Pacific Media Centre | Call for Papers | Media
and Democracy in the Pacific, USP, Suva, Sept 5-6, 2012 |
Updates
CALL FOR
PAPERS Media and Democracy in the South
Pacific University of the South
Pacific
Suva, Fiji, 5-6 September 2012
Democracy movements gathered momentum across the Middle East
in 2011-12, but in the South Pacific they arguably stalled.
Fiji continued to be governed by a military dictatorship
resulting from the country’s latest coup in 2006. A
draconian Media Decree enacted in 2010 provides fines and
even prison sentences for what were once ethical violations.
A new government elected in Tonga in 2010 has not moved as
quickly as expected toward democracy and media freedom.
In Samoa, almost all Members of Parliament are still
chiefly matai, and libel laws have a chilling effect
on journalism. West Papua continues to be occupied by
Indonesia, and its press is subject to onerous restrictions.
Even media advocacy groups suffered from dissention, with a
group of mostly Polynesian journalists breaking away from
the Fiji-based Pacific Islands News Association (PINA) and
basing itself in Samoa as the Pasifika Media
Association
(PasiMA).
The University of the South Pacific serves
twelve member nations in the region. Its Journalism
programme is based at USP’s Laucala campus in Suva, Fiji.
It seeks to bring together regional and international media
scholars and political scientists, along with Pacific Island
journalists and journalism educators, to discuss issues
relating to Media and Democracy in Pacific countries and to
propose solutions to problems identified. It also seeks to
facilitate regional collaboration to assist and strengthen
media organisations and democracy movements in the South
Pacific, and to establish a network of Pacific journalism
educators. In partnership with the Pacific Media Centre at
Auckland University of Technology (AUT), USP Journalism
invites paper and panel proposals for a symposium on Media
and Democracy in the South Pacific to be held 5-6 September
2012.
Selected peer-reviewed papers from the symposium
will be published in a special issue of AUT’s Pacific
Journalism Review in May 2013.
Possible areas to be
addressed include:
• Press freedom in the South
Pacific
• Peace journalism
• Development
communication
• Media and government
• Media
education in the South Pacific
MORE INFORMATION AT USP: www.usp.ac.fj/index.php?id=11749
Please send individual paper proposals of 300 words, or
panel proposals of 1000 words, to: Dr Marc Edge: marc.edge@usp.ac.fj
Non-scholarly works on the subject by journalists, including multimedia presentations, are invited for a special session devoted to the views of media practitioners. Student essays are also invited, and the top student paper will be awarded a prize. Pacific Journalism Review submissions and other calls for papers:
Other Pacific Media Centre
updates:
Latest Pacific Journalism
Review edition 18(2) May 2012 preview of
abstracts:
www.pjreview.info/volume-18/issue-1
Pacific Media Centre media freedom 2012
video: http://www.youtube.com/pacmedcentre
VIDEO: Assaults, repression, self-censorship
plague Pacific media, says new PMW report
PMW ID: 7920 Wednesday, May 2, 2012 AUCKLAND (Pacific
Media Watch): Brutal repression of journalists and civil
rights in Indonesian-ruled West Papua, censorship and
self-censorship in... read more
PNG: Police assault only woman MP Dame
Kidu
PMW ID: 7944 Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Sarah Matsushita PORT MORESBY (Asia-Pacific Forum on Women,
Law and Development / Pacific Media Watch): Human rights
activist and sole Papua New... read more
PNG state
recovers K52m in corruption probe
Pacific
Scoop:
Report – By Henry Yamo Fifty two million kina (NZ$32 million) has been recovered by Papua New Guinea’s Task Force Sweep corruption watchdog and the government hopes to double that to more than K100 million in the next six months.
www.pmc.aut.ac.nz
ENDs