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ANDREW CALABRESE Professor College of Media, Communication and Information University of Colorado – Boulder January 2018 1. GENERAL 1.1. Education 1988 Ph.D., Communication. The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. 1983 M.A., Communication. The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. 1979 B.A., Denison University, Granville, Ohio. 1.2. Professional Experience 7/14 – present Professor, College of Media, Communication and Information, University of Colorado – Boulder. 8/14 – 12/14 Visiting Scholar, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. 8/08 – 7/12 Associate Dean, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado – Boulder 7/05 – 6/14 Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado – Boulder 8/95 – 6/05 Associate Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado – Boulder 1/98 – 6/98 Fulbright Fellow, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. 8/97 – 12/97 Fellow, Center for the Humanities and the Arts, University of Colorado – Boulder 8/92 – 7/95 Assistant Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, and Adjunct Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Colorado – Boulder 8/88 – 7/92 Assistant Professor, Department of Communication, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana. 1/88 – 8/88 Presidential Fellow, Ohio State University. 1.3. Teaching and Research Interests Social and political theory (emphases: public sphere, civil society, social justice); U.S. and transnational media industries and policies; digital innovation; media and social movements; localism and community studies. 2. RESEARCH AND PUBLISHING Unless otherwise indicated, all publications and presentations are single-authored.

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ANDREW CALABRESE

Professor College of Media, Communication and Information

University of Colorado – Boulder January 2018

1. GENERAL

1.1. Education

1988 Ph.D., Communication. The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.

1983 M.A., Communication. The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.

1979 B.A., Denison University, Granville, Ohio.

1.2. Professional Experience

7/14 – present Professor, College of Media, Communication and Information, University of Colorado – Boulder.

8/14 – 12/14 Visiting Scholar, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. 8/08 – 7/12 Associate Dean, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of

Colorado – Boulder

7/05 – 6/14 Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado – Boulder

8/95 – 6/05 Associate Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado – Boulder

1/98 – 6/98 Fulbright Fellow, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

8/97 – 12/97 Fellow, Center for the Humanities and the Arts, University of Colorado – Boulder

8/92 – 7/95 Assistant Professor, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, and Adjunct Professor, Department of Sociology,

University of Colorado – Boulder

8/88 – 7/92 Assistant Professor, Department of Communication, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.

1/88 – 8/88 Presidential Fellow, Ohio State University.

1.3. Teaching and Research Interests Social and political theory (emphases: public sphere, civil society, social justice); U.S. and transnational media industries and policies; digital innovation; media and social movements; localism and community studies.

2. RESEARCH AND PUBLISHING Unless otherwise indicated, all publications and presentations are single-authored.

Calabrese/…Page 2 of 23

2.1. Refereed Journal Articles

(2017) Caveat Emptor! The Rhetoric of Choice in Food Politics. Communication +1, Vol. 6, Article 2. Available at: http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cpo/vol6/iss1/2

(2017) Human Need as a Justification for Communication Rights. The Communication Review, 20(2): 98-121, DOI: 10.1080/10714421.2017.1304140

(2015). Liberalism’s disease: Civility above justice. European Journal of Communication. Special issue on the theme of “Media, Communication and the Limits of Liberalism.” October, 539-553.

Baysha, O., and Calabrese, A. (2012). The global in the local: A case study on deforestation in a Ukrainian journalistic field. Environmental Communication: A Journal of Nature and Culture. March, 1-19.

Baysha, O., and Calabrese, A. (2011). The construction of fear: The New York Times deliberation on the USA-Russia nuclear dialogue. Russian Journal of Communication, 4 (3/4).

(2007). The letter of the law: Telecommunications and the corporate person. Info: The Journal of Policy, Regulation, and Strategy for Telecommunications, Information, and Media,9(2/3), 122-135.

(2006). The symbolism of international summits and declarations: Reflections on the World Summit on the Information Society. Global Media Journal: Mediterranean Edition, 1(2), 44-54.

(2005). Communication, global justice and the moral economy. Global Media and Communication, 1(3), 301-315.

(2005). El Informe MacBride: Su valor para una nueva generación (Spanish), The MacBride Report: Its value to a new generation (English). Quaderns del CAC (journal of the Catalonian Broadcasting Council), #21 [special issue commemorating the 25th anniversary of the MacBride Report], January-April.

(2005). Casus belli: U.S. media and the justification of the Iraq war. Television and New Media, 6(2), 153-175.

(2004). Virtual nonviolence? Civil disobedience and political violence in the information age. Info: The Journal of Policy, Regulation, and Strategy for Telecommunications, Information, and Media, 6(5), 326-338.

(2004). Moving forward, looking back: The MacBride Report revisited. Information Technologies and International Development (ITID) [Special issue on the World Summit on the Information Society] 1(3-4), 51-52.

(2004). The promise of civil society: A global movement for communication rights. Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, 18(3), 317-329.

