Alexander R. Galloway_NYU_미디어컬쳐앤컴




Alexander R. Galloway
Associate Professor
Department of Media, Culture, and Communication
New York University
 books articles software teaching bio contact
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BIO

Alexander R. Galloway is an author and programmer. He is a founding member of the software collective RSG and creator of the Carnivore and Kriegspiel projects. The New York Times recently described his work as "conceptually sharp, visually compelling and completely attuned to the political moment." Galloway is the author of Protocol: How Control Exists After Decentralization (MIT, 2004), Gaming: Essays on Algorithmic Culture (Minnesota, 2006), and a new book cowritten with Eugene Thacker called The Exploit: A Theory of Networks (Minnesota, 2007). He teaches at New York University.

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Ph.D., The Literature Program, Duke University, 2001
B.A., Modern Culture and Media, Brown University, 1996

Scholarly interests include: critical theory, semiotics, aesthetics, digital media, networks, software, new media art, games, and film.

Core faculty member of the NYU program in Visual Culture
Affiliated faculty member of the NYU Department of Comparative Literature

ARTICLES


Recent

The Spirit of NihilismA review of Mehdi Belhaj Kacem's book L'esprit du nihilisme.

The Unworkable InterfaceOn the aesthetics and politics of interfaces. Forthcoming also in German translation.

Debord's Nostalgic AlgorithmOn Guy Debord's 1978 game "The Game of War." An HTML version including higher resolution images is also available here.

Dialogues Carried Out in SilenceAn email exchange between Alexander Galloway, Geert Lovink, and Eugene Thacker

Radical Illusion (A Game Against)On Jean Baudrillard and play

We Are the Gold FarmersOn protocol, networks, Google, algorithmic culture, counter-gaming

StarCraft, or, BalanceOn homeostasis in cybernetic systems as a philosophical problem

Language Wants To Be Overlooked: On Software and IdeologyOn theories of ideology and their relation to language, computer code, and software

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In Progress

The Anti-language of New Media—A response to Lev Manovich

Fury, Iridescence, Hermeneutics—On a tripartite theory of mediation

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Archive

24/7, 16.8: Is '24' a Political Show?On aesthetics and politics in the Fox television show "24"

ProtocolShort article on the concept of protocol for the "Problematizing Global Knowledge" project

Warcraft and UtopiaOn the relationship between diegetic and nondiegetic space in World of Warcraft

Global Networks and the Effects on CultureOn the internet protocols, computer viruses, and the challenges of networked communication

Protocol, Control, and NetworksToward a political ontology of networks, cowritten with Eugene Thacker

Social Realism in GamingOn the problem of realism in video games (reprinted as chapter 3 of the book "Gaming")

Allegories of Control in CivilizationOn problems of interpretation in information-based media (reprinted as chapter 4 of the book "Gaming")
by blogstudy | 2009/11/09 03:35 | 트랙백 | 덧글(0)
HELEN NISSENBAUM_NYU_미디어,컬처&컴&컴사이언스




HELEN NISSENBAUM
Department of Media, Culture and Communication
New York University, 239 Greene Street, 7th Floor
New York, NY 10003  (212) 998-5251
http://www.nyu.edu/projects/nissenbaum


POSITIONS

New York University 2001 - present
Professor, Department of Media, Culture and Communication; Computer Science
Associate Professor, Department of Media, Culture and Communication; Computer Science
Faculty Fellow, Information Law Institute. NYU Law School

Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton 2000-2001, 2008
Visitor, School of Social Sciences, 2008
Member, School of Social Sciences, 2000-2001

Princeton University 1991-2001
Research Associate, University Center for Human Values, 1998-2001
Associate Director, University Center for Human Values, Program in Ethics & Public Affairs, 1991-1998
Lecturer, Woodrow Wilson School of Public & International Affairs, 1991-2001
Coordinator, Computer Science Department, Program in Science, Technology and Ethics 1991-2001

Stanford University 1983-1991
Assistant Director, Symbolic Systems Program, 1985-1991
Postdoctoral Research Affiliate, Center for the Study of Language & Information, 1983-1985
 


EDUCATION

Ph.D. Philosophy (1983) Stanford University, Stanford, CA
M.A. Social Sciences in Education (1978) Stanford University, Stanford, CA
B.A. Mathematics and Philosophy (1975) University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
B.A. Honors in Philosophy, First Class (1976) University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
 


AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION

Philosophy and politics of technology: ethical, social and political implications of information and communications technology and digital media (privacy, security, accountability, intellectual property, electronic publication, computing in education); Information and communications policy; Applied and professional ethics (engineering ethics, scientific integrity and research ethics)
 


GRANTS

Co-Principal Investigator. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), Program of the University Research Initiative (MURI), Collaborative Policies and Assured Information Sharing, ONR BAA 07-036 August 2008. $500,000 (Total grant: $4,453,881)

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Collaborative Research: GENI Working Group Meetings - Opt-in, CNS-0820795 September 2008. $49,997

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Cyber-Trust (CT) Collaborative Research, CT-M: Privacy, Compliance and Information Risk in Complex Organizational Processes, CNS-0831124 July 2008. $250,000 (Total grant: $1.2 million)

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Science of Design Collaborative Research: Values-at-Play - Integrating Social Factors into Design, CNS 0613893 September 2006. $537,243 (Total grant: $790,757)

Principal Investigator. United States Department of Homeland Security, "The Politics of Facial Recognition Systems." $60,073

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Collaborative Research: A Workshop on Values in the Design of Information Technology,SES-0352632 June 2004. $32,291

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Sensitive Information in a Wired World, Collaborative Research: ITR-0331542 September 2003. $406,000 (Total grant: $12.5 million) [Press Release]

Project Director. Ford Foundation Grant, Values in Technology Design: Democracy, Autonomy, and Justice, May 2003. $100,000

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Research Agenda Workshop on Internet Research Ethics, Grant SBR-0135590 December 14-15, 2001, Lancaster University. $20,529

Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Societal Values in an Age of Information Technology,
Grant SBR-9806234. $75,000

Co-Principal Investigator. National Science Foundation, Network Security Responsive to Human Values: Theory and Practice (Co-Investigators: E. Felten, Princeton University and B. Friedman, Colby College), Grant SBR-9729447. $463,257
 


ARTICLES

L. Hansen and H. Nissenbaum, "Digital Disaster, Cybersecurity, and the Copenhagen School," International Studies Quarterly (accepted for publication)

D. Howe and H. Nissenbaum, "TrackMeNot: Resisting Surveillance in Web Search," (download pdf) In On the Identity Trail: Privacy, Anonymity and Identity in a Networked Society, (Eds) I. Kerr, C. Lucock, and V. Steeves, Oxford: Oxford University Press (Forthcoming 2009)

M. Flanagan and H. Nissenbaum, "Design Heuristics for Activist Games," (download pdf) In Beyond Barbie and Mortal Kombat: New Perspectives on Gender and Computer Games, Y.B. Kafia, J. Denner, C. Heeter, and J. Sun (eds.) Cambridge: MIT Press, 2008, 265-279.

