing unique experiences spearheaded by renowned cultural institutions like the Royal Shakespeare Company, Natural History Museum and Royal Opera House. These initiatives are designed to establish the UK’s position in an international marketplace that encompasses everything from Dreamscape Immersive’s location-based VR attractions, to Museum of Ice Cream’s multi-sensory installations, to Punch Drunk’s immersive theatre shows. Just this small selection of examples is spread across the USA, Singapore, Dubai and China.

29 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "DESARROLLOS CONTEMPORÁNEOS SOBRE MEDIOS, CULTURA Y SOCIEDAD: ARGENTINA Y AMÉRICA LATINA", CONGRESO MESO 2021

MESO invita a la contribución de artículos inéditos para la conferencia “Desarrollos Contemporáneos Sobre Medios, Cultura y Sociedad: Argentina y América Latina”. La conferencia, organizada por el Centro de Estudios sobre Medios y Sociedad en Argentina, tendrá lugar los días viernes 26 y sábado 27 de noviembre de 2021. La modalidad de esta edición será híbrida.

Este será el séptimo Congreso Anual que MESO organiza con el propósito de intercambiar conocimiento de investigación sobre las interacciones entre medios, cultura y sociedad. Para ver más información sobre los Congresos anteriores puede visitar nuestro sitio web. Contamos con el auspicio del Center for Global Culture and Communication de Northwestern University y del Center for Latinx Digital Media.

Se solicitan artículos que contribuyan a la discusión sobre medios, cultura y sociedad de manera empírica, teórica o metodológica, y que amplíen el conocimiento sobre esta temática en el ámbito nacional y regional. Los artículos podrán referirse a distintos aspectos de la comunicación, los medios y los bienes y servicios culturales expresados a través del periodismo, el entretenimiento–cine, teatro, televisión, música, etc.– la publicidad y el marketing, las relaciones públicas, las redes sociales, y los videojuegos, entre otros.

27 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "SHOWING THEORY TO KNOW THEORY: UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL SCIENCE CONCEPTS THROUGH ILLUSTRATIVE VIGNETTES", CATALOGUE E-CAMPUS ONTARIO

Funded by e-Campus Ontario, this collaborative, open educational resource (OER) will bring together a collection of 100+ short pedagogical pieces (500-1000 words) to help new learners understand complex theoretical concepts and disciplinary jargon from the critical social sciences. Each entry takes the form of an “illustrative vignette”—a short, evocative story, visual or infographic, poem, described photograph, or other audio-visual material. This OER will be of use across disciplines and community contexts, democratizing theory while linking it to practical, grounded experience. 
 
This FOLLOW-UP to our initial CFP is to gather submissions that address one of the remaining available terms in our catalogue. Please consult the online spreadsheet to select an available concept/term. Then email your Expression of Interest to the editors (contacts below), confirming the your selection AND the illustrative example that you would like to use. We will get back to you with any feedback. To create your vignette, follow the template attached to this CFP. Two sample vignettes are also included to provide examples of style, tone, and structure.

You may create your vignette as an expository text, story or narrative, illustration or infographic, poem, described photograph, or other audio-visual material.

7 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "ENTREPRENEURIAL JOURNALISM: EMERGING MODELS AND LIVED EXPERIENCES. LOOKING BACK AND LOOKING FORWARD", VOL. 8 Nº 2 (2022), BRAZILIAN JOURNALISM RESEARCH

This special edition of Brazilian Journalism Research interrogates and collates the links between entrepreneurialism and journalism, in emergent journalistic practices and socioeconomic models. The growing recognition of entrepreneurial values and practices in the journalism domain has occurred against a backdrop of interlinked changes in journalism and media in the economic, technological, social, ideological and regulatory terrains. These are most prominent not only in the emergence of new digital actors and new configurations of national and international media landscapes but also in the reframing of normative journalistic practices, organisational structures, modes of production, distribution and financial sustainability. In this vein then, entrepreneurial journalism delineates new relations between actors, publics and domains of activity (Hang and Van Weezel, 2005; Mitchelstein and Boczkowski, 2009; Lee-Wright et al., 2012; Mercier and Pignard-Cheynel, 2014; Carbasse, 2015; Grohmann et al., 2019).

