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Upper level seminar on specialized topics relating to journalism media studies. Examples of recent topics: Covering the World, Design for the World Wide Web, History of Sports Journalism.
Khrebtan-Hörhager, J. & Kim, M. (2021, February 18). The invitation to learn the uncomfortable truth about comfort women [Online Post]. National Communication Association Communication Currents.
Doerfel, M. L., Harris, J. L., Kwestel, M., & Kim, M. (2020). Crisis communication and organizational resilience. In F. Finn & W. Johansen (Eds.). Handbook of communication science: Crisis communication (pp. 319-342). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Khrebtan-Hörhager, J., & Kim, M. (2020). Re-Membering Comfort Women: From on-screen storytelling and rhetoric of materiality to re-thinking history and belonging. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 106(4), 427-452.
Doi:10.1080/00335630.2020.1828606.
Analyzes debates about media and cultural globalization, and theories about international media.
Kim, M., Kwestel, M., Youn, H., Quow, J., & Doerfel, M.L. (2021). Serving the vulnerable while being vulnerable: Organizing resilience in a social service sector. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 00 (0), 1-22,
Doi:10.1177/08997640211013912
Goulbourne, T., & Yanovitzky I. (2021). The communication infrastructure as a social determinant of health: implications for health policymaking and practice. The Milbank Quarterly. DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.12496.
The purpose of this course is to provide a critical understanding of popular culture’s role in society.
This course examines the exciting world of law and policy relevant to digital media: the Internet, mobile media, and social media.
The course will address such timely questions as:
This course demonstrates the importance of reputation management as a practice to better ensure organizational health and mitigate risk by augmenting crisis/risk management work.