M. Flanagan, D. Howe, and H. Nissenbaum, "Embodying Values in Technology: Theory and Practice," (download pdf) In Information Technology and Moral Philosophy, Jeroen van den Hoven and John Weckert (eds.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008

M. Flanagan, D. Howe, and H. Nissenbaum, "Design Method Outline for Activist Gaming," (download pdf) In Worlds in Play, S. de Castell and J. Jensen (eds.) Peter Lang 2007, 241-248.

M. Flanagan and H. Nissenbaum, "A Game Design Methodology to Incorporate Social Activist Themes," Proceedings of CHI 2007, March 2007

Y. Benkler and H. Nissenbaum, "Commons-Based Peer Production and Virtue," (download pdf) Journal of Political Philosophy 14(4), 2006: 394-419.

A. Barth, A. Datta, J. Mitchell, and H. Nissenbaum, "Privacy and Contextual Integrity: Framework and Applications," (download pdf) Proceedings of the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, May 2006 (Showcased in "The Logic of Privacy," The Economist, January 4, 2007)

H. Nissenbaum, "Where Computer Security Meets National Security," (download pdf) Ethics and Information Technology, Vol. 7, No. 2, June 2005, 61-73 (Also in Cybercrime, (download pdf) Eds Jack Balkin, James Grimmelmann, Eddan Katz, Nimrod Kozlovski, Shlomit Wagman and Tal Zarsky, New York, NYU Press, 2007)

M. Flanagan, D. Howe and H. Nissenbaum, "Values at Play: Design Tradeoffs in Socially-Oriented Game Design," (download pdf) Proceedings of CHI 2005, 751-760

H. Nissenbaum, "Values in Technical Design," (download pdf) Encyclopedia of Science, Technology and Ethics,
New York: Macmillan, 2005, lxvi-lxx

H. Nissenbaum, "Information Technology and Ethics," (download pdf) Berkshire Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction, Great Barrington, MA, Berkshire Publishing Group, 2004, 235-239.

H. Nissenbaum, "Will Security Enhance Trust Online, or Supplant It?" (download pdf) In R. Kramer and K. Cook (eds.) Trust and Distrust Within Organizations: Emerging Perspectives, Enduring Questions, Russell Sage Publications (2004): 155-188.

H. Nissenbaum, Hackers and the Contested Ontology of Cyberspace," (download pdf) New Media and Society, Vol 6(2): 195-217.

H. Nissenbaum, "Privacy as Contextual Integrity," (download pdf) Washington Law Review Vol 79, No. 1, February 2004: 119-158.

H. Nissenbaum, "New Research Norms for a New Medium," (download pdf) In The Commodification of Information, N. Elkin-Koren and N. Netanel (editors) The Hague: Kluwer Academic Press, 2002. 433-457.

H. Nissenbaum, "Hackers and the Battle for Cyberspace" Dissent, Fall 2002, 50-57.

H. Nissenbaum, "Securing Trust Online: Wisdom or Oxymoron," (download pdf) Boston University Law Review June 2001 Volume 81, No.3 635-664 (Reprinted in B. Kolko (ed.) Virtual Publics: Policy and Community in an Electronic Age. New York: Columbia University Press, 1983)

L.J. Camp, C. McGrath, H. Nissenbaum, "Trust: A Collision of Paradigms," (download pdf) Financial Cryptography 2001: Conference Proceedings, Springer Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS)

H. Nissenbaum, "How Computer Systems Embody Values," (download pdf) IEEE Computer, Mar. 2001, 120, 118-119.

L. Introna and H. Nissenbaum, "Shaping the Web: Why the Politics of Search Engines Matters," (download pdf)
The Information Society, 16(3):1-17, 2000.

L. Introna and H. Nissenbaum, "Defining the Web: The Politics of Search Engines" IEEE Computer, January 2000, 54-62.

H. Nissenbaum, "Can Trust be Secured Online? A Theoretical Perspective" Etica e Politica No. 2, December 1999.

H. Nissenbaum, "The Puzzle of Priority: New Conventions in Research for the Context of Electronic Publication," The Australian Journal of Professional and Applied Ethics Vol 1, No. 1, July 1999: 44-68.

H. Nissenbaum, "The Meaning of Anonymity in an Information Age," The Information Society 15:141-144, 1999 (Reprinted in Readings in CyberEthics (2001) R.A. Spinello and H.T. Tavani (eds.) Sudbury: Jones and Bartlett)

L. Introna and H. Nissenbaum, "Sustaining the Public Good Vision of the Internet: The Politics of Search Engines," (download pdf) Center for the Arts and Cultural Policy Studies, Working Paper #9, 1999, Princeton University

H. Nissenbaum and D. Walker, "A Grounded Approach to Social and Ethical Concerns about Technology and Education," Journal of Educational Computing Research, Vol 19, No. 4, 1998: 411-432.

H. Nissenbaum, "Protecting Privacy in an Information Age: The Problem of Privacy in Public," (download pdf)
Law and Philosophy, 17: 559-596, 1998.

H. Nissenbaum and D. Walker, "Will Computers Dehumanize Education? A Grounded Approach to Values at Risk," Technology in Society, 20 (1998) 237-273.

H. Nissenbaum, "Values in the Design of Computer Systems," (download pdf) Computers in Society, March 1998, 38-39.

H. Nissenbaum, "Values in Computer System Design: Bias and Autonomy," Ethics and Information Technology, Delhi: New Academic Press, 1998

H. Nissenbaum, "Toward an Approach to Privacy in Public: The Challenges of Information Technology," (download pdf) Ethics and Behavior, 7(3), 1997, 207-219 (Reprinted in Readings in CyberEthics, R.A. Spinello and H.T. Tavani (eds.) Sudbury: Jones and Bartlett, 2001).

C. Mitcham and H. Nissenbaum, "Ethics and Technology,"Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, London and New York: Routledge, 1998.

H. Nissenbaum, "Information Technology Ethics," Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, London and New York: Routledge, 1998.

B. Friedman and H. Nissenbaum, "Bias in Computer Systems," (download pdf) ACM Transactions on Information Systems, July 1996, 330-347.

H. Nissenbaum, "Accountability in a Computerized Society," (download pdf) in Science and Engineering Ethics, 1996, 2, 25-42.