Taking shape in a movement which moves beyond traditional journalism boundaries (Neff et al., 2005) these transformations have created favourable conditions for new editorial projects to grow outside of traditional legacy, corporate or mainstream media. They exist as heterogeneous independent structures where journalists are confronted with operational challenges and financial obstacles that question any hard divide between editorial and business operations, which are little understood. New journalistic techniques and products are developed and iterated through a process of experimentation outside of normative practices. Whether they openly embrace the ‘entrepreneurial journalism’ label (Briggs, 2011) as distinguished at least in part from the other non-salaried forms of employment such as freelance (De Cock and De Smaele, 2016) or whether they adhere to certain entrepreneurial competences and general qualities without wanting to be overtly labelled, these journalistic projects are united by a certain level in their journalistic practices of deindustrialization and decentralisation. They necessitate new definitions and understandings hinged on flexible structures and new manners of doing and financing journalism.

3 de junio de 2021

*CFP* "SEEING THE (IN)JUSTICE OF SUSTAINABILITY: VISUALIZING INEQUALITY AT THE CENTRE OF CLIMATE CHANGE COMMUNICATION", SPECIAL ISSUE, JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MEDIA

We know that environmental change due to massive global warming negatively influences the world’s poorest and most-marginalized the most, as do the corporate and collective actions themselves that drive greenhouse gas emissions. With greater urgency, media scholarship – and practice – must now turn to the wicked problems associated with forms of human inequality that are sometimes linked to efforts to develop local and global sustainability: racialized gentrification of urban areas to form wetlands creates a forced migration of residents. The development of environmentally sound (and expensive) housing pushes out the poor. Mainstreamed media narratives of climate change activists elevate particular people and parts of the world over others. And yet such effects of sustainability are often invisible or missing from mediated discourses and arenas.

As notions of sustainability become more normalized as key to our shared social futures, they can remain tied to long-standing issues of racialized environmentalism shaping government and corporate decisions, as well as individual and collective interpretations of curbing climate change. ‘Climate change is the result of a legacy of extraction, of colonialism, of slavery’, Elizabeth Yeampierre, cochair of the Climate Justice Alliance, told PBS in the US in 2020. ‘The truth is that the climate justice movement, people of color, indigenous people, have always worked multi-dimensionally because we have to be able to fight on so many different planes.’ We share in this concern.

19 de mayo de 2021

*CFP* "MEDIA AND THE EU GOVERNANCE. DEMOCRACY, PARTICIPATION, AND INNOVATION", SPECIAL ISSUE 2022, EUROPEAN AND GLOBAL STUDIES JOURNAL

While the European Union (EU) has become increasingly crucial for the life and the work of its 450M citizens, the European integration process itself has historically been characterized by cyclical crises. While looking back, it is clear that economic and political tensions have previously opened new opportunities for widening and deepening the EU's integration. The present crisis seems different. A long-term falling trend of public trust in national and EU institutions has been undermining the European integration process and more recently “citizen dissatisfaction with national governments and disaffection from the EU has been on the rise” (Schmidt, 2015, p.57). The EU has had to face a long-lasting economic crisis, accompanied by the rise of populist and anti-EU parties that have been present in the European Parliament since the last two legislatures. Today, and on top of the political crisis described earlier, for the first time in the history of the EU, an unexpected force of disruption, such as the health crisis caused by the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, has contributed to create an unprecedented critical situation for the European Union. 

Aware of this epochal conjuncture, European leaders and Policy Makers have called for "The Future of Europe'' conference. This Conference should help to address the crisis openly, enlarge the participation of European citizens in European governance, and ultimately define the fundamental values and principles that have shaped the European communities, whose building “has always been plagued by uncertainty” (Williams, 2009, p.551). Following the delay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, the debate is now restarting with renewed energies. 