(2004). Stealth regulation: Moral meltdown and political radicalism at the Federal Communications Commission. New Media and Society, 6(1), 18-25. Reprinted in 2008 in C. Jin and Y. Zhao (Eds.), The Political Economy of Communication: A Reader, Vol. 2, pp. 180-186. Shanghai: Fudan University Press, 2008.

(1999). Communication and the end of sovereignty? Info: The Journal of Policy, Regulation, and Strategy for Telecommunications, Information, and Media, 1(4), 313-326.

(1997). Creative destruction? From the welfare state to the global information society. Javnost/The Public, 4(4), 7-24.

Calabrese, A. & Borchert, M. (1996). Prospects for electronic democracy in the United States: Re-thinking communication and social policy. Media, Culture and Society, 18, 249-268.

Padovani, C. & Calabrese, A. (1996). Berlusconi, RAI, and the modernization of Italian feudalism. Javnost/The Public, 3(2), 109-120.

Calabrese, A. & Redal, W. (1995). Is there a US foreign policy in telecommunications? Transatlantic trade policy as a case study. Telematics and Informatics, 12(1), 35-56.

Calabrese/…Page 3 of 23

Radojkovic, M. & Calabrese, A. (1992). Intellectual autonomy and the future of the university. Educational Technology Research and Development, 40(3), 117-124.

Calabrese, A., & Burke, B. (1992) American identities: Nationalism, the media, and the public sphere. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 16(2), 52-73.

Calabrese, A., & Lenart, S. (1992). Cultural diversity and the perversion of tolerance. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 16(1), 33-44.

Calabrese, A., & Wasko, J. (1992). All wired up and no place to go: The search for public space in U.S. cable development. Gazette: The International Journal for Mass Communication Studies, 49, 121-151.

(1992). The electronic journal: Changing times for scholarly communication. Technology in Society: An International Journal, 14, 199-220.

Calabrese, A., & Jung, D. (1992). Broadband telecommunications in rural America: An analysis of emerging infrastructures. Telecommunications Policy, 16(3), 225-236.

(1991). The periphery in the center: The information age and the ‘good life’ in rural America. Gazette: The International Journal for Mass Communication Studies, 48, 105-128. This article was awarded the 1991 Donald McGannon Award for Social and Ethical Relevance in Communications Policy Research.

(1990). Telephone-cable crossownership: The push for video common carriage. Communications and the Law, 12(1), 19-36.

Calabrese, A.M., & Jung, D. (1989). New media technology in the United States: A political and institutional overview. Broadcasting Research [Korea], Summer, 150-169.

2.2. Book Chapters and Encyclopedia Articles

Refereed Calabrese, A., and Barnes, C. (In press). UNESCO. Oxford Bibliographies Online. Calabrese, A., and Rollins, T. (2016). Amazon.com. In B. Birkinbine, R. Gomez & J. Wasko (Eds.), Global

Media Giants (413-427). New York: Routledge. Baysha, O., and Calabrese, A. (2014). Cosmopolitan Vision, Global Responsibility and Local Reporting in

Ukraine. In A. Yilmage, R. Trandafoiu & A. Mousoutzanis (Eds.), Media and Cosmopolitanism (207-226). Oxford, UK: Peter Lang. Previously published as Baysha, O., and Calabrese, A. (2012). The global in the local: A case study on deforestation in a Ukrainian journalistic field. Environmental Communication: A Journal of Nature and Culture. March, 1-19.

(2014). Media reform and communication rights in the United States. In C. Padovani & A. Calabrese (Eds.), Communication rights and social justice: Historical accounts of transnational mobilizations. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave/Macmillan.

Calabrese, A., & Mihal, C. (2011). Liberal fictions: The public-private dichotomy in media policy. In J. Wasko, G. Murdock & H. Sousa (Eds.), The Handbook of Political Economy of Communications (226-263). Walden, MA: Blackwell.

Calabrese, A., & Briziarelli, M. (2011). Policy imperialism: Bilateral trade agreements as instruments of media governance. In R. Mansell & M. Raboy (Eds.), The Handbook of Global Media and Communication Policy (383-394). Walden MA: Blackwell.

(2011). Political Communication. In G.T. Kurian (Ed). The Encyclopedia of Political Science, Vol. 4 (1235-1238). Congressional Quarterly Press (in cooperation with the American Political Science Association).

Calabrese, A., & Briziarelli, M. (2011). Hegemony. Oxford Bibliographies Online: Communication. doi: 10.1093/obo/9780199756841-0071.

(2010). Vox Americana: Why the media forget, and why it is important to remember. In A. Roosvall and I. Salovaara Moring (Eds.), Communicating the Nation (163-173). Nordicom Press. Invited chapter,

Calabrese/…Page 4 of 23

updated from: Calabrese (2007). Historical memory, media studies and journalism ethics. Global Media and Communication, 3(3), 363-370.

(2008). Privatization of the Media. In W. Donsbach (Ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Communication. Blackwell Publishing. Blackwell Reference Online.

(2008). UNESCO. In W. Donsbach (Ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Communication. Blackwell Publishing. Blackwell Reference Online.

