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...and Communications for All? A Telecommunications Policy Agenda for the Obama Administration

...and Communications for All?
A Telecommunications Policy Agenda for the Obama Administration
 
 

Monday, January 26, 2009
10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.

Lunch served.

New America Foundation
1630 Connecticut Ave NW, 7th Floor
Washington, DC 20009

 


Over the past year, the Future of American Communications (FACT) Working Group, composed of sixteen telecommunications scholars from eleven American     universities, has been putting together a communications policy agenda for the next administration. The culmination of the group's work, a volume titled "...and Communications for All: A Policy Agenda for a New Administration" will be launched on January 26, 2009. The group's research and analysis covers a broad range of communication policy challenges facing the new administration, directly addressing issues like media ownership, universal broadband, protecting teenage privacy, and revamping competition in broadband markets. Members of the group will discuss the group's recommendations and political feasibility with Washingtonveterans.

Welcome 10:00 a.m.
Sascha Meinrath
Research Director,
Open Technology Initiative
Wireless Future Program, New America Foundation

Keynote 10:15 a.m.
Hon. Jonathan Adelstein
Commissioner, FCC

Rep. Mike Doyle (D-PA) invited
Vice Chair, Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet
Committee on Energy and Commerce 

Gene Kimmelman
Vice President, Federal and International Affairs
Consumers Union

Panel I 11:00 a.m.
FACT Working Group A

Competition and Investment in Wireline Broadband
Marvin Ammori
Assistant Professor of Law
University of Nebraska - Lincoln

U.S. Cable TV Policy: Managing the Transition to Broadband
Richard D. Taylor
Palmer Chair and Professor of Telecommunication Studies
Co-Director, Institute for Information Policy
Pennsylvania State University

America's Forgotten Challenge: Rural Access
Sharon Strover
Chair and Philip G. Warner Regents Professor
Department of Radio-Television-Film
Director, Telecommunications and Information Policy Institute
University of Texas

The Future of E-Rate: U.S. Universal Service Fund Support for Public Access
and Social Services
Heather E. Hudson
Director of the Communications and Technology Management Program
School of Business Administration
University of San Francisco

Panel II 12:00 p.m.
Fact Working Group B

A Spectrum Policy Agenda
Jon M. Peha
Professor, Department of Engineering and Public Policy
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Associate Director of the Center for Wireless and Broadband Networking
Carnegie Mellon University

The Way Forward for Wireless
Rob Frieden
Professor and Pioneers Chair in Cable Telecommunications
Pennsylvania State University

Public Service Media 2.0
Ellen P. Goodman
Professor of Law
Rutgers School of Law - Camden

Creating a Media Policy Agenda for the Digital Generation
Kathryn Montgomery
Professor, School of Communication
American Univeristy

Moderator
Amit Schejter
Co-Director, Institute for Information Policy
Assistant Professor, College of Communications
Pennsylvania State University

To RSVP for this event, go to the event page:
http://www.newamerica.net/events/2009/and_communications_all

For questions, contact Stephanie Gunter at (202) 986-2700 x 340 orgunter@newamerica.net
 
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[Call for Papers]Digital Cities 6: Concepts, Methods and Systems of Urban Informatics Workshop

Digital Cities 6: Concepts, Methods and Systems of Urban Informatics
Workshop at the 4th International Conference on Communities and Technologies
Penn State, USA, 24 June 2009

April 16th, 2009    Workshop position papers due
May 18th, 2009    Author notifications sent
June 24th, 2009    Workshop

1    Theme

http://cct2009.ist.psu.edu/workshops.cfm


2    Topics

Relevant workshop topics include but are not limited to the following:

•    Civic and community engagement strategies to support urban planning
•    Public sphere, participation and online deliberation systems
•    Urban e-government, e-governance, e-participation, e-democracy approaches
•    u-City: Ubiquitous computing, pervasive technology, wireless internet and mobile applications
•    Locative media, navigation and space
•    Urban informatics design and development methods and epistemologies
•    Multi-format user-generated content (narratives, photos, videos, multimedia)
•    Neogeography and 3D virtual environments for urban design and planning
•    Simulations to reproduce and analyse complex social phenomena and city systems
•    Social networking, collective intelligence and crowd sourcing in the urban context
•    Environmental, economic and social sustainability
•    Citizen science
•    Access, trust, privacy, safety and surveillance
•    Implications for residential architecture and the design of cities and public spaces
•    Ethical considerations scrutinizing the assumptions behind urban informatics


3    Organisation and Submission Details

This is a full day workshop. We will start off with a keynote address by an eminent speaker. Rather than formal conference-style paper presentations, we will follow the successful peer interview format and ask each participant to interview another contributing author. Pairs will be assigned in advance to prepare questions and engage with the paper. After lunch, there will be a range of group activities and a closing plenary discussion at the end. The workshop can accommodate a maximum number of between 25 to 30 participants including presenters in order to provide an environment that is conducive to debate and interaction.
We are interested in three types of contributions:

Concepts: Essay style papers discussing theoretical and conceptual ideas and innovation within a cross-disciplinary framework.

Methods: Papers reporting on novel approaches in the area of urban informatics, e.g. network action research, shared visual ethnography, urban probes, cross-disciplinary methods, etc.

Systems: Reports of systems and case studies that ground findings in practice and experience.

Prospective participants are asked to submit a position paper (2-4 pages total, in English, ACM SIGCHI 2-column format, same as for the C&T full papers) related to one of the workshop topics. Each submission should also include a short biography stating the author’s background and motivation for attending the workshop. Workshop position papers are due on April 16th, 2009 and will be reviewed and selected by the organisers with the support from an international program committee. Accepted authors will be notified by May 18th, 2009 – to leave enough time to qualify for the early bird conference registration. The acceptance of a workshop position paper implies that at least one of the authors will register for both the workshop and the Communities & Technologies 2009 conference. The workshop takes place on June 24th, 2009. After the workshop, selected contributors are invited to submit a full paper by October 1st, 2009. Full papers will undergo double blind peer review before being published. Arrangements for an edited book or a special issue of a relevant international journal are currently underway.


4    Bibliography

Each Digital Cities workshop has produced an edited volume containing selected workshop papers and other invited contributions as follows:

Digital Cities 5 -- Foth, M. (Ed.) (2009). Handbook of Research on Urban Informatics: The Practice and Promise of the Real-Time City. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference, IGI Global.

Digital Cities 4 -- Aurigi, A., & De Cindio, F. (Eds.). (2008). Augmented Urban Spaces: Articulating the Physical and Electronic City. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

Digital Cities 3 -- van den Besselaar, P., & Koizumi, S. (Eds.). (2005). Digital Cities 3: Information Technologies for Social Capital (Lecture Notes in Computer Science No. 3081). Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.

Digital Cities 2 -- Tanabe, M., van den Besselaar, P., & Ishida, T. (Eds.). (2002). Digital Cities 2: Computational and Sociological Approaches (Lecture Notes in Computer Science No. 2362). Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.

Digital Cities 1 -- Ishida, T., & Isbister, K. (Eds.). (2000). Digital Cities: Technologies, Experiences, and Future Perspectives (Lecture Notes in Computer Science No. 1765). Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.


5    Organisers

Marcus Foth
Senior Research Fellow, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
m.foth@qut.edu.au

Laura Forlano
Kauffman Fellow in Law, Yale Law School, New Haven, USA
laura.forlano@yale.edu

Hiromitsu Hattori
Assistant Professor, Department of Social Informatics, Kyoto University, Japan
hatto@i.kyoto-u.ac.jp
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[Call for Papers]SPECIAL ISSUE OF NEW MEDIA AND SOCIETY: MOBILE COMMUNICATION AND THE DEVELOPING WORLD