6 de abril de 2021

*CFP* "RE-INTRODUCTIONS TO CULTURAL SCIENCE", SPECIAL ISSUE, CULTURAL SCIENCE JOURNAL

Cultural Science Journal is an Open Access (free for authors to publish) journal that was started by Professor John Hartley and colleagues in 2008 at the Queensland University of Technology. Most recently it has been published by Ubiquity Press and Curtin University’s Centre for Culture and Technology. After 13 years of activity the editorship of the journal is handed over this year to professors Indrek Ibrus and Maximilian Schich, both of Tallinn University. The journal will be published by Tallinn University's Cultural Data Analytics Open Lab and it is currently being transferred to Sciendo platform.

Cultural Science Journal continues to be a multidisciplinary journal publishing original work on change and dynamics in culture, media and communications. It investigates structures, interactions, and processes of cultural systems at all levels of analysis and scales of application.

The Journal takes advantage of advances in cultural analytics, cultural data science, and cultural semiotics. It encourages active dialogue with evolutionary and institutional economics, biosemiotics, complexity science, network analysis, research in and cultural history and cultural evolution, specifying the ‘uses of culture’ from personal meanings to planetary platforms and systems of meaning.

6 de octubre de 2020

*CFP* "UNIVERSIDAD, INNOVACIÓN E INVESTIGACIÓN ANTE EL HORIZONTE 2030", CONGRESO INTERNACIONAL NODOS DEL CONOCIMIENTO 2020

El Congreso Internacional Nodos del Conocimiento 2020 es un encuentro virtual de carácter multidisciplinar y abierto a la comunidad universitaria, docente, científica e investigadora, un espacio idóneo para dar visibilidad a nuevas investigaciones, trabajos de doctorandos, proyectos en desarrollo, etc.

El congreso, ubicado bajo el concepto de “calidad de la formación docente”, está dotado de herramientas para maximizar su relevancia académica, como son la revisión por pares ciegos de los trabajos presentados o el acceso público y abierto de las defensas y diálogos académicos que se generen.

El evento está diseñado para facilitar sinergias entre participantes y posibilitar la creación de nuevas redes estratégicas de colaboración internacional en torno a los diferentes nodos del conocimiento propuestos. Para ello ponemos a disposición de los congresistas herramientas de comunicación interna y promoción académica.

13 de julio de 2020

*CFP* "EL ROL DE LA COMUNICACIÓN EN LA FORMACIÓN Y MANTENIMIENTO DE UNA CULTURA DE INNOVACIÓN CORPORATIVA", PRÓXIMO NÚMERO, OBRA DIGITAL: REVISTA DE COMUNICACIÓN


La innovación juega un rol muy importante en la supervivencia y competitividad de una empresa (Daniel, 2011). Innovar significa crear nuevos o mejorados productos, servicios, modelos de negocio, etc., y explotarlos en el mercado de una forma eficiente. Décadas de investigación en este tópico han intentado responder a la pregunta: ¿Por qué algunas empresas son más capaces de innovar que otras? Admiramos a empresas como Google, Apple, Amazon, etc., y nos preguntamos ¿Qué tienen en particular estás organizaciones que son tan capaces de crear productos o servicios tan innovadores? La literatura existente hace referencia a dos factores: 1) un ecosistema de innovación basado en elementos como estructuras que apoyen el proceso de innovación, KPI´s correctos, uso de metodologías ágiles, tiempo dedicado para innovar, y una estrategia que guíe todo proceso de innovación, entre otros elementos (Eisenmann et al. 2013; Rao & Weintraub, 2013; Viki, et al. 2017). Los extensos estudios que ha hecho Kuratko et al (2014) también indican que el apoyo de directivos hacia la innovación, el uso de recompensas y reconocimiento, el uso discrecional del tiempo para innovar y la flexibilidad organizacional, son otros elementos que el ecosistema de innovación debería de tener. El segundo elemento es: 2) una cultura organizacional que promueva y facilite la innovación. En general, la cultura se puede concebir como los comportamientos, valores, creencias o actitudes que son compartidas y transmitidas dentro de un colectivo; lo que hace que ese colectivo sea único o diferente frente a otros (Bik, 2010). En este sentido, una empresa con cierta cultura puede crear el ambiente propicio para la innovación, o hacer todo lo contrario.

