ISSN: 1918-5901 (English) -- 1918-591X (Français)
Welcome to the Global Media Journal -- Canadian Edition | For potential Guest Editors, please consult the Call for Themes web page | For potential Authors, please consult the Call for Papers web page

 


Call for Papers

2013: Volume 6, Issue 2

 

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Call for Papers

2014: Volume 7, Issue 1

The Seventh Annual Conference of the Global Communication Association
Ottawa, Canada, 22-24 November 2013

 The Communication Galaxy:
Discoveries, Boundaries, and Opportunities

The Global Communication Association (GCA) is pleased to announce that its Seventh Annual Conference (22-24 November 2013), and First in North America, will be hosted by the School of Social Communication and Leadership, Faculty of Human Sciences, Saint Paul University, Ottawa, Canada. Established in 2007, the GCA promotes academic research in global studies among major universities around the world. It facilitates joint projects and research opportunities among scholars, researchers, and students. Particularly, it explores the myriad opportunities and challenges in the areas of teaching, learning, communication development, globalization, mass media, and international cooperation.

The legendary Canadian scholar Marshall McLuhan’s The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962) prophetically predicted the future of global media communications when he voiced in one of his most-frequently quoted passage of his book: “if a new technology extends one or more of our senses outside us into the social world, then new ratios among all of our senses will occur in that particular culture. It is comparable to what happens when a new note is added to a melody. And when the sense ratios alter in any culture then what had appeared lucid before may suddenly become opaque, and what had been vague or opaque will become translucent” (1962: 41). Indeed, McLuhan’s work revealed the “magical” world: the new media of communication—radio, television, film, photography, satellites, computers, Internet, and social media.

This conference builds on McLuhan’s notions of “galaxy” and “global village” where he argued that with the new technological advances of the media (especially television during his time), societies are restoring the “tribal” character that existed before the invention of print. The world has become a “global village” where people send and receive messages instantly. In 1970, McLuhan told Ed Fitzgerald of CBC television: “You could say that with the satellite, the global village has become a global theatre . . . [with] everybody on the planet simultaneously participating as actors” (Benedetti & DeHart, 1997: 66).

A fundamental goal of this conference, therefore, is to showcase the various spheres of our current global communication galaxy, evident in the multi-disciplinary framework of human communication, and to demonstrate different emerging issues in the practice of media and technology. Given the cross- and inter-disciplinary nature of this conference’s theme, scholars, activists, and professionals are invited to submit papers that draw on the various understandings of our communication galaxy, and address (but not limited to) the following topics:

  • Access to information, free speech, and freedom of expression
  • Communication and media ethics
  • Crisis communication
  • Globalization, culture, and digital divide
  • Health communication
  • Identity, ethnicity, hybridity, gender, and Diaspora
  • Imperialism and communication history
  • International, transnational, and intercultural communication
  • Media labour, literacy, activism, and hacktivism
  • New media, ICTs, and international development
  • Political economy of media and communication
  • Religion and media
  • Social change, democracy, and media reforms
  • The right to communicate and communication rights

Submissions

Submissions of individual papers and proposed panels can be in English or French, but must be original work which has not been previously published or presented in any language or format. All submissions must be sent electronically as Word Document attachments to Dr. Aliaa Dakroury, Conference Chair, at gca2013ottawa@gmail.com.

  • Papers: Proposals of individual papers should include: 1) the paper’s title; 2) name(s), affiliation(s), and rank(s)/status(es) of author(s); 3) contact information (e-mail, tel., fax, and address); and 4) a 250-400 word abstract of the proposed paper. The abstract should outline the research question, main argument, theoretical framework, methodology, analysis and discussion, and potential contribution to the communication and media literature.
  • Panels: Proposals of panels (maximum 4 papers) should include: 1) the panel’s title; 2) name(s), affiliation(s), and rank(s)/status(es) of the panel’s chair (or co-chairs); 3) the titles of all papers; 4) names, affiliations, and ranks/statuses of the panelists; 5) contacts information (e-mail, tel., fax, and address) of all chairs and presenters; and 6) a 500-800 word abstract of the proposed theme of the panel. The abstract should outline the overall theme of the panel and summaries of each individual presentation (i.e., research question, main argument, theoretical framework, methodology, analysis and discussion, and potential contribution to the communication and media literature).

Publications and Guidelines

All submissions will be refereed by the conference scientific committee, and accepted papers and panels will be published in the conference proceedings. Selected submissions will be considered for publication as refereed journal articles and book chapters. The refereed journal articles will be published in the Fall 2013 (15 December 2013) and the Spring 2014 (15 June 2014) issues of the Global Media Journal -- Canadian Edition (GMJ--CE). The refereed book chapters will be published in an edited book in 2014. The full papers for the conference proceedings, the refereed journal articles, and the refereed book chapters must follow the guidelines available at http://www.gmj.uottawa.ca/for-authors_e.html.

Important Dates

  • 1 May 2013:      Submission of proposals         
  • 1 June 2013:     Notification of decision
  • 1 Sep. 2013:     Full papers for conference proceedings
  • 15 Sep. 2013:   Revised articles for the Fall 2013 issue of GMJ--CE
  • 15 Mar. 2014:   Revised articles for the Spring 2014 issue of GMJ--CE
  • 1 May 2014:      Expanded chapters for the edited book

For more information and regular updates, please visit www.globalcomassociation.com or email the conference organizing committee at gca2013@ustpaul.ca.

Top ^^


Call for Papers

2013: Volume 6, Issue 1
Journalism and New Media
Guest Editor:
Dr. Geneviève A. Bonin
University of Ottawa

Research on the Internet has garnered more attention than any other technology in our history. Researchers have examined cyberspace from different angles; including, the technology itself, its creators, its users, its content, and its socioeconomic outputs. Journalism scholars have examined issues of convergence, production, alternative forms of journalism, content and the evolution of business models, only to name a few. However, research in this area is still evolving as social applications of new media are growing. Social networking sites are now an integral part of modern life. As far as journalism is concerned, the uses of these tools and user-generated content are still being explored.

he socio-economic constraints on this profession force managers and owners to make difficult decisions involving journalists’ workloads, work environments, and required skills which often include the ability to produce content for many platforms and sometimes in multiple languages. These challenges certainly affect content, production, and consumption.

. . . more

 


Call for Themes

Global Media Journal -- Canadian Edition invites thematic proposals (400-500 words) for future issues.

GMJ -- CE welcomes themes that examine the broad boundaries of communication and media studies, including, but not limited to, print media, broadcasting, radio, advertising, public relations, information and communication technologies, emerging media, alternative media, political communication, political economy of communication, journalism, research methodology, rhetoric, cultural studies, media effects, media ethics, communications law and policy, and so on. Given that the themes covered by this journal have implications that transcend national borders, proposed themes need not focus exclusively on Canada.

Topics related to the above specializations are numerous. However, priority for future issues of GMJ -- CE is given to themes that encompass the following topics:

  • Communication and Empire
  • Crises and Conflicts
  • Communication and Media Ethics
  • Economics of Communication
  • Foreign Policy, National Security, and Terrorism
  • Human Rights
  • Immigration and Citizenship
  • Innovation, regulation, and control
  • Mobile Technologies and Digital Consumption
  • Multiculturalism
  • Ethnicity and Identity

Theme proposals should be sent electronically as Word Document attachments to Dr. Mahmoud Eid at gmj@uOttawa.ca.

 

 
 

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