CALL FOR PAPERS

SPECIAL ISSUE OF NEW MEDIA AND SOCIETY: MOBILE COMMUNICATION AND THE DEVELOPING WORLD

Rich Ling & Heather A. Horst, guest editors

We are seeking papers for a special edition of the journal New Media & Society focusing on mobile communication and media, and its impact on the developing world. We are interested in papers that empirically describe the use of mobile practices as well as the convergence of mobile and other platforms in the developing world (e.g. Africa, Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe or other locations in the "global south"). Successful papers will examine the integration and use of mobile communication technology and its implications (both positive and negative) in individuals' lives. We are seeking papers that investigate the global as well as the local appropriations of mobile media use and its relationship to social change and/or development. Papers might address issues such as:

*    What are the social, cultural, gender related and political dimensions of mobile communication in the developing world?
*    What are the determinants, obstacles and implications of the adoption and use of mobile communications?
*    What are the dimensions of inequalities and how does mobile communication address these inequalities? 
*    How does mobile communication facilitate activities such as care giving, coordination, social cohesion, money transfer, commerce, locally and globally?   
Submissions may be in the form of empirical research studies or theory-building papers and should be 5000 - 7000 words (in English). Papers must reflect new scholarship and not have been previously published (it is possible to submit revised conference papers). Authors interested in submitting to the special issue should send their 200-word abstract to either guest editor (Rich Ling or Heather Horst) on or before 1 March 2009.  A sub-set of these abstracts will be selected for further development. Papers based on the abstracts that have been accepted for further consideration, will be due on 15 July 2009. Authors of papers selected for formal review may be invited to participate in a Pre-Conference Workshop at Association of Internet Research meetings on 7 October 2009 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin USA.

About the editors of this NM&S special issue:

Rich Ling (richard.ling@telenor.com) is a sociologist at Telenor's research institute located near Oslo, Norway, and a guest Professor at the IT University of Copenhagen. He has also been the Pohs visiting professor of communication studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author of the recently published book New Tech, New Ties: How Mobile communication is reshaping social cohesion as well as The Mobile Connection: The cell phone's impact on society, and along with Scott Campbell he is the editor of The Reconstruction of Space and Time Through Mobile Communication Practices. For the past fifteen years, he has worked in the research arm of Telenor and has been active in researching issues associated with new information communication technology and society with a particular focus on mobile telephony.

Heather A. Horst (hhorst@uci.edu) is a sociocultural anthropologist at the Humanities Research Institute at the University of California, Irvine. She is the co-author (with Daniel
Miller) of The Cell Phone: An Anthropology of Communication that examines the implications of mobile phones for development in Jamaica and is co-author with Mizuko Ito, et al. of a forthcoming book published by MIT Press, entitled Hanging Out, Messing Around and Geeking Out: Living and Learning with New Media  She received her Ph. D. in Social Anthropology from University College London. Before joining UCHRI, she worked as a research fellow at the University of the West Indies and University College London and a postdoctoral scholar at University of Southern California, and University of California, Berkeley where her focus has been on the appropriation of new media and communication technologies in Jamaica and the United States.
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[공모] ≪방송문화연구≫ 제21권1호 기획논문 및 일반 연구논문 공모

<안내> 한국방송공사 ≪방송문화연구≫ 제21권1호 기획논문 및 일반 연구논문 공모
 
1. 회원님들의 건승을 기원합니다.
 
2. 한국방송공사에서는 등재학술지≪방송문화연구≫ 2009년 제21권1호 기획논문 및 일반 연구논문 공모를 <다 음>과 같이 공모합니다.
 