H. Nissenbaum, "Should I Copy My Neighbor's Software?," (download pdf) in Computers, Ethics, and Social Responsibility, D. Johnson and H. Nissenbaum (eds.) Prentice Hall, 1995, 201-213. (Reprinted in Business Ethics for the 21st Century (1997) D.M. Adams and E.W. Maine (eds.) Mountain View: Mayfield Publishing Company.) (Reprinted in Computers and Ethics in the Cyberage (2001) D. M. Hester and P.J. Ford (eds.) Upper Saddle River: Prentice-Hall) (Reprinted in Ethics for Everyday (2001) David Benatar (Ed.) New York: McGraw-Hall)

B. Friedman and H. Nissenbaum, "Software Agents and User Autonomy," (download pdf) Proceedings of the First International Conference on Autonomous Agents. Feb., 1997, New York: ACM.

B. Friedman and H. Nissenbaum, "Bias in Computer Systems," (download pdf) Center for the Study of Language and Information, Technical Report No. CSLI-94-186, 1994, Stanford.

B. Friedman and H. Nissenbaum, "Discerning Bias in Computer Systems," in S. Ashlund, K. Mullet, A. Henderson, E. Hollnagel, & T. White (Eds.), InterCHI '93 Adjunct Proceedings Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 141-142.

H. Nissenbaum, "Casual Copying," Proceedings of the National Conference on Computing and Values, August 1991, 15-22.
 


BOOKS AND REPORTS

H. Nissenbaum, Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, Forthcoming: December, 2009)

L. Introna and H. Nissenbaum, Facial Recognition Technology: A Survey of Policy and Implementation Issues, Report of the Center for Catastrophe Preparedness and Response, NYU (2009) (Download pdf)

M. Price and H. Nissenbaum (eds.), Academy and The Internet (New York, Peter Lang Publishing Company, 2004)

D. Johnson and H. Nissenbaum (Eds.), Computers, Ethics, and Social Values (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall, 1995)

H. Nissenbaum, Emotion and Focus (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985)
 


SOFTWARE

TrackMeNot: (with Daniel Howe) 2006. A Firefox browser extension designed to protect web-search against identification, surveillance, and profiling.


EDITORIAL BOARDS

Editorial Advisory Board, Encyclopedia of Science, Technology and Ethics (2005 MacMillan Reference, USA)

Associate Editor (and co-founder),  Journal of Ethics and Information Technology (Kluwer Academic Publishers)

Editorial Advisory Board, The Journal of Privacy and Confidentiality

Editorial Board, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Editorial Board, Research in Philosophy and Technology


    SELECTED PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

    Member, Advisory Board, Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), June, 2009 ?present

    Member, Programme Committee, 8th International Conference of Computer Ethics: Philosophical Inquiry, Ionian University, Corfu, Greece, June 2009

    Co-organizer, Workshop on Network Design and Societal Values, National Science Foundation, Arlington, Virginia, September 2008

    Co-organizer, DIMACS Workshop on Internet Privacy: Facilitating Seamless Data Movement with Appropriate Controls, September 2008

    Member, Coordinating Group for NSF Network Science and Engineering (NetSCE) Initiative, 2008 - present

    Co-director, NSF Graduate Workshop on Values in Design, August 2006 and 2008

    Member, GENI Science Council, 2005-2007

    Invited Participant, Symposium on E-Learning: New National and International Policy Perspectives, (download pdf) Boulder, CO, February 2006

    National Academy of Sciences, NRC Committee on Privacy in an Information Age, May 2002 - present

    Board of Advisors, Public Knowledge

    Invited participant, National Science Foundation Workshop on Science, Technology and Democracy

    Co-Chair, User Opt-in Working Group, GENI, 2008-present

    Provost's Visiting Committee for the Communications and New Media Programme, National University of Singapore, March 2008

    Member, Markle Connecting for Population Health Challenge Team, 2007

    Program Committee, Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry, 2007

    Organizing Committee, National Science Foundation Science of Design Meeting for Principal Investigators

    Selection Committee, SSRC Digital Cultures and Information Project, 2004

    Workshop Co-Director (with Monroe Price), Public Values, System Design and the Public Domain, Rockefeller Foundation Study and Conference Center, Bellagio, Italy, March 2003

    Workshop Director, 2002. Cross-disciplinary Workshop on Public Design, Information Law Institute. New York University School of Law

    Program Committee, International Conference on Computer Ethics: A Philosophical Enquiry (CEPE'01), University of Lancaster, December 2001

    Advisory Board, Public Knowledge

    Advisory Board, Ethics Center in Science and Engineering on the World Wide Web

    Executive Board, Society for Philosophy and Technology, 1996-present

    Member, APA Committee on Philosophy and Computing

    Program Committee, ACM Computing Policy Conference, Washington DC, May 1998

    Program Committee, International Conference on Computer Ethics: A Philosophical Enquiry (CEPE'98), London School of Economics, December 1998

    Conference Organizer, Design for Values: Ethical, Societal & Policy Dimensions for Information Technology, DIMACS National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center, 1998

    Board of Trustees, e-thepeople, 2004-2006

    Advisory Panel, Societal Dimensions of Engineering, Science and Technology, National Science Foundation 1999-2002

    Committee Member, National Academy of Sciences, On Being a Researcher/Scholar in the Digital Age

    Member, Sub-Commission on the Ethics of the Information Society, UNESCO World Commission on the Ethics of Scientific Knowledge and Technology (COMEST)

    Member, ACM Committee on Licensing of Software Engineers

    Research Fellow, Programme in Media Law and Policy, Oxford University

    Advisory Committee, AAAS, Project on Anonymity on the Internet, 1997

    Site Visit Evaluation Team, New Haven, Connecticut. National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies Program

    Invited participant, National Science Foundation Workshop on Human Information Processing and Decision Making in Complex Information Systems, Washington DC. April 2001


    SERVICE AT NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

    Director, Colloquium on Information Technology and Society, Information Law Institute of the NYU School of Law, 2000-present

    Departmental Ph.D. Committee, 2009

    Departmental Search Committee, 2005-06

    Steinhardt Technology Steering Committee, 2004-06

    Steinhardt Dean’s Advisory Committee for Associate Dean Search, 2004-05

    Humanities Council Steering Committee, 2005-08

    University Task Force on Culture and Communication, 2003-04

    Service Award, Steinhardt School of Education, 2002-03

    Chair, Departmental Search Committee, 2002-03

    Chair, Study Committee for Departmental Policy and Priorities, 2003-04

    Ph.D. Advising and Miscellaneous Departmental Committees



      SELECTED PRESENTATIONS: 2000 - present

      밣rivacy in Context,?US France Young Engineering Scientist Symposium, US-NSF and Office of Science and Technology (France), Washington DC, July 2009

      밯hat뭩 Wrong with Behavioral Advertising??8th International Conference of Computer Ethics: Philosophical Inquiry, Ionian University, Corfu, Greece, June 2009

      밨especting Privacy: Risk/Benefit versus Privacy,?Data Risk Workshop, NYU Stern Center for Digital Economy Research and IBM Research, New York, April 2009