(2008). Social Mobilization. In W. Donsbach (Ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Communication. Blackwell Publishing. Blackwell Reference Online.

(2003). The political significance of media literacy. In B. Cammaerts, L. Van Audenhove, G. Nulens & C. Pauwels. Beyond the digital divide: Reducing exclusion, fostering inclusion. Brussels: Free University Press. Reprinted from O. Luthar, K. McLeod & M. Zagar (Eds.). Citizenship and civic education in democracies (68-88). Oakville, Ontario: Mosaic Press, 2001.

(2001). Why localism? Communication technology and the shifting scale of political community. In G. Shepherd & E. Rothenbuhler (Eds.), Communication and community (251-270). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers.

(2001). Justifying civic competence in the information society. In S. Splichal (Ed.), Vox populi, vox dei? (147-164). Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

(2000). Political space and the trade in television news. In C. Sparks & J. Tulloch (Eds.), Tabloid tales: Global debates over media standards. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. This essay was recently published in revised form, in J. Wasko (Ed.), A Companion to Television, Malden, MA: Blackwell.

Calabrese, A., & Redal, W. (1997). Is there a US foreign policy in telecommunications? Transatlantic trade policy as a case study. In M. Bailie and D. Winseck (Eds.), Democratizing Communication? Comparative Perspectives on Information and Power. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 311-341. [Originally published in the journal Telematics and Informatics in 1995 in Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 35-56.]

(1995). Local versus global in the modernisation of Central and Eastern European Telecommunications: A case study of US corporate investments. In P. Preston and F. Corcoran (Eds.), Re-Regulating European Communications, pp. 233-256. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

(1994). Free speech in America: Contemporary social movements and the politics of representation. In S. Splichal, A. Calabrese and C. Sparks (Eds.), Information Society and Civil Society: Contemporary Perspectives on the Changing World Order, pp. 254-290. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press.

(1994). Home-based telework and the politics of private woman and public man. In U.E. Gattiker (Ed.), Studies in Technological Innovation and Human Resources: Vol. 4. Women and Technology, pp. 161-199. Berlin and New York: de Gruyter.

(1993). Designing communication: The culture and politics of the electronic cottage. Progress in Communication Science, 11. Edited by B. Dervin and U. Hariharan, pp. 75-100. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.

Other

(2005). The trade in television news. Invited republication. In J. Wasko (Ed.), A Companion to Television, Malden, MA: Blackwell. [Invited republication, revised and updated from its original publication in C. Sparks & J. Tulloch (Eds.), Tabloid tales: Global debates over media standards. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield]

(2004). Casus belli: I media statunitensi e la giustificazione della guerra in Iraq. In A. Medici (Ed.), Archivo Audiovisivo del Movimento Operaio e Democratico, Annali 6, Schermi di Guerra: Le Responsabilità della Comunicazione Audiovisiva. Rome: Ediesse. This essay, which was written in English and translated into Italian, was also published in English in the journal Television and New Media.

Calabrese/…Page 5 of 23

(2004). Toward a political economy of culture. In A. Calabrese & C. Sparks (Eds.), Toward a political economy of culture: Capitalism and communication in the twenty-first century (1-12). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

(2001). The means of communication and the discourse on sovereignty. In S. Chambers and A. Costain (Eds.), Deliberation, Democracy, and the Media. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Invited republication of the essay Communication and the end of sovereignty? [Originally published in the journal Info in 1999 in Vol. 1, No. 4.]

(2001). I mezzi di comunicazione e il discorso sulla sovranità. In C. Padovani, (Ed.), Comunicazione globale: Democrazia, sovranità, culture. UTET Libreria. Invited republication of the essay Communication and the end of sovereignty? [Originally published in the journal Info in 1999 in Vol. 1, No. 4.]

(1999). The welfare state, the information society, and the ambivalence of social movements. In A. Calabrese & J.C. Burgelman (Eds.), Communication, citizenship, and social policy: Re-thinking the limits of the welfare state (259-277). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

(1997). Surrendering standards: Contemporary dilemmas in the commercialisation of news and current affairs programming in the United States. In K. Robins (Ed.), Programming for people. From cultural rights to cultural responsibilities (pp. 263-283). Newcastle, UK: University of Newcastle and Radiotelevisione Italiana (RAI).

(1984). The potential of videotex in education. In S. Grieve & N.M. Singer (Eds.), Satellite Telecommunications and Their Potential for Vocational Education (pp. 193-203). Columbus, Ohio: National Center for Vocational Education.

2.3. Edited Books and Journals

Calabrese, A. & Fenton, N. (Eds.). (2015). Special issue of the European Journal of Communication, on the theme of “Media, Communication and the Limits of Liberalism.” October.

Padovani, C. & Calabrese, A. (Eds.). (2014). Communication rights and social justice: Historical accounts of transnational mobilizations. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave/Macmillan.

Cammaerts, B. & Calabrese, A. (Eds.). (2011). Special issue of Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, 25(1), on the theme of “A post-neoliberal order in media and communication regulation?”

