News archive - [Event Announcement and Call for Papers] Conference and Call for Papers "Digital intermediaries and media pluralism"
The conference "Digital intermediaries and media pluralism" aims at exploring the way digital intermediaries (search engines, social media, news aggregators, etc) affect media pluralism and diversity.
The goal of the conference is to explore topics such as but not limited to:
• What are the indicators/measures of media pluralism of content distributed & shared by digital intermediaries?
• What (big) data sources and computational techniques can be used for measuring media pluralism of content distributed & shared by digital intermediaries?
• How to benchmark or weight indicators of media pluralism in content distributed & shared by digital intermediaries?
Different theoretical and empirical scientific approaches are welcome.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Digital intermediaries (search engines, social media, digital stores, news aggregators, and messaging apps) became one of the most important platforms for accessing and finding news in the 21st century (Napoli 2014; Rasmus and Schroder, 2014; Helberger, 2016). The recent example of the 2016 elections in the US showed the importance of Facebook as a (primary) source of news and the creation of a privately-controlled public sphere (Helberger, 2016) where social networks act as ‘social editor’ (Helberger, 2016) which controls the algorithm (news feed) that allows users to access and engage with content. That kind of power of digital intermediaries questions media freedom, media pluralism, and current media policies (Helberger, 2016).
Digital intermediaries make editorial-like and personalisation judgments in their algorithms and therefore can cause effects like filter bubble (Pariser, 2011) and echo chambers (Jamieson and Cappella, 2008; Garrett, 2009). However, “their potential to make information visible and accessible is why information intermediaries can have a very positive effect on diversity and pluralism.” (Helberger et al., 2014) Because of these processes, policy -makers should consider taking measures to ensure media plurality and diversity.
Different studies (Foster, 2012; Helberger et al., 2014; Nenadic and Ostling, 2016; Newman et al., 2016) tried to address the issue but none of them manage to answer the questions of how to measure and benchmark media pluralism and diversity of digital intermediaries. Existing tools and metrics for monitoring media pluralism provided by the European University Institute (The Media Pluralism Monitor) and Ofcom in the UK only partially address the problem. Ofcom (2015) noted that survey data and the web measurements (reach, page views, and time spent) do not provide “a complete and consistent picture of online news consumption across both the full range of devices and the sources used.” Considering the trend that is visible in the research of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (Foster, 2012; Newman et al., 2016) and other sources (Ofcom; EUI) determining the appropriate tools for measuring media pluralism and diversity is crucial.
Papers presented at the conference (after peer review) will be published in Proceedings which will be submitted for indexation by ISI, SCOPUS, and Google Scholar.
Official conference language is English.
TIMELINE
Deadline for submission of abstracts (300 words): July 31, 2017; Notification of acceptance: August 10, 2017;
Registration fee for participants whose papers are accepted – 120 Euro (SEE academia pay 50 Euro), all others pay 200 Euro.
Registration Form https://goo.gl/forms/iJhstSEL2iePNm373
Full Papers due by October 1, 2017 (4,000-6,000 words, including 300 word abstracts and six keywords; referencing - APA)
REGISTRATION AND SUBMISSION VIA E-MAIL: dmd@unidu.hr
For further information about the conference in general, contact:
dr.sc. Mato Brautovic (mbraut@unidu.hr)
Source and further information are available here
- Croatia
- Western Balkans
- Cross-thematic/Interdisciplinary
Entry created by Giorgio Piccirillo on July 10, 2017
Modified on July 10, 2017