      밣rivacy, Technology, and the Integrity of Social Life,?Conference on Privacy Rights and Wrongs: Balancing Moral Priorities for the 21st Century, Center for Ethics Education at Fordham University, April, 2009

      밫erms of Service: A Play in One Act,?Symposium on Information Intermediaries in the Information Society, Center on Law and Information Policy, March 27, 2009 (download pdf)

      밣rivacy in Context,?Colloquium of the Philosophy Department and Center for Applied and Professional Ethics, University of North Carolina, Charlotte, March 2009

      밮alues at Play in Digital Games and TrackMeNot,?/a> Colloquium of the Information Science Program, Cornell University, February 2009

      밣rivacy, Technology and the Integrity of Social Life,?Paduano Seminar in Business Ethics, Stern School of Business, NYU, February 2009

      밣rivacy and the Integrity of Social Life,?Conference on The Right to Privacy and Individual Liberties ?from Ancient Times to the Cyberspace Age, Institute for American and Talmudic Law, January 2009

      밅ontextual Integrity and Court Records,?Conference on Privacy and Public Access to Court Records, William and Mary Law School, November, 2008.

      밆oes Privacy Still Matter in the Information Age,?Institute for Advanced Study, October 2008

      밣rivacy in Context,?/a> Colloquium of the School of Social Sciences, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, October 2008

      "Privacy in Organizations" (with Anupam Datta), NSF Workshop on Organizations and Innovation, NSF Headquarters, Arlington, VA, July 2008

      "Contextual Integrity as a Normative Guide for Privacy," Distinguished Lecture Series, School of Information, University of California, Berkeley, April 2008

      "Values in Design: Values@Play," Humanities Center Colloquium, Carnegie-Mellon University, April 2008

      "Contextual Integrity as a Normative Guide for Privacy," Conference on Windows into the Soul: Surveillance in an Age of High Technology, Harvey-Mudd College, March 2008

      "Contextual Integrity as a Normative Guide to Privacy," BSF/DINACS/Dy/Dan Workshop on Data Privacy, February 2008

      "Contextual Integrity as a Normative Guide to Privacy," Colloquium of the Information Society Project, Yale School of Law, February 2008

      "TrackMeNot: Politics through Technology," Connecticut-Trinity-Wesleyan Computer Science Distinguished Lecture Series, February 2008

      "Deconstructing the Private/Public Dichotomy for the Sake of Privacy," CFP Privacy and Security Working Group: Communications Futures Program, MIT, October 2007

      "Privacy as Contextual Integrity," (download pdf) CyLab Colloquium, Carnegie-Mellon University, October 2007

      "Contextual Integrity," Goodbye Privacy Festival Symposium, Ars Electronica, Linz Austria, September 2007

      "TrackMeNot: Politics through Technology," Santa Fe Institute, August 2007

      "TrackMeNot: Contesting the Terms of Access to Knowledge Online," Conference on Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry, San Diego, July 2007

      "Deconstructing the Private/Public Distinction for the Sake of Privacy," presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Practical and Professional Ethics, February 2007

      "Trackmenot: A Right to Privacy in Search," Invited Panelist, Law of Search Engines Workshop, Haifa Center for Law and Technology, Haifa University, December 2006

      "Deconstructing the Private/Public Distinction for the Sake of Privacy," Faculty Colloquium, Faculty of Law, University of Haifa, December 2006

      "Privacy as Contextual Integrity" (download pdf), Invited Panelist, Conference on Consumer Protection in the Next Tech-Ade, Federal Trade Commission, Washington DC, November 2006

      "Privacy and Information Technology: Trouble with the Private/Public Dichotomy," Invited Colloquium, Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions, Indiana University, October 2006

      "Formal Representation of Privacy as Contextual Integrity," Invited talk, Privacy and Accountability Workshop, MIT, July 2006

      "Contextual Integrity: A Conservative Approach to Privacy," (download pdf) Center for Information Technology Policy, Princeton University, April 2006

      "Contextual Integrity in Ubicomp Design," Annual Meeting of the AAAS, St. Louis, February 2006

      "Contextual Integrity: A Conservative Approach to Privacy," (download pdf) Yale University Technology and Ethics Working Group Speaker Series, November 2005

      "Plagiarism, Self-Plagiarism, and Norms of Scientific Research," Conference on Plagiarism Across the Science Disciplines, NYU Medical Center, October 2005

      "New Design Methods for Activist Gaming" (with M. Flanagan & D. Howe), International Conference of the Digital Games Research Association, Vancouver, June 2005

      "A Cultural Approach to Privacy: Meeting the Challenges of Information Technology," Colloquium, Program in Science, Technology and Society, Drexel University, May 2005

      "Values at Play," Command Lines: Conference on the Emergence of Governance in Global Cyberspace, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, April 2005

      "Privacy as Contextual Integrity," Symposium on Law and Information Society, Fordham University Law School, April 2005

      "Values at Play: Design Tradeoffs in Socially-Oriented Game Design" (with Mary Flanagan and Daniel Howe), CHI 2005, Oregon, April 2005

      "Privacy in Context," Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, March 2005

      "Anonymity and Contextual Integrity," "The Concealed: I Anonymity, Identity and the Prospect of Privacy," University of Ottawa, March 2005

      "Contextual Integrity: Privacy as a Cultural Value" (download pdf), Glasscock Humanities Center, Texas A&M University, February 2005

      "Securing the Internet as Public Space: Project Planning Meeting," American Academy of Arts and Sciences, December 2004

      "Values as a Design Criterion: Challenges and Commitments," Workshop on New Directions in Understanding Ethics and Technology, University of Virginia, October 2004

      "Privacy as Contextual Integrity," Seminar of the Computer Laboratory Security Group, University of Cambridge, U.K.,
      July 2004

      "Social and Ethical Implications of Computing," NYC Microsoft Research Lecture Series, May 2004

      "Privacy as Contextual Integrity," Sapienta Colloquium, Philosophy Department, Dartmouth College, May 2004

      "When Computer Security Meets National Security: Two Conceptions of Security Online," Conference on Computer Crime and Security, Yale Law School, March 2004

      "Privacy as Contextual Integrity," Conference on Privacy-Preserving Data-Mining, DIMACS, Rutgers University, March 2004

      Rock Ethics Lectures, Pennsylvania State University, February 2004

      "Ethical and Cultural Foundations of Privacy," Conference on Technology, Values, and the Justice System, University of Washington School of Law, Seattle, January 2004

      "Privacy and Contextual Integrity," Annual Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, Washington DC, December 2003

      "Two Conceptions of Security Online," Presented at the Symposium on "The Dis/Simulations of War and Peace," Watson Institute, Brown University, June 2003.