Calabrese, A. & Padovani, C. (Eds.). (2004). Special issue of Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, 18(3), on the theme of “Global Communication Governance.”

Wasko, J. & Calabrese, A. (Eds.). (2004). Theme issue of Javnost/The Public, 11(3), on the theme of “New perspectives on critical communication studies.”

Calabrese, A. & Sparks, C. (Eds.). (2004). Toward a political economy of culture: Capitalism and communication in the twenty-first century. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Calabrese, A. & Burgelman, J.C. (Eds.). (1999). Communication, citizenship, and social policy: Re-thinking the limits of the welfare state. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Calabrese, A. & Burgelman, J.C. (Eds.). (1997). Theme issue of Javnost/The Public, 4(4), on the theme of “Communication and citizenship.”

Splichal, S., Calabrese, A., & Sparks, C. (Eds.). (1994). Information Society and Civil Society: Contemporary Perspectives on the Changing World Order. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press.

2.4. Other Publications

Calabrese, A. & Fenton, N. (2015). A symposium on media, communication and the limits of liberalism. Introduction to a special issue of the European Journal of Communication. October, 517-521.

Calabrese/…Page 6 of 23

Cammaerts, B., & Calabrese. A. (2011). Creative imagination: A post-neoliberal order in media and communication regulation? Introduction to special issue of Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, 25(1), 1-4.

(2010). Sending a message: Violence as political communication. International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics. Vol.6(1), 109-114.

(2007). Historical memory, media studies and journalism ethics. Global Media and Communication, 3(3), 363-370.

(2006). Communication rights before and after the WSIS. Community Media Review, 29(4), Winter, 17-19.

(2006). Politica de Telecommunicaciones de Estados Unidos y Las Corporaciones. Boletin Digital de Politicas de Communicacion, Vol.15, October.

(2006). [Review of Creative Industries]. Continuum: The Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, 20(1), 127-132.

(2005). [Review of Global Activism, Global Media]. European Journal of Communication, 20(4), 555-559.

(2004). Profits and patriots: US media coverage of the Iraq war. Media Development, 3, 34-38.

(2004). Foreword. Many voices, one world: Towards a new, more just and more efficient world information and communication order [Twenty-fifth anniversary edition of the “MacBride Report”]. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

(2003). “If FCC Chairman Powell Has His Way, Independent Voices Will Be Further Curtailed,” Rocky Mountain News, 24 May: 22B. Reprinted in the Salt Lake Tribune, 31 May 2003.

(1999). The information age according to Manuel Castells. [Review essay of The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture, 3 vols.]. Journal of Communication, 49(3), 172-186.

(1993). [Review of Transforming the Revolution: Social Movements and the World-System]. Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 10(4), 436-437.

(1993). A rich compilation of details. [Review essay of Electronic Byways: State Policies for Rural Development Through Telecommunications]. Telecommunications Policy, 17(1), 88-91.

(1989). [Review of Misunderstanding Media]. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 40, 139-140.

(1989). [Review of Information Technology: A Luddite Analysis]. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 40, 141-142.

(1989). [Review of Competing Visions, Complex Realities: Social Aspects of the Information Society]. Journal of Communication, 39(2), 167-170.

2.5. Lectures and Conference Presentations (2017, April) Class Consciousness versus the Cultural Production of Ignorance.” Presentation at the

conference, “What is Life?” University of Oregon. Portland. (2017, April). Panelist at the conference, “Reporting in the Age of Alternative Facts.” CU-Boulder. (2017, April). Public Lecture, “Can We Fight Fake News?” April 24. Lafayette Public Library. (2017, June). Media Legitimacy in the Age of Trump.” Presented at the symposium, “Il Problema Della

Legittimazione Nelle Democrazie Contemporanee. University of Padova. Italy. (2016, November). Media, moralism, and food paternalism: Does the “right to know” matter? Paper

presented at the National Communication Association preconference on “Media and Class in the 21st Century.” Philadelphia, PA.

(2016, May). Food movements and the cultural politics of trade institutions. Paper presented at a one-day symposium at the University of Ljubljana on “Digital Citizenship.” Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Calabrese/…Page 7 of 23

(2016, April). Food studies and media studies: Common ground and critical tensions. Paper presented at the “What is Media?” conference. Portland, OR.

(2015, July). Caveat Emptor! The rhetoric of ‘choice’ in American food politics. Paper presented at a panel for the IAMCR Political Economy Section of the conference of the International Association for Media and Communication Research. Montreal, Canada.

(2015, May). The illiberal foundations of economic liberalism. Paper presented at a panel for the ICA Philosophy, Theory and Critique Division at the conference of the International Communication Association. San Juan, Puerto Rico.

(2015, April). Media justice and food justice: A tale of two struggles. Colloquium presentation, sponsored by the Department of Media and Communications, Goldsmiths University of London. UK.

(2015, April). Food policy as cultural policy. Colloquium presentation, sponsored by the Department of Media and Communication Studies. University of Lund. Sweden.

