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  • ICA24 Black Scholars' Noirée Evite: Saturday, 222 June 2024

    Back for its second year, the ICA Black Scholars' Noirée celebrates Black communication scholars' contributions to the field and to our community with drinks, canapes, and desserts provided by ICA. 

    Cohosted this year by @msand37 and Laura Sawyer, ICA's Executive Director.

    In the words of original ICA22 Paris Noirée host @dfreelon, "Anyone who would be comfortable in a room full of overeducated Black people is welcome."

    Saturday 22, June 2024 from 9:00 - 10:45pm

    Convention Center - Upper Floor Foyer E+F

    Please RSVP here: http://evite.me/NP7ZrTVxsh 

  • NEW DEADLINE (15 Feb 2024): ICA Preconference "Whose News is It"?

    *Whose News is It? Assessing the Role and Influence of International Media Assistance in Defining the News Agenda*

    This preconference is now a hybrid event and has a new abstract submission deadline of 15 February 2024.

     

    *Call for papers*

     

    This preconference explores "International Media Assistance Influence on the News Agenda" on a global scale. We seek to debate the question, "Whose news is it?", fostering deeper understanding of the nature and role of foreign media assistance. We hope to attract researchers and practitioners to construct a more comprehensive framework for critical analysis and empirical examination of media funding and its implications. Ultimately, the goal is to exchange and disseminate research illuminating the multifaceted aspects of foreign media funding from an interdisciplinary perspective.

     

    A significant portion of global international development assistance has been dedicated to enhancing the capacity of societies to deliver news and investigative journalism. This aid and investment has sought to foster journalism in often hostile environments where governance and economic conditions create barriers to the existence and operation of independent media. Over the years, media assistance programs have allocated substantial resources to support media organizations and individual journalists operating in diverse countries (Requejo Alemán 2011, 2013). This backing has played a crucial role in filling the void left by traditional journalism business models, primarily rooted in analogue environments reliant on advertising which has massively declined. A report by the Centre for International Media Assistance in 2018 estimated that approximately $600 million annually is directed towards media development in Africa, coming from both state and private donors (CIMA 2022). One could argue that this figure might even be higher, considering the undisclosed amounts spent by China on global media operations and training.

     

    In recent years, funders and researchers have increasingly collaborated to evaluate the impact of media development assistance (Becker et al. 2019; Benequista et al. 2022). Meanwhile, some scholars have delved into how the influx of foreign funding affects the development of an independent media sector in the Global South (Paterson, Gadzekpo, and Wasserman 2018) and how foundation funding influences the "boundaries of journalism" (Wright, et al, 2019). Notably, China has made substantial investments in the development and influence of media in Africa and Latin America, channelling resources into media infrastructure and training (Kalathil 2017; Myers, Dietz, and Frère 2014). Furthermore, other nation-states and media corporations like Google, along with private foundations, have directed resources into journalism initiatives. Despite comprehensive criticism of media assistance, many argue that investigative journalism in numerous regions around the world would cease to exist without the foreign support it receives, even as they express concerns about maintaining colonial dependencies, neo-imperialism, and alignment with donor priorities (Requejo-Alemán and Lugo-Ocando 2014; Wright, Scott, and Bunce 2019).

     

    While extensive research has been conducted on the impacts and influences of foreign assistance on media in Africa (e.g., Wasserman and Madrid-Morales, 2018), Latin America (e.g., Morales and Menechelli, 2022), and the Arab World (e.g., Bebawi, 2016), the growing role of the Asia-Pacific region as a site of East-West tension calls for exploration of foreign journalism funding in this area. This region has increasingly become a battleground for geopolitical struggles where all participants aim to project soft power and influence. The objectives and outcomes of media development aid have been examined in special issues (Higgins, 2015; Paterson et al, 2018; Olmedo Salar & Lugo-Ocando. 2018) and in various books (Becker, et al, 2019; Lugo-Ocando, 2020), and are the focus of an IAMCR working group.

     

    With this context in mind, this call for papers seeks to inspire discussions and identify the fundamental elements and issues that define the role of media assistance and account for its role, nature, and influences. The potential outcomes include the creation of a journal special edition featuring papers presented at the pre-conference, and/or the development of an edited book. Acceptance into the preconference does not determine acceptance into any subsequent publication.

     

    Those interested in submitting abstracts should draw from, though not be limited to, these questions and issues:

     

       * What is the current state of media assistance in the Global South?

       * Is media assistance in the Asia-Pacific still relevant in the

         post-Cold War era?

       * Who are the primary donors and recipients of media assistance?

       * How does media assistance influence news agendas?

       * What distinctions exist in the goals and outcomes of private versus

         public media assistance?

       * Is media assistance a form of media co-option?

       * What is the relationship between media assistance, soft power, and

         geopolitical or ideological conflicts?

       * How is the reporting of climate change and other global crisis

         affected by donor funding?

       * In which ways is (covert) media assistance framed and articulated?

       * How can media assistance be mobilised to engage and bolster the full

         spectrum alternative voices at the margins?

       * What are the historical contexts of media assistance programs and

         the issues they address?

     

    Please send a 300-word abstract to C.Paterson@leeds.ac.uk and Saba.Bebawi@uts.edu.au by midnight GMT on 15 February 2024.

    Decisions will be communicated by 29 February 2024.

     

    This hybrid preconference will take place Thursday, 20 June from 8:00 AM - 12:00 PM at the Gold Coast Convention & Exhibition Centre (GCCEC) and will include online presentations.  Online presenters or attendees are required to register.  Registration details will be posted at icahdq.org.

     

    Hosted by the Global Communication and Social Change division of ICA and organised by:

     

    Susan Abbott, Saba Bebawi, Jairo Lugo-Ocando, Winston Mano, viola milton, Pablo Morales, Chris Paterson, Herman Wasserman



    ------------------------------
    Lea Hellmueller
    City, University of London

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  • The Museum of Public Relations 9th Annual Celebrating Black PR History Event (Live/Webinar)

    Where Are All the Black Men in Public Relations?

    9th Annual Celebrating Black PR History event
    Thursday, February 15, 2024, 6pm ET

    This is a HYBRID event, taped before a live audience, followed by a networking reception. It is also accessible via Zoom.


    You must be registered to attend.

    REGISTER HERE TO ATTEND LIVE | Admission to attend the live event: $25; Student: $10
    REGISTER HERE FOR ZOOM | Attend via Zoom: Free
    BECOME A SPONSOR

    Ninety years ago, the first African American man opened a public relations agency in the extraordinarily competitive New York market. Despite dealing with the Depression—and despite his race—Joseph Varney Baker thrived for decades by representing national corporations reaching out to the burgeoning Black middle class in the North. While several Black men over the decades followed successfully in Baker's footsteps, primarily as entrepreneurs, Black men today are all but absent inside today's agencies and corporate communications departments, and Black entrepreneurs are few and far between.

    This intergenerational panel will discuss the real life issues affecting Black men today, with a focus on developing strategies to attract more Black men into the industry, especially when the number of men of all ethnicities is nearing record lows.  

    HOST Dr. Chuck Wallington, Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing & Communications Officer, Cone Health

    David W. Brown, Assistant Dean of Community and Communication, Temple University

    Brandon Thomas, Executive Vice President, Freuds Group

    Emmanuel Reid, Account Executive, Ogilvy Chicago

    Devon Jackson, Senior Account Supervisor, EGAMI Group

    CLOSING Touré Burgess, VP of Operations; Chair, Black Men in Communications, VP, Operations, Black Public Relations Society New York

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