      "The Virtue of Commons-Based Peer Production," (with Yochai Benkler) Presented at the Conference on Computer Ethics - Philosophical Enquiry, Boston College, June 2003.

      "Big Brother Technologies," Choices and Challenges, Virginia Tech Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, March 2003

      "Two Conceptions of Trust Online," Conference on Trust and Honesty, Budapest Collegium, December 2002

      "Private v. Public: A Red Herring for Privacy," Presentation to the New Jersey State Bar Association, Judicial Administration Forum on Privacy vs. Public Access: Court Records and Proceedings, September 2002

      "Privacy Online and Contextual Integrity," Conference on the Future of Internet Regulation, Program in Law and Public Affairs, Princeton University, May 2002

      "Privacy and Contextual Integrity: Where Philosophy Meets the Social Sciences," Summer Institute, SSRC Program on Information Technology, International Cooperation and Global Security, Columbia University, June 2002

      "National Security and Personal Security: Competing Philosophical Conceptions of Network Security," Computer Ethics Philosophical Enquiry 2001, University of Lancaster, December 2001

      "The Ethics of P2P" Panel Presentation. The O_Reilly Peer-to-Peer & Web Services Conference (download pdf) Washington DC. November 2001

      "Competing Conceptions of Computer Security," Telecommunications Policy Research Conference. Alexandria, Virginia. November 2001

      "Hackers and Other Contested Entities of Cyberspace," University Lecture Series, Carnegie-Mellon University. April 2001.

      "Privacy and Contextual Integrity," School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study. March 2001 (Also presented at Friends of the Institute Forum, April 2001)

      "Privacy in Public and Contextual Integrity," Workshop Series, Committee on Philosophy, Politics and Public Affairs and the Center for Information Policy, University of Maryland. February 2001

      "Privacy and Technologies of Information," Joint Colloquium, Department of Philosophy and Information School, University of Washington, Seattle. January 2001

      "Privacy and Technologies of Information," Joint Colloquium, Department of Computer Science and Centre for Applied Ethics, University of British Columbia. January 2001

      "Can Trust be Secured Online?" Colloquium, Science and Technology Studies, Cornell University. December 2000

      "The Politics of Search Engines" Colloquium, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT. November 2000

      "Securing Trust" Conference on Trust Relationships.  Boston University School of Law. September 2000

      "Securing Trust: Wisdom or Oxymoron?" Keynote Address. Internet Research 1.0: The State of the Interdiscipline, First meeting of the Association of Internet Researchers. September 2000

      Invited Participant. Value Sensitive Design Workshop. University of Washington, Seattle. September 2000

      "Can Trust be Secured Online?" Keynote Address. Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry. Dartmouth College. July 2000

      "Hackers and Other Contested Entities of Cyberspace," Conference on Social Ontology. Erasmus University Rotterdam. July 2000

      "Securing Trust Online: Wisdom or Oxymoron?" Conference on A Free Information Ecology in the Digital Environment. New York University School of Law. April 2000

      "The Politics of Search Engines," Innovation Policy Colloquium, New York University, School of Law. February 2000

      Invited Panelist. Interdisciplinary Conference on the Impact of Technological Change on the Creation, Dissemination, and Protection of Intellectual Property. The Ohio State University College of Law. February 2000


      Ph.D. Dissertations

      Gaia Bernstein, 2005, NYU Law School, Dissertation Committee
      Azi Lev-On, 2005, NYU Politics Department, Dissertation Committee
      Bilge Yesil, 2005, NYU Department of Media, Culture & Communication, Dissertation Committee
      Michael Zimmer, 2008, NYU Department of Media, Culture & Communication, Dissertation Committee Chair
      Joseph Reagle, 2008, NYU Department of Media, Culture & Communication, Dissertation Committee Chair
      Alice Marwick (in process), NYU Department of Media, Culture & Communication, Dissertation Committee
      Travis Hall (in process), NYU Department of Media, Culture & Communication, Chair, Dissertation Committee

      by blogstudy | 2009/11/09 03:32 | 트랙백 | 덧글(0)
      인디애나 레토릭&공공문화 프로그램_교수진
      The study of rhetoric and public culture engages rhetorical theory and practice to analyze, interpret, and critique political life. We value rhetoric as a critical mode of cultural production that addresses democratic tensions and imaginaries as they are negotiated through a wide range of communicative performances, including language, embodied gesture, and visual image. This transformative project is one committed to a more just democratic world. It requires that we take seriously the tasks raised by historical and contemporary contexts, including both oppressive and resistant discourses constituting war and dissent, death and desire, law and judgment, race and ethnicity, feminism and sexuality, nature and environmentalism, and class disparity in a global economy. Such a robust enterprise hones our skills as rhetorical critics and inevitably requires a rigorous interdisciplinary plan of study both within our department and outside, involving areas such as media studies, visual culture, political and social theory, American Studies, and cultural studies. Through examining how rhetorical judgment and invention are articulated by democratic exigencies, we aim to challenge constraints to freedom and to foster a more participatory and responsible citizenry.


      레토릭과 공공문화 교수진

      http://www.indiana.edu/~cmcl/rhetoric/faculty.shtml

      Rhetoric and Public Culture | Faculty

      Carolyn Calloway-Thomas, Associate Professor

      Carolyn Calloway-Thomas

      Professor Calloway-Thomas received her Ph.D. from Indiana University. She studies and teaches about African American public discourse and intercultural communication. A former Fulbright scholar and Ford postdoctoral fellow, she is currently the president of the Central States Communication Association and book review editor for the Howard Journal of Communication. More...


      Robert Ivie, Professor

      Robert Ivie

      Robert Ivie (Ph.D., Washington State University, 1972) is Professor of Communication & Culture and a faculty member in the American Studies, Cultural Studies, and Myth Studies programs at Indiana University. His two most recent books are Democracy and America's War on Terror (University of Alabama Press, 2005) and Dissent from War (Kumarian Press, 2007). In addition to his previous service as editor of Quarterly Journal of Speech and founding editor of Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, he now serves on the editorial boards of Presidential Studies Quarterly, Rhetoric & Public Affairs, Quarterly Journal of Speech, Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, and other scholarly journals. His public scholarship and teaching focus on issues of rhetoric as a mode of productive critique, with particular emphasis on democratic dissent, the problem of war, and peacebuilding communication. More...

      Michael Kaplan, Assistant Professor

      Michael Kaplan

      Michael Kaplan (Ph.D., Northwestern University, 2005) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication and Culture and Adjunct faculty member in the Cultural Studies program at Indiana University. His articles and reviews appear in such journals as Public Culture, Quarterly Journal of Speech, Cultural Studies, and Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies. He has recently completed a book manuscript titled Friendship Fantasies: Envisioning Citizenship in the Liberal Imaginary. His research and graduate teaching focus on problems of political agency specific to late modernity; the discursive production and representation of democratic citizenship in the cultural public sphere; and the implications of post-structuralist theory for critical rhetorical, media and cultural studies. More...