(2015, March). Media justice and food justice: A tale of two struggles. Colloquium presentation, sponsored by the Faculty of History and Politics, University of Padua. Italy.

(2014, December). Connecting needs and rights in policy discourse. Paper presented at the Symposium on Media Activism, sponsored by the Scholars Program in Culture and Communication. Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia.

(2014, November). Media justice and food justice: A tale of two struggles. Colloquium presentation, sponsored by the Annenberg Scholars Program in Culture and Communication. Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia.

(2014, October). From sentimentalism to militant particularism: The morphing of localism as a cultural ideal. Public lecture for the Annenberg Scholars Program in Culture and Communication. Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia.

(2014, June). Media justice and food justice: A tale of two struggles. Invited lecture, sponsored by the Department of Media and Communications, University of Sydney, Australia.

(2014, June). Speaker on panel on Public Service Media: Is the Future So Gloomy? Sponsored by the Department of Media and Communications, and the Sydney Democracy Network. University of Sydney. Australia.

(2014, May). Human need as a justification for communication rights. Paper presented at a panel for the Philosophy, Theory and Critique Division at the conference of the International Communication Association. Seattle, Washington. (Winner, “Top Paper” for the division)

(2014, April). Cosmopolitan localism: The ambivalent mediatization of the local food movement. Invited paper presented at the 15th International Academic Conference on Economic and Social Change. National Research University, Higher School of Economics. Moscow, Russia.

(2013, October). The cult of digital disruption. Invited lecture at the School of Journalism and Communication. University of Oregon. Eugene, Oregon.

(2013, June). Liberalism’s disease: Just tell me what to think. Paper presented at a panel for the Political Economy Section at the conference of the International Association for Media and Communication Research. I also was co-organizer and chair of the panel, on the topic “Media and the Limits of Liberal Democracy.” Dublin, Ireland.

(2012, November). Means and ends: Instrumental reason’s threat to media education. Presentation at the European Institute for Communication and Culture Colloquium. Piran, Slovenia.

(2012, October). Means and ends: Should we care more about the process or the outcome of democratic communication? Invited lecture. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.

(2012, June). Media communication and global justice. Invited lecture. University of Passau (Germany).

(2012, May). Corporations are people too: How corporate personhood undermines the rights of citizens. Invited lecture, University of Athens (Greece).

(2012, May). Media and global justice. Invited lecture. University of Athens (Greece).

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(2010, July). Media institutions as surrogate political institutions in cosmopolitan theory. Paper presented at a panel for the Political Economy Section at the conference of the International Association for Media and Communication Research. Braga, Portugal.

(2010, July). A Critique of pure civility. Paper presented at a joint ICA-IAMCR plenary panel on "Communication and Citizenship" (the conference theme) at the conference of the International Association for Media and Communication Research. Braga, Portugal.

(2010, July). Olga Baysha and Andrew Calabrese. Is there anybody who is not frightened? The New York Times Deliberation on the USA-Russia Nuclear Discourse. Paper presented at a panel for the International Communication Section at the conference of the International Association for Media and Communication Research. Braga, Portugal.

(2010, July). Keynote speaker: Economically liberal and politically illiberal: Political communication’s great contradiction. Presented at the annual meeting of the Taiwan Communication Society, held at National Chung Chang University, Chia-Yi, Taiwan.

(2010, November). Invited speaker: From needs to rights: Grounding communication policy in human need. Presented at the "International Seminar on Media Convergence: Regulation for Citizenship," held at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

(2010, November) Invited speaker: The concept of political violence in cyberspace. Presented at the Fourth Symposium of the Brazilian Cyberculture Association, held at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

(2009, July). Presentation at roundtable on "The Emerging Post-Liberal Order and its Consequences for Media and Communication. Presented at the IAMCR conference in Mexico City, Mexico.

(2009, June). Stealth Regulation. Invited presentation given at a symposium on media industries and policies at the Zhejiang University of Media and Communications. Hangzhou, China.

(2009, June). The letter of the law: Telecommunications and the legal person." Invited presentation given at symposium titled "Advanced Forum on Global Education in Digital Publishing and Publishing Industries." Fudan University. Shanghai, China.

(2009, June). A new deal for the media. Plenary presentation at the conference “Beyond East and West: Two Decades of Media Transformation after the Fall of Communism.” Central European University. Budapest, Hungary.

(2009, April). Global justice and the politics of shame. Keynote presentation for the Media & Politics Group at the 59th Political Studies Association (PSA) Annual Conference. Manchester, UK

(2009, April). Communication as a basic human need. Invited paper presented at conference on “Europeanization, Welfare and Democracy.” University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Humanities, Denmark.

(2009, January). New media and the political imagination: The case of Barack Obama's run for the U.S. presidency. Invited presentation given at the symposium, "Barack Obama's America," University of Padova. Padova, Italy.

(2008, July). From needs to rights: Justifying and prioritizing the costs of communication rights. Paper presented at the Political Economy Section, IAMCR conference. Stockholm.

