Displaying 5011 - 5020 of 5112
Aakhus, M. (2005). Conversations for Reflection: Designing Support for Reflection-on-Professional Action. In G. Goldkuhl, M. Lind, & S. Haraldson (Eds.), Proceedings of the 10th International Working Conference on the Language Action Perspective on Communication Modelling (pp. 63-75). Linköping, Sweden: Research Network VITS.
Aakhus, M. & Vasilyeva, A. (2007). Making, challenging, and defending a proposal: The emergence and evolution of disagreement space in a multi-party deliberation. In Eemeren, F. H. van, Garssen, B., Blair, T., & Willard, C. (Eds.), Proceedings of the 6th International Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation. Amsterdam: SICSAT.
Aakhus, M. & Greenfeld-Benovitz, M. (2008). Argument reconstruction and socio-technical facilitation of large scale argumentation. In P. J. Ågerfalk, H. Delugach, and M. Lind (Eds.), Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on the Pragmatic Web: Innovating the Interactive Society, ICPW '08, vol. 363 (pp. 77-81). New York: ACM.
Broadfoot, K., Carlone, D., Medved, C., Aakhus, M., Gabor, E. & Taylor, K. (2008). Meaning/ful Work and Organizational Communication: Questioning Boundaries, Positionalities, and Engagements. Management Communication Quarterly, 22, 152-161. DOI: 10.1177/0893318908318267
Keith, S. (2001). Applying sociological theory to statements of news principles: Functionalist, monopolist, and public service/status claims in four recent journalism ethics codes. Presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Southeast Colloquium, March 2001, Columbia, South Carolina, where it received the first-‐place student paper award in the Open Division.
Keith, S. (2001). Applying sociological theory to statements of news principles: Functionalist, monopolist, and public service/status claims in four recent journalism ethics codes. Presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication at its annual meeting, August, Washington, D.C. The paper was later presented by invitation to the New Directions for Journalism Research invitational colloquium for recent Ph.D. graduates and ABDs, January 2002, University of Texas, Austin, Texas
Schwalbe, C. B., Keith, S., & Silcock, B. W. (2003) Embedded images: The framing of the first visuals of the U.S. war in Iraq: A content analysis of television, Internet, newspaper, and magazine coverage. Presented to the Southwest Education Council for Journalism and Mass Communication Southwest Symposium, November 8, Salt Lake City, Utah. Received honorable mention faculty paper award.
Keith, S., Schwalbe, C. B., & Silcock, B. W. (2005). Blood on the lens; Private moments, public platforms: Images and ethics codes across media in an era of violence and tragedy. Refereed paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication annual meeting, August 10, San Antonio, Texas. Received second-‐place faculty paper honors from the Media Ethics Division.
Keith, S. (2005). Fear-‐mongering or fact: The construction of “cyber-‐terrorism” in U.S., UK & Canadian media. Presented at Safety and Security in a Networked World: Balancing Cyber-‐Rights and Responsibilities, conference sponsored by the Oxford Internet Institute in collaboration with the University of Auckland, NetSafe, EURIM and Brown University’s Watson Institute for International Studies on September 8, University of Oxford, Oxford, England
Keith, S. & Thornton, L-‐J. (2006). Researching “invisible communicators”: Techniques for identifying and contacting under-‐studied media workers. Refereed paper presented to the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication Southeast Colloquium, March 3, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Was awarded the top faculty paper award in the Open Division.