      John Lucaites, Professor

      John Lucaites

      John Louis Lucaites (Ph.D., University of Iowa, 1984) is Professor of Rhetoric and Public Culture, Department of Communication and Culture and Adjunct Professor of American Studies, Indiana University. He is a 2006-2007 Fellow at the Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions. His most recent book publications include No Caption Needed: Iconic Photographs, Public Culture, and Liberal Democracy (University of Chicago, 2007, co-authored with Robert Hariman), and Rhetoric, Politics, and Materiality (Peter Lang, in press, co-edited with Barbara Biesecker). Early books include Crafting Equality: America’s Anglo-African Word (University of Chicago, 1993, co-authored with Celeste Michelle Condit) and Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Sermonic Power of Public Discourse (University of Alabama Press, 1993, co-edited with Carolyn Calloway Thomas). He is also the co-editor (with Celeste Michelle Condit) of Contemporary Rhetorical Theory: A Reader (1999, Guilford Press). His articles have appeared in Quarterly Journal of Speech, Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Rhetoric Society Quarterly, and the Journal of American History. He is Senior Editor of the University of Alabama’s book series, “Rhetoric, Culture, and Social Critique,” and editor for the Quarterly Journal of Speech (2008-2010). He serves on numerous editorial boards. In 2001 he co-hosted national and international conferences on visual rhetoric at the University of Iowa and Indiana University. He is a member of the Hutton Honors College and teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on rhetoric and social theory and rhetoric, visuality, and public culture. More...

      Phaedra Pezzullo, Associate Professor

      Phaedra Pezzullo

      Professor Pezzullo (Ph.D., University of North Carolina, 2002) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication and Culture, as well as an adjunct faculty member of Cultural Studies and American Studies, and a faculty ally of Gender Studies and the Kinsey Institute. In addition to articles and chapters, she has published two books, Toxic Tourism: Rhetorics of Pollution, Travel, and Environmental Justice (University of Alabama, 2007) and Environmental Justice and Environmentalism: The Social Justice Challenge to the Environmental Movement, co-edited with Ronald Sandler (MIT Press, 2007). She currently serves on the editorial boards of: Environmental Communication: A Journal of Nature and Culture, the Quarterly Journal of Speech, and Critical Studies in Mass Communication. Pezzullo also is an Advisor to the national Sierra Club's Environmental Justice Committee and a Commissioner for the city of Bloomington's Environmental Commission. She teaches graduate courses on Feminism/Gender Studies & Rhetorical Theory, Rhetorics of Transgression and Resistance, and Environmental Communication & Public Culture. More...

      Jon Simons, Associate Professor

      Jon Simons

      Jon Simons (Ph.D., Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1993) is Associate Professor of Communication and Culture and an adjunct faculty member in Cultural Studies. He graduated in Politics and Modern History at Manchester University, England, where he grew up. He moved to Israel in 1985, where he completed an MA and PhD in Political Science at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. He then directed and taught an interdisciplinary graduate program in Critical Theory and Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham, England (1995-2006). Two edited volumes, From Kant to Lévi-Strass and Contemporary Critical Theorists (both published by Edinburgh University Press, in 2002 and 2004 respectively) reflect that expertise. Trained in political theory, his special interests lay in poststructuralist and feminist theory, and Michel Foucault in particular, about whose work he published Foucault and the Political (Routledge, 1995). His current teaching and research, published in a range of journals and edited volumes, focuses on the connection between democratic politics and popular, mediated aesthetics. A book in progress addresses arguments against the aestheticization of politics common in much critical political and cultural theory. He is also interested in the interdisciplinary study of images (especially political images) as a focus for both teaching and research. He is an editor of the interdisciplinary journal Culture, Theory and Critique and co-editor of the Manchester University Press book series, Reappraising the Political. More...

      Robert Terrill, Associate Professor

      Robert Terrill

      Robert Terrill (Ph.D, Northwestern University, 1996) is Associate Professor in the department of Communication & Culture, and adjunct faculty in the American Studies program, at Indiana University. His book, Malcolm X: Inventing Radical Judgment (Michigan State, 2005), received the Kohrs-Campbell Prize in Rhetorical Criticism. His essays analyzing speeches and films have appeared in The Quarterly Journal of Speech, Critical Studies in Media Communication, and other journals. He also has contributed essays to anthologies including Rhetoric and Reform in the Progressive Era (Michigan State, 2003) and The Rhetoric of the New Political Documentary (Southern Illinois, in press). He has served on the editorial board of several academic journals. He teaches courses in pedagogy and protest, and his current research includes exploring the potential for the art of rhetorical criticism to model civic engagement through entextualized performance. More...

      James Andrews, Emeritus Professor

      James Andrews

      Professor Emeritus of Communication and Culture, American Studies, and Victorian Studies. More...

      by blogstudy | 2009/11/09 03:28 | 트랙백 | 덧글(0)
      ZIZI A. PAPACHARISSI_University of Illinois-Chicago_Communication

      ZIZI A. PAPACHARISSI

       

      Professor and Head, Communication
      University of Illinois-Chicago
      1007 W Harrison Street, Behavioral Sciences Building 1140A, MC132
      Chicago IL 60607 | Phone: 312-996-3188 | Fax: 312-413-2125
      zizi@uic.edu
       
      EDUCATION


      University of Texas at Austin, Ph.D., Journalism, 2000. Dissertation title: The Individual Utility of Personal Home Pages. Concentration areas: New Media Technologies and Political Communication.
       
      Kent State University, M.A., Communication Studies, 1997.
       

      Mount Holyoke College, B.A., Double Major: Economics/Media Studies, 1995.

       
       
      EXPERIENCE
       
      Professor and Head, Department of Communication, University of Illinois-Chicago. August 2008-present.
      Interim Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Research, School of Communications and Theater, Temple University. August 2006 – June 2008.

      Associate Professor, Department of Broadcasting, Telecommunications, and Mass Media, Temple University. May 2006 – July 2008.

      Assistant Professor, Department of Broadcasting, Telecommunications, and Mass Media, Temple University.
      July 2000 - May 2006.

      Courses taught include Introduction to Cybermedia, Advanced Topics in Social Processes: New Media Theories and Issues, Information Society, Introductory Topics in BTMM: Human-computer Interaction, Political Communication, Communication Research Methods, Global Telecommunication, Media and Politics, Communication Theory II, Communication Content and Behavior.
      Director of Graduate Studies, School of Communications and Theater, Temple University. Coordinate activities among all graduate programs and supervise program administration. Serve as liaison between the graduate programs and university administration. Oversee recruiting and attend to administrative matters involving current and prospective students. Fall 2005- present.