(2008, May). The global citizen and the politics of shame. Paper presented at the ICA preconference on “Mediating Global Citizenship.” Co-sponsored by the Philosophy of Communication and Political Communication Divisions. Montreal.

(2008, May). Taking communication rights seriously. Paper presented at the Philosophy of Communication Division, ICA Conference. Montreal.

(2008, February). What do human rights and global media have in common? Presentation to the International Institute of Education. Denver.

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(2008, January). Taking communication rights seriously. Presentation at the Department of Art History and Communication Studies, McGill University. Montreal.

(2007, October). Speaker, roundtable on “Revisiting Communication, Citizenship and Social Policy (1999): A Roundtable on Globalization and Media Regulation” at the meeting of the Union for Democratic Communications, Vancouver.

(2007, October). Where to shine the spotlight? Public information and the problem of global business accountability. Paper presented at the meeting of the Union for Democratic Communications, Vancouver.

(2007, October). Civility and silence: Repressive norms of civil discourse. Presentation at the Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spanish National Research Council (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), Madrid.

(2007, October). Taking communication rights seriously. Presentation at the Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI), University of Westminster, London.

(2007, October). Keynote speaker, symposium on “Equal Opportunities and Communication Rights: Representation, Participation & the European Democratic Deficit.” Symposium sponsored by the European Communication and Research Association (ECREA), Vesalius College, and the European Journalism Centre, Brussels.

(2007, October). Keynote speaker, symposium on “The Myth of the Global Internet: Unequal Infrastructures, Invisible Controls, Multiple Cultures.” Symposium sponsored by the European Communication and Research Association (ECREA) and the Free University of Brussels, Brussels.

(2007, July). Speaker, panel on “Mapping global media policy: The state of the art.” Presentation to the Working Group on Global Media Policy. International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR), Paris.

(2007, July). Speaker, panel on “Mapping global media policy: The way forward.” Presentation to the Working Group on Global Media Policy. International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR), Paris.

(2007, May). Activist networks, sovereignty, and the postnational constellation. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Communication Association. San Francisco.

(2006, September). Historical memory, media studies and journalism ethics. Paper presented at the conference on “Internationalizing Media Studies,” University of Westminster, London.

(2006, September). The U.S media and Iraq. Presentation at the international colloquium on “State and Communication,” School of Communication, University of Brasilia, Brazil.

(2006, July). Political imagination and the norms of global civil society. Presentation to the Working Group on Global Media Policy. International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR). Cairo, Egypt.

(2006, July). Plenary roundtable participant for the IAMCR Task Force on the World Summit on the Information Society. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR). Cairo, Egypt.

(2006, June). Corporate welfare and corporate citizenship in telecommunications: No rights without responsibilities. Presentation at the ICA Pre-Conference “Influencing Outcomes: Communications Research and Global and Regional Policy Transformations,” Central European University, Budapest, Hungary.

(2006, April). Global justice and the means of communication: Report on the 5th World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Colloquium presentation at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado, Boulder.

(2006, April). The letter of the law: Censorship, surveillance and the corporate person. Paper presented at the conference on Making Public-Service Telecommunications: Past and Present Challenges for Networked Information Infrastructures. University of Illinois, Urbana.

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(2006, March). Media ethics and the coverage of the Iraq war. Keynote presentation at the 32nd Annual Undergraduate Honors Conference. Department of Communication and Theatre. De Pauw University, Greencastle, Indiana.

(2005, November). Speaker at the UN World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), regarding the launch of the “International Researchers’ Charter for Knowledge Societies,” which was sponsored by the International Association for Media and Communication Research's (IAMCR). Tunis, Tunisia.

(2005, September). State and civil society in the era of the MacBride Commission: An investigation of the role of NGOs. Paper presented at the European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM) colloquium on “The MacBride Report-25 Years Later.” Piran, Slovenia.

(2005, June). All the news that’s fit to buy: Market values and American journalism. Public lecture presented at the Faculty of Communication, University of Maribor, Slovenia.

(2005, April). Communication, global justice and the moral economy. Presentation at the colloquium on “A Fourth Rights Revolution? Communication Rights and Global Justice.” University of Colorado, Boulder.

(2005, January). The American case. Invited lecture presented at the First Information and Communication World Forum. Porto Alegre, Brazil.

(2004, November). Multistakeholder approaches in historical perspective: National and transnational strategies of advocacy in communication policy. Keynote presentation at the conference on The Multistakeholder Approach in Information and Communication Policy: From Geneva to Tunis. Venice, Italy.

(2004, November). The radical right and the American media. Invited lecture presented to the faculty of History and Political Science at the University of Padova. Padova, Italy.

(2004, October). Accounting for the unaccountable: An agenda for the study of global media industries. Invited closing presentation for a symposium to launch the Global Media Research Center, College of Mass Communication and Media Arts, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois.

(2004, September). The means of communication and the problems of civil society. Colloquium presentation at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Colorado, Boulder.

(2004, March). Communication policy as social policy. Colloquium presentation at the Center for Values and Social Policy. University of Colorado. Boulder.