6 de junio de 2019

*CFP* "STEERING INNOVATION IN COMMUNICATION INFRAESTRUCTURES" CONGRESS


Steering Innovation in Communication Infrastructures Congress
Bern, Switzerland, 5–6 February 2020
Homage to the 170 years since the founding of Swiss Post (est. 1849)
Organized by the History and Computing Association, the Museum of Communication, and the PTT Archives, Bern, Switzerland

The Internet of Objects, Artificial Intelligence, Smart Cities, and the 5G mobile communication standard are among the many challenges facing today public and private entities in charge of communication infrastructures. That technological evolution is “disruptive” is, however, nothing new: from the invention of telegraphy and railways to Internet and drones, the communications sector’s established ways of doing had to be repeatedly reinvented.

The interaction between technological innovation and governance of communication infrastructures constitutes the theme of the conference in February 2020. We wish to explore how innovation was steered by postal and telecommunication companies, as well as by other public and private players in the field of communication infrastructures: enterprises, governments, professional and state organizations, the users.

16 de abril de 2019

*CFP* "LANGUAGE GAMES: CONVERSATIONS BETWEEN HUMAN AND MACHINE LANGUAGES", LEONARDO ELECTRONIC ALMANAC


Language Games is the title of a forthcoming issue with LEA edited by Lanfranco Aceti, Sheena Calvert, and Hannah Lammin. We invite a range of submissions initially in the form of abstract. The description of the issue is below with all the related information for submission.

Language is a technology, as theorists including Martin Heidegger and Marshall McLuhan have argued, and yet its manifestation in both speech and writing is fundamentally human-centred: anthropological. However, speech and writing are rapidly becoming an interface not just between humans and the ‘out there’, as traditional philosophies of language assert, but between humans and machines, and machines and other machines. As a result, the usual presuppositions we might make about language as a technology which is predicated on human utterance and man-made material transcription is rapidly shifting, and in the process the line between human and machine is becoming less clear.

*CFP* "RADICAL IMMERSIONS: NAVIGATING BETWEEN VIRTUAL/PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENTS AND INFORMATION BUBBLES", CONFERENCE


Radical Immersions: Navigating between virtual/physical environments and information bubbles 
8 – 10 September 2019 Watermans Centre, London, UK

Over the past years, immersive technologies have been hyped as consumer gadgets, entertainment media and the future of exhibition practices. The free distribution of VR headsets with smartphones and the increasing interest of museums, festivals and other cultural organisers towards ‘immersive digital content’ have quickly turned VR and AR devices and applications into widely recognized cultural artefacts. The promotion of ‘full immersion’ in the physical spaces of exhibitions and museums has led to some venues relying solely on interactive projections and audience interaction. However, just like many earlier ‘new media’ before them, the hyperbolic promises attached to these technologies’ supposed capacity to deliver immediacy and trigger a paradigm shift in media culture have thus far hardly become reality.

1 de abril de 2019

*CFP* "ÉTICA DE LA INNOVACIÓN EN MEDIOS INFORMATIVOS EMERGENTES", PRE-CONGRESO IAMCR



Ética de la innovación en medios informativos emergentes: cómo los valores humanos y cívicos de la profesión pueden favorecer una reconstrucción creativa del periodismo

En el contexto actual de disrupción tecnológica, académicos y profesionales han entendido la innovación como un proceso de “destrucción creativa” (Schumpeter, 1942), a modo de una mutación industrial que, debido a la tecnología digital, revoluciona de manera imparable la estructura económica desde dentro, destruyendo la vieja maquinaria y creando incesantemente una nueva.

