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In: Italian Political Science Review: IPSR = Rivista italiana di scienza politica : RISP, Band 50, Heft 3, S. 437-439
ISSN: 2057-4908
In: Journal of information policy: JIP, Band 6, S. 403-435
ISSN: 2158-3897
AbstractThe goals set out in the 1995 Platform for Action of the Beijing World Conference on Women—to achieve gender equality in and through the media—interrogate today's digital policies: To what extent have internationally agreed-upon norms of gender equality and gender mainstreaming been recognized and implemented? To what extent has the knowledge produced by feminist scholarship informed media policy developments? What kind of new knowledge, and analytical frameworks, may contribute to unmask gender-unequal power relations in contemporary media environments? The article addresses these questions with a focus on European discourses and institutional practices for the Digital Agenda.
In: Journal of information policy: JIP, Band 6, Heft 1, S. 403-435
ISSN: 2158-3897
AbstractThe goals set out in the 1995 Platform for Action of the Beijing World Conference on Women—to achieve gender equality in and through the media—interrogate today's digital policies: To what extent have internationally agreed-upon norms of gender equality and gender mainstreaming been recognized and implemented? To what extent has the knowledge produced by feminist scholarship informed media policy developments? What kind of new knowledge, and analytical frameworks, may contribute to unmask gender-unequal power relations in contemporary media environments? The article addresses these questions with a focus on European discourses and institutional practices for the Digital Agenda.
In: Feminist media studies, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 318-322
ISSN: 1471-5902
In: Italian Political Science Review: Rivista italiana di scienza politica, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 166-168
ISSN: 0048-8402
In: Italian Political Science Review: Rivista italiana di scienza politica, Band 42, Heft 1, S. 143-146
ISSN: 0048-8402
In: Italian Political Science Review: Rivista italiana di scienza politica, Band 37, Heft 1, S. 141-143
ISSN: 0048-8402
In: Routledge studies in European communication research and education 11
Section 1. Introduction / Karen Ross and Claudia Padovani -- Section 2. Research and policy review / Carolyn M. Byerly and Claudia Padovani -- Section 3. The WIME study : context, methods and summaries / Karen Ross and Monia Azzalini -- Section 4. The national case studies -- Section 5. Conclusions / Claudia Padovani, Karen Cross and Margaret Gallagher.
In: Global transformations in media and communication research
"Communication Rights and Social Justice offers historical perspectives on struggles to use the instruments of state and political participation - power, inter-governmental treaties and declarations, and various forms of political advocacy and protest politics - to articulate the concept of communication as a fundamental right. The contributions make up an intergenerational and multi-vocal dialogue. Different generations of scholars, activists and practitioners, who have been engaged with mobilizations at different times, present their views; some adopt a more academic style, others reflect autobiographically on personal experiences. The collection acknowledges the plural geo-cultural roots that compose what have eventually become a network of transnational mobilization dynamics that are increasingly global, digitally mediated, multi-stakeholder and faced by new and forthcoming challenges. It makes an original and welcome contribution to understanding a vital history that will only grow in worldwide importance"--
In: Global Transformations in Media and Communication Research
"Communication Rights and Social Justice offers historical perspectives on struggles to use the instruments of state and political participation - power, inter-governmental treaties and declarations, and various forms of political advocacy and protest politics - to articulate the concept of communication as a fundamental right. The contributions make up an intergenerational and multi-vocal dialogue. Different generations of scholars, activists and practitioners, who have been engaged with mobilizations at different times, present their views; some adopt a more academic style, others reflect autobiographically on personal experiences. The collection acknowledges the plural geo-cultural roots that compose what have eventually become a network of transnational mobilization dynamics that are increasingly global, digitally mediated, multi-stakeholder and faced by new and forthcoming challenges. It makes an original and welcome contribution to understanding a vital history that will only grow in worldwide importance"--
Introduction to the volume and the project behind it and short summary of chapters. This publication, resulting from a collaboration between Euromed Feminist Initiative and the University of Padova, builds on the knowledge of academics and advocates, shedding new insights on those challenges. It aims at supporting institutional efforts being made to guarantee women's participation in the Syrian reconstruction, as well as advocacy initiatives carried out to ensure women's participation in political and economic decision-making in the country's future.
BASE
In: Global networks: a journal of transnational affairs, Band 16, Heft 3, S. 350-371
ISSN: 1471-0374
AbstractIn this article, we address transformations in global governance brought about by information and communication technologies (ICTs). Focusing on the specific domain of 'gender‐oriented communication governance ', we investigate online interactions among different kinds of actors active in promoting gender equity in and through the media. By tracing and analysing online issue networks, we investigate which actors are capable of influencing the framing of issues and of structuring discursive practices. From the analysis, different forms of power emerge, reflecting diverse modes of engaging in online interactions, where actors can operate as network 'programmers', 'mobilizers', or 'switchers'. Our case study suggests that, often, old ways of conceiving actors' interactions accompany the implementation of new communication tools, while the availability of a pervasive networked infrastructure does not automatically translate into meaningful interactions among all relevant actors in a specific domain.
Part 2: Section 1: National and International Policies ; International audience ; This paper looks at the challenges posed by ICT critical infrastructures in their interaction with governance processes. The authors argue that, in order to develop better understanding of how (global) governing arrangements are made in a highly mediatised environment, adequate frameworks should be elaborated to study the interrelation between institutional and technological infrastructures. In this context, institutions are conceived as collections of norms - including a mix of rules and practices - while technological infrastructures are seen as instruments that transform governance processes, also enabling different actors' participation. Adopting a constructivist approach, combined with a focus on governance networks, the authors introduce a multi-dimensional analytical framework to investigate governance processes where institutions and technologies converge to create socio-technical systems.
BASE
In: The Handbook of Global Media and Communication Policy, S. 543-563