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Creative Brains in Brisbane
Submitted by Snurb on Wed, 25/06/2008 - 10:10.Brisbane.
The CCi conference is about to start, with the opening keynote address by the wonderfully titled Baroness Professor Susan Greenfield. She begins by highlighting the role of creativity as a key commodity of the 21st century, and (as a neuroscientist) points especially to the question of what happens physically in the creative brain. The brain determines our perspective on the world, yet it is impossible to convey to others exactly what that perspective is (we resort to various forms of communication as a means for doing so); some views say that the abilities of the brain are themself determined by DNA.
Futures for News Media in the Face of Citizen Journalism
Submitted by Snurb on Wed, 25/06/2008 - 13:11.Brisbane.
We're now starting the first panel session of the CCi conference, and this is the panel on citizen journalism that my paper is in as well, so I'm including the Powerpoint below (audio to be added later available now).
The first speaker is David McKnight from UNSW, whose focus is on the future of quality journalism in the emerging media environment. He points to a perspective that newspapers are now an 'endangered species'; The Australian passionately rejected this in a September 2006 editorial. It suggested a commitment to quality journalism as an important continuing strategy for newspapers. Nonetheless, the economic case for newspaper publishing is becoming increasingly difficult; circulations are falling and especially classified advertising is moving away from print.
Public Speech, Public Spaces, Public Spheres
Submitted by Snurb on Wed, 25/06/2008 - 15:13.Brisbane.
The next session I'm attending at the CCi conference is also (broadly) on citizen journalism. Andrew Kenyon from the University of Melbourne is the first speaker, and his focus is especially on the legal perspective on journalism as public speech, building on interviews with editors, journalists, and other media workers. Legal frameworks enable in particular the search for truth, the maintenance of democracy, and (especially in the US) a critique of government, but public speech is often positioned as fulfilling a more generic function (such as consensus formation). Public speech often critiques, and limited protections for public speech is often seen as having a chilling effect on the diversity of public speech that is possible.
Public Information Access Opportunities in the UK
Submitted by Snurb on Wed, 25/06/2008 - 16:28.Brisbane.
The second plenary speaker here at the CCi conference is Richard Allan, a former UK member of parliament who is now working with Cisco Systems and is involved with the UK government Power of Information Task Force. Public sector information consists in part of information about people and places, about public services, and about public culture; traditionally it exists across a data, an analysis, and a presentation layer. The former two are increasingly open for access, the latter also for more flexible interaction. With the rise of the Web as a public information medium, the number of public information Websites has multiplied almost beyond control, and in the UK there is now a drive to consolidate government Websites from over 2500 to a more manageable number in the future. (Even the UK and Australian secret services now have their Websites.)
Participation and Voice in Citizen Journalism and Transmedia Documentary
Submitted by Snurb on Wed, 25/06/2008 - 18:03.Brisbane.
We're now in the final session of the first day at the CCi conference, which I'll try to chair and blog at the same time - we'll see how it goes. My colleague Terry Flew is the first presenter, and he begins by outlining the three layers of impact of new media technologies as artefacts or devices (technologies); communication activities and practices using these technologies; and the social arrangements, institutions, and organisational forms which develop around the use and management of such technologies. Journalism has so far responded to the Internet as a new technology mainly in the first sense, no so much in the two latter senses. This also takes place at a time of perceived crisis in journalism, and in the face of the emergence of citizen journalism in responding to that crisis.


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