 
< 다    음 >
 
1. 기획논문
한국방송공사에서 발행하는 ≪방송문화연구≫ 2009년 제21권1호(6월 30일 발행)는 특집으로 ‘미디어 환경변화와 방송뉴스의 위상과 역할’을 기획하였습니다. 관심 있는 미디어 종사자와 언론학자들께서는 관련 연구주제들에 관해 연구개요와 방법론, 그리고 연구내용을 담아 A4 용지 2~3매 정도의 분량의 지원서를 오는 1월 30일(금)까지 book@kbs.co.kr로 접수해주시기 바랍니다.
기안서가 채택된 연구자들께서는 2009년 3월 30일까지 가본을 제출하셔야 하며, 완성된 원고는 일반 연구논문과 마찬가지로 별도의 심사과정을 거치며 최종원고 접수일은 4월30일입니다.

<연구주제>
"미디어 환경변화와 방송뉴스의 위상과 역할"
포털 등 인터넷 사이트를 통한 뉴스의 확산이 일상적인 현상이 됨에 따라 방송뉴스의 위상과 역할에 대해 깊이 있게 고찰해봐야 할 필요성이 제기되고 있습니다. 기존 매체와의 속보성 경쟁에서 벗어나 방송 매체가 가지고 있는 상대적 이점을 최대화하여, 시청자의 알 권리와 복지를 위해 기여할 수 있는 방송뉴스의 역할 정립이 무엇보다 시급한 시기입니다. 따라서 《방송문화연구》에서는 방송뉴스의 취재, 편집, 편성 등 생산현장에서의 전 과정에 대해 깊이 있는 연구논문들을 공모해 다매체 환경에서의 방송뉴스의 위상과 역할을 총체적으로 정립해보고자 합니다.

<세부주제>
주제 1 : 지상파방송 뉴스의 미래
새로운 매체 환경에서 지상파 방송 뉴스의 현재는 어떠하며 미래는 어떠할 것인지에 대한 분석 연구.
주제 2 : 방송뉴스의 생산과정 연구
아이템 선정, 취재, 편집 등 방송뉴스의 생산관행을 고찰해보는 연구 또는 그런 고찰 과정을 통해 개선점을 찾아내어 새로운 매체 환경에 맞는 생산 방식을 제안해볼 수 있는 연구.
주제 3 : 방송뉴스의 포맷 연구
방송뉴스의 포맷을 분석한 연구 또는 그런 분석을 통해 다매체 환경에 맞는 뉴스포맷을 제안해볼 수 있는 연구.
주제 4 : 방송사 보도국의 조직 구성 연구
지난 몇 년간 방송사 보도국이 부서제에서 팀제, 전문기자제 등 다양한 변화를 시도해왔다. 이런 조직 변화가 뉴스생산에 미친 영향을 고찰한 연구 또는 새로운 매체 환경과 급변하는 사회현실을 고려하여, 시청자들에게 좀 더 알찬 뉴스를 생산할 수 있는 보도국의 조직 구성을 제안할 수 있는 연구.
주제 5 : 방송기자의 역할 연구
미디어 환경 변화에 따른 방송기자의 역할 변화를 고찰해보는 연구 또는 방송뉴스   의 객관성과 공정성, 시청자 복지 향상을 위한 방송기자의 역할을 제시하는 연구
주제 6 : 방송뉴스에서의 시민(기자)의 역할 연구
방송뉴스 생산 과정에서의 시민 참여를 고찰해보는 연구나 방송뉴스를 생산하는 시민기자들의 역할과 의미를 고찰해보는 연구

※ 이 밖에도 방송 뉴스 편집이나 뉴스 영상, 뉴스 리포트 구성방식, 방송사 보도국내의 여기자와 남기자의 역할과 위상, 방송사 보도국의 조직문화, 방송기자 선발방식 등 방송뉴스 생산과정과 방송사 보도국의 다양한 특성을 고찰하는 논문 모두 환영합니다.  
 .............................................................