      Co-Director, PhD Program, Mass Media and Communication, Temple University. Co-administer doctoral program with tenured faculty member. Advise and recruit students. Serve on graduate program and graduate policy committees. Supervise the progress of enrolled students. Fall 2004- Summer 2005.
       
      Director, M.A. Program, Department of Broadcasting, Telecommunications, and Mass Media, Temple University. Administer Master of Arts program. Review applications and make admissions decisions. Advise and recruit students. Revise curriculum and update program web site and recruiting materials. Serve on graduate program and graduate policy committees. Supervise the progress of enrolled students. Spring 2001-Summer 2002.
       
      Computer Technology Consultant,Communication Technology Team, College of Communication, University of Texas at Austin. Provide computer support for faculty, staff, and students on a part-time basis. Resolve hardware and software problems, set up computer systems, and assist in multi-platform network maintenance. October 1997-present.

      Instructor, Theory & Practice of Oral Discourse, Communication Studies Department, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio. Teach required public speaking course to two sections (30 college students each) for five academic semesters. Coach students on their public speaking and communication skills. Compile course readings, plan course syllabus, lecture three times a week per section, write exams, and grade assignments, exams and speeches. August 1995 - May 1997.
       
      Teaching Assistant, Department of Journalism, College of Communication, University of Texas at Austin. Grade student essays, advise students, construct exams, lead class discussions, create and maintain course web page. Course assignments varied every semester, but all involved large lecture classes of 120-400 students. Courses assigned included: Critical Thinking for Journalists, Mass Media and Society. Fall 1997-Spring 2000.
       
      Music Director, Program Director and DJ, WKSR, College Radio Station, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio and WMHC, College Radio Station, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts. Serve as public relations contact person for major and independent record company representatives. Review incoming music, assemble playlist, maintain media database. Construct the radio station's programming schedule. Handle student and community conflicts with radio station programming. Train DJs to receive FCC license. Supervise daily programming of the station. Conduct two-hour weekly radio show. 1992-1997.
       
       
      PUBLICATIONS

       

      BOOKS

      Papacharissi, Z. (Ed.) (2009). Journalism and Citizenship: New Agendas, Lawrence Erlbaum/Taylor & Francis, New York. 

      Papacharissi, Z. (manuscript due 2009). Digital Politics: A Private Sphere. Digital Media and Society Series, Polity Press, Cambridge, UK. 

      Papacharissi, Z. (Ed.) (manuscript due 2010). The Networked Self: Online Social Networks, Routledge, New York. 

       

      JOURNAL ARTICLES/CHAPTERS

      Papacharissi, Z. (in press). The Virtual Geographies of Social Networks: A comparative analysis of Facebook, LinkedIn and ASmallWorld.New Media & Society, 10th Anniversary Issue.

      Papacharissi, Z. (in press). The Citizen is The Message: Online media and Civic Journalism. Journalism & Citizenship: New Agendas. Zizi Papacharissi (Ed.), Lawrence Erlbaum.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2008). The Virtual Sphere 2.0: The Internet, the Public Sphere and beyond. Handbook of Internet Politics, Andrew Chadwick & Philip Howard (Eds.), Taylor & Francis.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2008). Uses and Gratifications. An Integrated Approach to Communication Theory and Research. Michael  Salwen, Don Stacks (Eds.), Lawrence Erlbaum.

      Mendelson, A. & Papacharissi, Z. (2008). Reality vs. Fiction: How Defined Realness Affects Cognitive & Emotional Responses to Photographs. Visual Communication Quarterly, 15(1).

      Papacharissi, Z. & Fernback, J. (2008). The Aesthetic Power of the Fab 5: Discursive Themes of Homonormativity in Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 32(4).

      Papacharissi, Z. & de Fatima Oliveira, M. (2008). Frames on Terrorism: A comparative analysis of terrorism coverage in UK and US newspapers. Harvard International Journal of Press and Politics, 13(1).

      Fernback, J., & Papacharissi, Z. (2007). Online Privacy as Legal Safeguard: The Relationship among Consumer, Online Portal, and Privacy Policies. New Media & Society, 9(5), 715-734.

      Papacharissi, Z. & Mendelson, A. (2007). The Reality Appeal: Uses and gratifications of reality shows. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 51(2), 355-371.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2007). The Blogger Revolution? Audiences as Media Producers. Blogging, Citizenship, and the Future of Media, M. Tremayne (Ed)., Routledge.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2006).The Digital Citizen: Promise and Predisposition. Encyclopedia of Digital Government.  Idea Group Publishing.

      Papacharissi, Z., & Zaks, A. (2006). Is Broadband the Future? An Analysis of Broadband Diffusion and Potential. Telecommunications Policy, 30, 64-75.

      Papacharissi, Z., Fernback, J. (2005). Online Privacy and Consumer Protection: An analysis of Portal Privacy Statements. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 49(3), 259-281.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2005).The Real/Virtual dichotomy in online interaction: A Meta-analysis of Research on New Media Uses and Consequences. Communication Yearbook, 29, 215-238.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2005). Review of  News and the Net and Digital Journalism: Emerging Media and the Changing Horizons of Journalism. Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 59, p. 40.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2004). Democracy On-line: Civility, Politeness, and the Democratic Potential of On-line Political Discussion Groups, New Media & Society,6(2), 259-284.

      Papacharissi, Z., (2004). The Virtual Sphere: The Internet as the Public Sphere, in F. Webster (Ed.), Information Society. London: Routledge.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2003). A virtu?is szf?a: Az internet mint t?sadalmi nyilv?oss?.Mediakutato ?Translation in Hungarian and reissue of The Virtual Sphere: The Internet as the Public Sphere, New Media & Society, 4(1), 5-23.

      Kim, H. & Papacharissi, Z. (2003). Cross-cultural Differences in On-line Self-Presentation: A Content Analysis of Personal Korean and US Homepages, Asian Journal of Communication, 13(1).

      Papacharissi, Z. (2002). The Self Online: The Utility of Personal Home Pages, Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 46(3), 346-368.

      Papacharissi, Z. (2002). The presentation of self in virtual life: Characteristics of personal home pages. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly 79(3), 643-660.

      Papacharissi, Z., (2002). The Virtual Sphere: The Internet as the Public Sphere, New Media & Society, 4(1), 5-23.

      Papacharissi, Z., & Rubin, A. M. (2000). Predictors of Internet Use. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 44, 175-196.

      Mendelson, A. & Papacharissi, Z. (revised and resubmitted). Users and Manipulators: A Typology of Internet Usage Styles.Media Psychology.

      Papacharissi, Z. & Leebron, E. (under review). Gender Differences in Local Media: Coverage of Female and Male Professionals in Philadelphia Area Newspapers. Gender & Politics.

