RIPE@2010 Conference September 8-11, 2010 in London CALL FOR PAPER PROPOSALS PUBLIC SERVICE MEDIA AFTER THE RECESSION ========================================= We are pleased to announce the fifth bi-annual RIPE conference, this time hosted by the Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI) at the University of Westminster together with the BBC and the Office of Communications (Ofcom). The recession is feeding trends and conditions that have long been festering but are now coming to a head for Public Service Broadcasting, and impacting transition to Public Service Media. Although better times are coming, and may already be appearing as green shoots¹, the consequences of changes in media policy, corporate strategy and industrial arrangements being pursued in response to the recession are likely to have longer-term implications. As deficits mount along with rising unemployment and shrinking tax revenues, governments seem to have less flexibility to support the public sector in media. As advertising revenue declines sharply commercial firms are lobbying more aggressively for a share of public funding to offset losses, threatening to end their unprofitable areas of service provision, and arguing more strenuously that PSM ought to be restricted to PSB. A public stressed by economic hardship, unemployment and financial losses are worried about mounting deficits may be less willing to pay for PSM. Thus, in the recessionary context challenges that have been simmering for years are coming to a boil. Media policy, corporate strategy and societal infrastructure are all in play as a consequence. This conference will focus on the implications in topical areas of particular importance: 1. Changing Conceptions and Practices in Journalism ===================================================== * Dynamics and conditions that challenge professional journalism * Citizen journalism, networked journalism and journalism as conversation¹ * Notions that PSM should be less a producer and more a news curator or aggregator * Trends in blogging, crowd sourcing and wiki practices in information production * Unique attributes and barriers in PSB news provision 2. Changing Patterns of Media Use and Engagement ================================================== * What is changing and for whom and what is not changing? * Consumer experiences and expectations of media * What advertisers understand about audiences, behaviours and media consumption that public broadcasters need to understand * New models of audience emerging ways to understand what media users are, and why and how this matters 3. Changing Strategies, Business Models and Sustainability ============================================================ * Challenges in implementing new strategies and the structural and organisational consequences of altered strategic directions * Comparing modes of funding for PSM and evidence of impact on content and service * Pros and cons of alternative arrangements for allocating public funding * Understanding the economic foundations of PSB as a financial organisation, especially economic analyses of these companies * Viability of varied options for financing in different platforms and genres * Pay-for media online where is it working, how is it working, and why 4. PSM and pressures for Localism and Community Services ========================================================== * The continuing importance of geographic communities for democracy and industry * Identities beyond geographic communities and implications for democracies and economies * Changes in targeting strategies and characteristic modes of address complex balance between cohesion and diversity * Experiments and experiences in public media for local and regional government * Patterns of investment in content, of what kinds and for which groups, and why * The challenges and opportunities of community media specifically relevant to PSM 5. Assessments of PSB / PSM Performance ========================================= * The extent to which criticisms of PSB /PSM companies withstand empirical scrutiny * Organisational and operational performance indicators and results * Competition in public service media provision how it works and with what results * Analyses of new instrumentation for governing PSB (e.g. public value test, service contracts, contestable funding, external governing boards, etc) 6. Media Policy and Discourse about PSM ========================================= * Assessment of public discourses about PSB / PSM, especially comparative research * The case for and against the historic status quo * The debate on state aid and evidence related to that * PSM¹s proper place in the media market today * Debate over who gets to be a public service provider * Who deserves to receive public funding, why and on what basis? * Can societies afford plurality in public service players and contents? SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS ======================= On one page (in English): 1 Provide the working title of the paper 2 Include your name, organisational affiliation with location, and e-mail address On a second page (in English): 1 Working title of the paper 2 An abstract addressing criteria 1-6 listed below 3 The maximum length is 600 words 4 Submissions due on or before January 11, 2010 All submissions will be peer reviewed as the basis for acceptance. Reviewers will assess the proposals using the following criteria: 1. Relevance to conference theme and topics 2. Conceptual/analytic quality (especially beyond purely descriptive) 3. Articulated implications for the management of public service companies, i.e. relevance to practice 4. Comparative research is highly desired 5. Empirical research is prioritised 6. Generalisability of insights and findings is certainly a factor Sixty papers will be accepted for presentation at the conference. The conference language is English. Decisions will be taken in February with notification on or about March 1, 2010. Please send your abstract proposal as an e-mail attachment to: Jeanette Steemers [log in to unmask] Gregory F. Lowe [log in to unmask] The conference registration fee is £250 for authors. The fee includes meals, amenities and conference materials. For those attending but not presenting, the registration fee is £350 and space is limited. The RIPE conference does not have funds to supplement personal travel costs except for invited keynote speakers. A select number of doctoral students can be included and the fee in these cases will be £180. For more information about the RIPE initiative and the substance of the previous four conferences, please visit our website: http://www.uta.fi/jour/ripe/2008/index.html. The 2010 conference web site is under construction.