2. 일반 연구논문
(1) 논문 주제 : 방송이론, 정책, 운영과 편성, 산업, 수용자, 방송 문화, 방송 기술 등
직접적으로 방송과 관련된 영역과, 간접적으로 관련이 있는 뉴미디어 영역 포함.
(2) 응모 자격 : 방송ㆍ언론 관련 박사학위 소지자 또는 언론계 종사자를 원칙으로 함.
(3) 논문 작성 : 《방송문화연구》 논문작성 규정(http://book.kbs.co.kr)을 따름.
(4) 원고 분량 : 200자 원고지 기준 130~150매
(5) 논문 심사 : 편집위원회가 의뢰한 전문가로 구성된 심사위원진을 통한 공정한 심사.
(6) 논문 접수 : book@kbs.co.kr
(7) 원고 마감 : 2009년 4월 30일
(8) 채택된 논문에 대해서는 소정의 원고료를 지급함.
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[Call for Papers] Digital Media Technologies Revisited

Call for Papers:

Digital Media Technologies Revisited: Theorising social relations,
interactions and communication


A two-day conference co-organised by the

ECREA Digital Culture & Communication (DCC) section,

the DGPuK Computer-Mediated Communication (CMC) section and

the DGPuK Media Sociology (MS) section

with support from the Centre for Material Digital Culture (DMDC),
University of Sussex, UK

and the COST 298: Participation in the Broadband Society network

Place: University of the Arts, Berlin, Germany

Dates: Nov. 20-21, 2009

Topic:

This two-day conference on ’Digital Technologies Revisited’ aims to
understand contemporary developments in digital media and digital media
theory by looking backwards as well as forwards. We set out to explore
an in-between time: a time, when much of the hype concerning digital
media has died down, much research material has been gathered and
analyzed and quite a bit about the possibilities and limitations of
digital media (especially in comparison to older media forms) has been
understood.

Far from a communication revolution, the media landscape has nonetheless
changed substantially in recent years. In fact, we have undergone a
process of diffusion and appropriation: digital media have become an
important and ever-increasing part of our everyday lives. They suffuse
our communication, information and entertainment spheres. Not
surprisingly, the perceived connection between the internet and many
areas of social life, from work to play, has steadily increased in
recent years. However, even as digital media become pervasive,
ubiquitous, common and mundane, innovation continues to become an
integral characteristic of digital media forms, the proliferation of
which is challenging to map.

We would therefore like to return to earlier models and theories that
attempted to explain new (digital) media in its ’first wave’ forms.
Additionally, we would like to address the question of what kind of
alterations and additions can be used to adapt existing models and
theories for current purposes (e.g. mediated person-to-person
communication; para-social interactions with virtual agents;
pseudo-social interactions with intelligent machines, etc.).

The range of models and theories that can be used, re-visited, or
adapted is wide (i.e. traditional communication studies models, cultural
studies theories, sociology and others). We want to encourage papers
that explore tensions between older and new approaches and older and
newer ‚new media’ formations. Where has there been movement, where not,
and are there in fact new theories emerging?

The social world sits at the heart of these diverse concerns. Social
relations, interactions and communication are at the heart of our
questions. Within this focus, the possible range of theories and methods
used, is wide. The following provides the range of angles that we propose:

- HCI revisited:
Human-computer-interaction was an early forerunner concerning questions
of the relation between humans and computers (as well as, eventually,
humans via computers). What do we know of these relationships by now?
How do they differ from other human-object relationships? And how do
developments in these fields continue to inform, intersect and diverge
from the social life of digital media forms?

- Virtual reality and AI re-thought:
Virtual reality and AI frameworks are another reference point that
dominated earlier cybercultural theory, and design. What was specific
about these moments and intersections? Why have these frameworks become
less used by technocultural theory (at least for more popular
theorizations)? What has survived in terms of virtual reality and AI
concepts in contemporary formations such as Web 2.0, Facebook and Second
Life?

- Disappearance of the machine – ubiquity, ambience and similar
approaches
A more recent development has been around the merging of machines, and
computational architecture with our environments. Thinking about
pervasive computing, sense perception and intimate technologies are
increasingly being used as frameworks for analysis. Where are they at in
terms of the current state of development? And what consequences would
these have for existing theoretical approaches (e.g. of appropriation of
media technologies) and questions of power? What happens to ethical and
political issues, such as privacy, monitoring, etc.? What does pervasive
computing mean for our relationships with machines?

