Possibly of interest....
J
SSRC Necessary Knowledge Program News
We've posted four new essays on "Making Communication Research Matter"
http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/
Kate Coyer: Community Media: Scholarship, Policy Advocacy, and Power
Tools http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=28
"We need be mindful of the role and value of critical theory and
inquiry. The last decade has produced substantive scholarship that
well-places alternative and community media on the media studies
landscape as well as in the media policy environment. The defensive
positioning that our work matters is thing of the past."
Marianne Franklin: What if? Confessions of a Sceptical Activist
http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=27
"Recent history is full of lessons about how policy-makers make a
difference in the halls of political - national and international -
power. For activists or researchers who set out on the
institutional-change route, this decision to take a 'reformist' approach
then has to eschew the public gaze, headline news of the day. It also
asks for time, energy and commitment and a devotion to the long term. It
also means leaving behind cherished notions of independent thought, a
degree of autonomy, and that much aligned space away from it all that
enables 'critical thought' and 'rigorous research' to take place."
Phillip M. Napoli: Audience Evolution and the Resuscitation of "Mass
Communication" http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=26
"Researchers looking at a wide range of issues related to the
production, distribution, and consumption of user-generated content are
conducting research that can potentially enhance our understanding of
the contemporary dynamics of access to audiences, and can thereby feed
into informing the ongoing transition to communications policy
frameworks that extend far beyond the traditional institutional
communicators -- and that instead account for the masses as mass
communicators as well."
Danilo Yanich: Doing Policy Research: Camelot or Oz?
http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=25
"Done well, policy research accomplishes the task of speaking truth to
power even if power is reluctant to hear it. Done well, policy research
is candid, scientifically sound and fearless in its recommendations.
Done well, policy research is a fundamental and critical guide to public
action. Done poorly, policy research is an abomination that muddies the
policy area and makes claim to expertise that it does not possess. Done
poorly, it creates the cover that power needs to escape the truth."
We have also published a wrap up of our 'Collaborative Grants' cycle...
- Research Strategies
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/research-strategies> : Inclusion, Localism, Better Data, Field
Analysis.
- Research Outcomes
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/research-outcomes-and-uses> : Policy and Organizing Impact, Academic
Change
- Building a Culture of Collaboration
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/building-a-culture-of-collaboration> : Who Gets Involved? What is
Collaboration?
- Chronological List of the Grants
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/funded-projects>
- Community Feedback
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/community-feedback>
As always, mediahub@ssrc.org mailto:mediahub@ssrc.org .
For other up-to-date news and events, please see
http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/news
http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/news and
http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/events
http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/events .
Possibly of interest....
J
SSRC Necessary Knowledge Program News
We've posted four new essays on "Making Communication Research Matter"
<http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/>
Kate Coyer: Community Media: Scholarship, Policy Advocacy, and Power
Tools <http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=28>
"We need be mindful of the role and value of critical theory and
inquiry. The last decade has produced substantive scholarship that
well-places alternative and community media on the media studies
landscape as well as in the media policy environment. The defensive
positioning that our work matters is thing of the past."
Marianne Franklin: What if? Confessions of a Sceptical Activist
<http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=27>
"Recent history is full of lessons about how policy-makers make a
difference in the halls of political - national and international -
power. For activists or researchers who set out on the
institutional-change route, this decision to take a 'reformist' approach
then has to eschew the public gaze, headline news of the day. It also
asks for time, energy and commitment and a devotion to the long term. It
also means leaving behind cherished notions of independent thought, a
degree of autonomy, and that much aligned space away from it all that
enables 'critical thought' and 'rigorous research' to take place."
Phillip M. Napoli: Audience Evolution and the Resuscitation of "Mass
Communication" <http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=26>
"Researchers looking at a wide range of issues related to the
production, distribution, and consumption of user-generated content are
conducting research that can potentially enhance our understanding of
the contemporary dynamics of access to audiences, and can thereby feed
into informing the ongoing transition to communications policy
frameworks that extend far beyond the traditional institutional
communicators -- and that instead account for the masses as mass
communicators as well."
Danilo Yanich: Doing Policy Research: Camelot or Oz?
<http://www.ssrc.org/essays/mcrm/?p=25>
"Done well, policy research accomplishes the task of speaking truth to
power even if power is reluctant to hear it. Done well, policy research
is candid, scientifically sound and fearless in its recommendations.
Done well, policy research is a fundamental and critical guide to public
action. Done poorly, policy research is an abomination that muddies the
policy area and makes claim to expertise that it does not possess. Done
poorly, it creates the cover that power needs to escape the truth."
* * *
We have also published a wrap up of our 'Collaborative Grants' cycle...
* Research Strategies
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/research-strategies> : Inclusion, Localism, Better Data, Field
Analysis.
* Research Outcomes
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/research-outcomes-and-uses> : Policy and Organizing Impact, Academic
Change
* Building a Culture of Collaboration
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/building-a-culture-of-collaboration> : Who Gets Involved? What is
Collaboration?
* Chronological List of the Grants
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/funded-projects>
* Community Feedback
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/grants/default-research-bounties/grant
s/community-feedback>
* * *
As always, mediahub@ssrc.org <mailto:mediahub@ssrc.org> .
For other up-to-date news and events, please see
http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/news
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/news> and
http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/events
<http://mediaresearchhub.ssrc.org/events> .