       
       
      CONFERENCE PAPERS
       

      Papacharissi, Z. Panelist, The Unconventional Mentor: Advice on How to Survive in the 21st Century Academy.National Communication Association Annual Conference, San Diego, November 2008.

      Papacharissi, Z. Panelist, on Social Networks. Aspects of Communication in the 21st Century Conference, Invitation-only. Sponsored by the Hellenic Audiovisual Institute, October 2008.

      Papacharissi, Z. & Mendelson, A. Friends, Networks and Zombies: The Social Utility of FacebookAssociation of Internet Researchers Annual Conference, Copenhagen, October 2008.

      Papacharissi, Z. The Virtual Geographies of Social Networks: A comparative analysis of Facebook, LinkedIn and ASmallWorld.Long History of New Media Preconference, sponsored by Communication History and New Media & Society, International Communication Association, Montreal, May 2008.

      Papacharissi, Z. The Virtual Sphere 2.0: The Internet, the Public Sphere and beyond. ATINER, Athens, Greece, May 2008.

      Papacharissi, Z. & de Fatima Oliveira, M. Frames on Terrorism: A comparative analysis of terrorism coverage in UK and US newspapers. International Association of Mass Communication Researchers, Paris, France, July 2007.

      Papacharissi, Z. The Citizen is the Message: Online Media and Citizen Journalism. Journalism and Citizenship: New Agendas Conference, Invitation-only. Sponsored by the University of Texas at Austin, College of Communication, Austin, Texas, July 2007.

      Papacharissi, Z. & Leebron, E. Gender Differences in Local Media: Coverage of Female and Male Professionals in Philadelphia Area Newspapers. Broadcast Education Association, Las Vegas, April, 2006. 2006 1st Place Debut Paper – Gender Issues Division.


      Papacharissi, Z. & Fernback, J. The Aesthetic Power of the Fab 5: Discursive Themes of Homonormativity in Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. International Communication Association, Dresden, June, 2006.

      Papacharissi, Z. Th
      e Asociacion Puertorriquenos en Marcha (APM) and the digital divide: Technology uses and expectations in East North Philadelphia. Association of Internet Researchers, Chicago, October, 2005.

      Papacharissi, Z., & Mendelson, A. The reality appeal: Uses and gratifications of reality shows. National Communication Association, Chicago, November, 2004.

      Mendelson, A. & Papacharissi, Z. Reality vs. fiction: How viewer perceptions of realness affect emotional responses to mediated content. National Communication Association, Chicago, November, 2004.

      Papacharissi, Z. Campaigning online: A content analysis of presidential candidate web sites for the US 2004 election.Association of Internet Researchers, Sussex, UK, September, 2004.

      Mendelson, A. & Papacharissi,  Z. Users and Manipulators: A Typology of Internet Usage Styles. International Communication Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, May 2004.

      Papacharissi, Z. The Social and Personal Utility of Blogs. International Communication Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, May 2004.

      Papacharissi, Z. The Blogger Revolution? Audiences as Media Producers. Association of Internet Researchers, Toronto, October, 2003.

      Fernback, J., & Papacharissi, Z. Online Privacy as Legal Safeguard: The Relationship among Consumer,OnlinePortal, and Privacy Policies. International Communication Association, San Diego, May, 2003.

      Papacharissi, Z. Understanding Individual Differences and Internet Use. Invited panel presentation focusing on Uses and Gratifications in the Newer Media Environment, Broadcast Education Association, Las Vegas, April, 2003.

      Papacharissi, Z. Reconsidering Internet Time: The Quantity and Quality of Internet Activity. Media Forum panel presentation focusing on Measuring Internet Use, National Communication Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, November, 2002.

      Papacharissi, Z., & Zaks, A. Why Broadband? An Analysis of Broadband Diffusion and Potential. National Communication Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, November, 2002.

      Papacharissi, Z., Fernback, J., & Tian, Y. Online Privacy and Consumer Protection: An analysis of Portal Privacy Statements. Association of Internet Researchers, Maastricht, Netherlands, October, 2002.

      Mendelson, A., & Papacharissi, Z. Users vs. Manipulators: Investigating Two Approaches to Internet Activity. Association of Internet Researchers, Maastricht, Netherlands, October, 2002.

      Papacharissi, Z. The Real/Virtual dichotomy: A Meta-analysis of Research on New Media Uses and Consequences, International Association of Mass Communication Researchers, Barcelona, Spain, July 2002.

      Kim, H. & Papacharissi, Z., Cross-cultural Differences in On-line Self-Presentation: A Content Analysis of Personal Korean and US Homepages, International Communication Association, Seoul, Korea, July 2002.

      Papacharissi, Z., Self presentation Online: Characteristics of Personal Home Pages, National Communication Association, Atlanta, Georgia, November 2001.

      Papacharissi, Z., The Individual Utility of World Wide Web Personal Home Pages, International Communication Association, Washington, D.C., May 2001.

      Papacharissi, Z., Democracy On-line: Civility, Politeness, and the Democratic Potential of On-line Political Discussion Groups, International Communication Association, Acapulco, June 2000.

      Papacharissi, Z., Civility in Cyberspace: The Rhetorical Strategies of On-line Political Discussion Groups, Rhetoric Society of America, Washington, D.C., May 2000.

      Papacharissi, Z., James Bond: Changes in the Sexuality and Violent Behavior of a Cultural hero, Southwest Symposium, Jonesboro, Arkansas, November 1999.

      Papacharissi, Z., Daily Newspapers, TV News, and On-line News: A Study of News Credibility, Southwest Symposium, Jonesboro, Arkansas, November 1999.

      Papacharissi, Z., The Virtual Sphere: The Internet as the Public Sphere, Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, New Orleans, August 1999.

      Papacharissi, Z. & Rubin, A. M. A Uses and Gratifications Analysis of the Internet, w/ A. Rubin, National Communication Association, New York City, November 1998.

      Papacharissi, Z., A Multi-Trait Multi-Method Validation of the Gratifications Sought Scale, Eastern Communication Association, Baltimore, April 1997.

       
       
      MEDIA INTERVIEWS/INVITED TALKS

      Associated Press
      , media coverage of Katrina feature, media expert interview, Fall 2005.

      WRTI
      Blogging feature, media expert interview, Spring 2005.

      6abc
      Action News Campaign 2004, Pursuit of the Presidency Special, media expert interview, Fall 2004.

      Temple on the Road presents Politics and the Media in the 2004 Election:
      A choice for the Ages. Tuesday, October 19, 2004.
      National Constitution Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  Speaker, panel member.

      Rutgers University,
      invited speaker on New Media Uses and Consequences, to graduate students in the Department of Communication, Spring 2003.

      Temple Issues Forum,
      panel member. Participated in open discussion of current issues involving other faculty members, media representatives and Temple students. September 2002.
       
      by blogstudy | 2009/11/09 03:18 | 트랙백 | 덧글(0)
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