Sin negar el rol que hoy desempeñan la tecnología y el mercado en la remodelación de los medios periodísticos, este pre-congreso de la IAMCR convoca a investigadores en el área con el fin de analizar los desafíos sociales y humanos de la innovación mediática desde una perspectiva ética y cultural.  

27 de septiembre de 2018

*CFP* GLOBAL HANDBOOK OF COMMUNICATIONS AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, BOOK CHAPTERS


In 2015 several member states of the United Nations agreed on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) or what is known as the 2030 Agenda. The SDGs are expected to address major global challenges such as poverty alleviation, access to education, addressing inequality, climate change, improving access to quality healthcare, eradicating hunger, ensuring environmental sustainability, promoting innovation and infrastructural development among others.

To what extent are the intended beneficiaries of this ambitious plan aware of the 2030 agenda? What is the role of the media in communicating for sustainable development? Are the efforts to communicate the global goals reaching the target beneficiaries or do they end up as gathering of elites in major capitals with little to show for in terms of impact for the ordinary people? How can communication be utilized to address the challenges of achieving sustainable development? How is the digital media being utilized in communicating for sustainable development? How can communication serve as a tool for community empowerment in achieving sustainable development?

28 de agosto de 2018

*CFP* "GAMIFYING NEWS: PLAYFUL APPROACHES TO PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT", SPECIAL ISSUE CONVERGENCE JOURNAL


Gamified and playful output that interacts with users (no longer audiences) is used pervasively to engage publics with the news agenda. Much of what is now communicated at a societal level has been subverted by the mechanics of social interaction and game-play, challenging legacy publishers and broadcasters to engage anew with their audiences, especially millennials, a generation accustomed to digital interactivity. The quality of public discourse needs to be scrutinised in the context of the take-up of these new technologies and new formats of journalistic distribution. Digital and AI (artificial intelligence) has the power to reinvent engagement with the public sphere through playful, social and immersive encounters, with the potential to both enhance and to diminish the importance of the content.  As such, ‘newsgames’, classified as a broad body of work produced at the intersection of videogames and journalism [1], present possibilities and limitations as they emerge as a more prominent platform. This special issue of Convergence, The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies, seeks to interrogate these trends by examining the growth of ‘newsgames’ and playful approaches to journalism.

2 de agosto de 2018

*CFP* COMUNICACIÓN DE LA CIENCIA EN IBEROAMÉRICA, REVISTA PERSPECTIVAS DE LA COMUNICACIÓN


La revista Perspectivas de la Comunicación abre convocatoria para número temático dedicado a la comunicación de la ciencia en Iberoamérica y en el que contamos para su coordinación como editor invitado con el Dr. Francisco López-Cantos, del Dept. de Ciencias de la Comunicación de la Universitat Jaume I de Castellón, España.

A lo largo de los últimos años se están incrementando los esfuerzos institucionales en la difusión pública de la ciencia, con el objetivo último de contribuir a que la ciudadanía participe en la implementación responsable del fruto de la actividad científica y resulte en mejoras significativas para el conjunto de la sociedad.

Sin embargo, uno de los discursos más prevalentes y extendido en todos los ámbitos sociales a los que se enfrenta el discurso científico y que cuestiona de manera directa la propia práctica científica es el conformado por una miríada de creencias y técnicas que, precisamente por su escasa o nula validez, denominamos genéricamente pseudociencias.

12 de julio de 2018

*CFP* "BACK TO THE FUTURE: TELLING AND TAMING ANTICIPATORY MEDIA VISIONS AND TECHNOLOGIES", SPECIAL ISSUE OF CONVERGENCE JOURNAL



Digital media, networked services, and aggregate data are beacons of the future. These incessantly emerging tools and infrastructures project new ways of communication bring unknown kinds of information and open up untrodden paths of interaction. Yet digital technologies do not only forecast uncharted times or predict what comes next. They are, it seems, both prognostic and progressive media: they don’t await the times to come but realize the utopian as well as dystopian visions which they have always already foreseen. At the same time, all calculation of anticipations has to rely on past data that profoundly shape our ability to manage expectations and minimize uncertainties.