(2004, August). Transnational labor and the future of communication rights. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR). Porto Alegre, Brazil.

(2003, November). Communication and the moral economy. Colloquium presentation given at the Tocqueville Seminar, sponsored by the Tocqueville Center for the Study of America in a Globalizing World. University of Colorado, Boulder.

(2003, September). Communication and the moral economy. Presented at the conference on “The Future of Critical Communication Studies,” University of Iowa, Iowa City.

(2003, May). Communication and the moral economy. Presented at the World Social Agenda conference. Padova, Italy.

(2002, October). We are all cosmopolitans now. Keynote presentation at the European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM) conference on “Electronic Networks and Democracy,” hosted by the Department of Communication, University of Nijmegen, Netherlands.

(2002, June). Publicity and surveillance in the postnational constellation. Paper presented at the conference on “Capitalism and Communication in the 21st Century.” University of Westminster. London, UK.

(2002, May). The discrete charm of the world citizen. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Cinema Studies. Denver, Colorado.

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(2001, November). Media and the idea of postnational citizenship. Colloquium presentation at the Center for Values and Social Policy. University of Colorado. Boulder.

(2001, June). A fourth rights revolution? The struggle for postnational communication rights. Paper presented at the "High-level Seminar on Digital Inclusion Policies," sponsored by SMIT research center at the Free University of Brussels. Brussels, Belgium.

(2001, February). Virtual nonviolence: Activism and the legacy of civil disobedience in the digital age. Lecture presented at the Telecom Policy Luncheon. University of Colorado. Boulder.

(2001, April). Honor among strangers? Political communication and post-national identity. Paper presented at the International Symposium on Communication, "Manipulation Power of the Media," held at Anadolu University, School of Communication Sciences, Eskisehir, Turkey.

(2000, December). Governing culture: Cultural policy and cultural citizenship in U.S. history. Lecture presented to the Faculty of Communication, University of Ljubljana. Slovenia.

(2000, December). Virtual nonviolence: Activism and the legacy of civil disobedience in the digital age. Lecture presented to the Faculty of Communication, University of Ljubljana. Slovenia. [Also presented in November 2000 at the CU Symposium on “The Internet and Political Participation.”]

(2000, December). Political theater in the 2000 U.S. election. Lecture presented to the Faculty of American Studies, University of Ljubljana. Slovenia.

(1999, October). Media and civic competence. Presented at the Australian Key Centre for Cultural and Media Policy. Brisbane, Australia. [Also presented at the Department of Philosophy’s Center for Values and Social Policy, University of Colorado, November 1999].

(1999, October). Media education and the “digital divide.” Presentation at the School of Media and Journalism, Queensland University of Technology. Brisbane, Australia.

(1999, October). The idea of electronic democracy. Presentation at the School of Media and Journalism, Queensland University of Technology. Brisbane, Australia.

(1999, October). Cosmopolitan democracy as a theme in transnational media policy. Presentation at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Technology – Sydney. Sydney, Australia. [Also presented at the Department of Humanities, Victoria University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia, November 1999].

(1999, March). Virtual democracy: The promise of technology in the discourse on postsovereignty. Paper presented at the conference on Democracy and Democratic Discourse, University of Colorado at Boulder.

(1998, November). Communication technology and the shifting scale of political community. Lecture presented to the Globalization and Democracy Project, Institute for Behavioral Science, at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

(1998, October). The political significance of media literacy. Paper presented at the conference on Citizenship and Civic Education in Democracies in Ljubljana, Slovenia.

(1998, May). Media education as political education. Lecture presented to the faculty of the Department of Communication, University of Ljubljana. Slovenia.

(1998, May). Media, citizenship, and social policy. Lecture presented to the faculty of the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Tampere. Finland.

(1998, May). Media education in U.S. universities. Lecture presented to the faculty of the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Tampere. Finland.

(1998, May). The information society and the ideology of global restructuring. Lecture-discussion with the Finnish-Hungarian Tempus workshop on the Information Society, presented at the University of Tampere. Finland.

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(1997, March). Media policy and the politics of communication. Lecture presented to the faculty of the Department of Radio-TV-Film, Northwestern University. Evanston, Illinois.

(1997, October). Creative destruction? From the welfare state to the global information society. Paper presented at the 12th Colloquium of the European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM). Boulder, CO.

(1997, July). Global trade, the information society and the ambivalence of social movements. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Association of Media and Communication Research. Oaxaca, Mexico.

(1997, July). A computer in every pot: Views on the importance of hooking everyone up. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Association of Media and Communication Research. Oaxaca, Mexico.

(1997, April). John Stuart Mill and the perversion of tolerance. Paper presented at the University of Colorado Center for the Humanities and the Arts’ symposium on “Civility and Censorship.” Boulder, CO.

(1996, December). The political economy of new media. Presented at a symposium in honor of a study delegation from the German Bundestag, University of Colorado, Boulder.

(1996, November). Communication as entitlement. Presented at the annual meeting of the National Communication Association, San Diego, CA.