- Identities 4.0?
Identity was a much discussed topic in early web discourses. It is one
that keeps returning in new disguises. Identity, it seems, has survived
the ’post’ in identity politics. However, the valences of identity are
now much more negative than the more utopic versions that proliferated
in early digital media cultures. Identity categories have proliferated,
and the intersections of race, nation, class, gender, sexuality and
belief play a part in generating insecurity and a lack of trust between
citizens, denizens and racialized others, the adult world and ‘youth’,
or children and potential ‘paedophiles’. Can early theorizations of
identity and digital media be brought to bear on contemporary
experiences and what would these look like?

- Bodies
Community, identity and the body were the tripartite features of digital
media theory in the 1990s. Whist community has been reformulated as SL
and social networking, and identity continues to return, the body has
also become an increasingly urgent site of enquiry as convergences of
informational and biotechnological practices of body knowledge become
materialized through digital media practices. These intersections offer
up questions about the precise contours of current biodigital identity
in the form of intersecting DNA databases, personal genomes, and
biometrics. What approaches and questions can address these informatic
corporealisations and their intersection with everyday life worlds?

- Mass media, journalism and public communication
Since the mid-1990s, a broad corpus of theories on the production,
dissemination, reception, and the public and/or personal impact of
online mass media has evolved in the social sciences. How do
journalists’ routines change in online media? Does the public relevance
of journalistic mass media decrease or increase in present and future
times? How can the (societal) diffusion or (individual) appropriation of
new media developments described or analyzed? What do mass media mean to
the audience, and what are the present and future economic perspectives
of online mass media?

- COST 298
Additionally, COST 298 members are invited to send separate abstracts
for a COST panel. COST 298 is an Action within the intergovernmental
framework for European Co-operation in the field of Scientific and
Technical Research. In COST 298 European scientists from
telecommunication research departments, universities and operators
together with independent consultants collaborate in cross-disciplinary
groups to analyze the social dimensions of people’s relationships to
information and communication technologies. In the COST 298 panel, the
same questions of older models and newer developments that guide the
overall conference are asked more specifically concerning the broadband
society. What have we learned in the last four years of the COST 298
network? Only COST 298 members will be eligible to apply for this panel.

Please submit an extended abstract (700 words max.) by the 31st of
May 2009 (and clearly stating which topic section you would like to
submit this to) to:

Prof. Dr. Maren Hartmann - University of the Arts (UdK) – GWK -
Mierendorffstraße 30 - 10589 Berlin - Germany - Phone: +49 30 3185 2943

Email: hartmann@udk-berlin.de
_______________________________________________
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크

[공모] 인터넷에서의 뉴스의 생산과 유통의 발전 방안

■ 세미나명
'인터넷에서의 뉴스의 생산과 유통의 발전 방안: 매체간 에코시스템 구축과 포털의 책임성 기준 확립을 위하여'
 
■ 내용
 
▷ 공모 주제
 
- 제1주제 : 언론사와 포털의 매체상생을 위한 에코시스템 구축 논의
- 제2주제 : 포털의 적절한 법규범적 책임성 기준 설정을 위한 논의
 
▷ 세미나 예정일 : 2009년 3월 20일(금)
 
▷ 세미나 장소 : 프레스센터 19층 기자회견장
 
■ 공모방식 : 발제를 희망하시는 분은 2페이지 내외의 연구계획서 및 연구경력서를 작성하시어 학회 홈페이지(www.comm.or.kr)의 공모탭 이용하시거나 학회 이메일(office@comm.or.kr)로 보내주시기 바랍니다.
 
■ 발제 신청 마감일 : 2009년 2월 6일(금)
 
■ 문의 및 안내 : 한국언론학회 사무국 office@comm.or.kr, 02-762-6833/723-8350
진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크