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Three-D Issue 19: Exploring the landscape of digital publishing

Katherine Burton Routledge, Taylor & Francis UK The academic publishing world has seen a great deal of change in the past 10 to 20 years and is set to see more in the coming years as technology develops and research output continues to grow. This article presents a brief snapshot of the digital publishing moment …Continue Reading

Three-D Issue 19: The future of academic publishing

Mila Steele SAGE Publications Over the past 500 years, not much changed in academic publishing. We printed books; people went to bookstores and bought them. We published journals; libraries subscribed to them.  All of a sudden, none of that seems to be the case anymore. How are simple things like books and journals changing – …Continue Reading

Statement of Research Ethics Guidelines

In view of the wide diversity of disciplinary orientation, methodological approach, and conceptual foundation of research in our field, MeCCSA does not publish a detailed code of research practice. Instead MeCCSA has published a statement that outlines a broad set of principles and links to a range of research practice guidelines from various associations, which we …Continue Reading

9th Annual MeCCSA-PGN Conference

The website for the 9th Annual MeCCSA-PGN conference has gone live. https://www-staff.lboro.ac.uk/~ssds4/index.htm

Three-D Issue 18

Three-D, issue 18 (PDF, 2.6 Mb) In this issue: 1 Reform(ation): Media & Higher Education (Einar Thorsen) MeCCSA Annual Conferences 2 MeCCSA 2012: Bedfordshire Experience (Janey Gordon) 3 MeCCSA 2013: Spaces and Places of Culture (Máire Messenger Davies) Media Reform 6 This system needs fixing (Des Freedman) 8 Market fundamentalism and new communications regulation (Damian …Continue Reading

Three-D Issue 18: Reform(ation): Media & Higher Education

Einar Thorsen Bournemouth University With Rupert Murdoch appearing at the Leveson inquiry and Jeremy Hunt’s days seemingly numbered, this issue of Three-D again focusses on media reform. Des Freedman offers a lively critique of The Sun and Murdoch, with a call for a radical rethink of media power and regulation. Damian Tambini also explores media …Continue Reading

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