(1996, May). Questioning Internet ownership (and its relationship to democracy). Presented at a panel on Internet commercialization at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, Chicago, IL.

(1995, December). Telecommunications as a field of social and cultural studies. Presented at the workshop on Culture, Media, Law: New Approaches to Media and Telecommunications Policy, European Law Research Center, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA.

Padovani, C., & Calabrese, A. (1995, June). Berlusconi, RAI, and the modernization of Italian feudalism. Presented at the International Association for Media and Communication Research conference, Beyond the Nation State, Portoroz, Slovenia.

(1995, April). Media across borders: The cultural politics of global communication. Presented at the conference on Rumours and Borders: Life, Culture and Geography in Mexico, Canada and the USA, University of Colorado, Boulder.

(1995, March). Telecommunications and the idea of global culture. Presented to the CU Information Technology Research Forum, University of Colorado, Boulder.

Calabrese, A., & de Souza, S. (1994, July). Beyond irrelevance and hostility: Responding to political challenges to the public support of local media. Presented at the bi-annual meeting of the International Association for Media and Communication Research, Seoul, Korea.

Calabrese, A., & Redal, W. (1994, July). Is there a foreign policy in telecommunications? Transatlantic trade policy as a case study. Presented at the bi-annual meeting of the International Association for Media and Communication Research, Seoul, Korea.

(1994, April). Cable television in the United States: An overview of political, economic and technological developments. Presented at the Antennacinema Film and Video Conference, Conegliano, Italy.

(1994, April). The historical and contemporary context of electronic media access in the United States. Presented at the Antennacinema/ EURICOM colloquium, Rethinking Access: Theory, Policy and Practice of Access to Electronic Media, Conegliano, Italy.

(1993, August). The local, the global, and the media: Community and identity in an age of globalization. Presented at the Institute for Advanced Philosophic Research conference, Community, the Family, and Culture, Estes Park, Colorado.

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(1993, June). Local-global tensions in the modernization of Central and Eastern European telecommunications: Social policy implications of foreign direct investments. Presented at the International Association for Media and Communication Research conference, Europe in Turmoil: Global Perspectives, Dublin, Ireland.

(1993, May). Why localism? On renewing a public interest theme in U.S. communications policy. Presented at the 43rd annual conference of the International Communication Association, Washington, DC.

(1993, May). Telecommunication studies: Intellectual and institutional challenges in developing an interdisciplinary program. Presented at the 43rd annual conference of the International Communication Association, Washington, DC.

(1992, October). Structural trends in American media development. Presented at the 6th Colloquium on Communication and Culture, Piran, Slovenia.

Burke, B., & Calabrese, A. (1992, April). All we need is Earth Day: The commodification of ecological crises. Presented at the conference, Mainstream(s) and Margins: Cultural Politics in the 90’s, Amherst, Massachusetts.

(1992, January). National television in the Gulf Crisis. Presented at the 2nd Teach Peace Conference, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN.

Calabrese, A., & Wasko, J. (1991, September). All wired up and no place to go: The search for public space in U.S. cable development. Presented at the 5th Colloquium on Communication and Culture, Piran, Yugoslavia.

Calabrese, A., & Burke, B. (1991, August). American identities: Institutions and subjectivity in the information age. Presented at the panel, “Journalism and the public sphere,” at the meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Boston.

(1991, August). Telecommunications and the spatial division of labor. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Rural Sociological Society, Columbus, Ohio.

Calabrese, A.M., & Jung, D. (1990, August). Communication technology, the country and the city: Utopian thought in rural American development policy. Paper presented at the meeting of the International Association of Media and Communication Research, Lake Bled, Yugoslavia .

(1990, August). Free speech in America: Public life in an information society. Paper presented at the 4th International Colloquium on Communication and Culture, Radovljica, Yugoslavia.

Calabrese, A., Jung, D., Burke, B., & Weispfenning, J. (1990, August). Media development in the United States: A political, institutional and technological survey. Paper presented at the 4th International Colloquium on Communication and Culture, Radovljica, Yugoslavia.

(1989, October). Futurism and the media: An historical approach to assessing depictions of alternative futures. Presented at the meeting of the International Conference on Culture and Communication, Philadelphia.

(1989, September). Computer-based homework in the United States: A labor policy history and prognosis. Presented at the 3rd Colloquium on Communication and Culture, Piran, Yugoslavia.

(1989, May). The evolution of telecommuting: A formative evaluation. Presented at the meeting of the International Communication Association, San Francisco.

Calabrese, A.M., Webster, J.B., & Ogles, R.M. (1989, April). Free speech and cable in the 1990s. Presented at the 13th Illinois Political Studies Conference, Eastern Illinois University, Charleston, Illinois.

(1987, November). Social science discourse: Issues in scholarly communication. Presented at the meeting of the Speech Communication Association, Boston. (ERIC document ED 295 223)

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2.6. Awards & Grants 2014 Visiting Scholar. Annenberg School for Communication. University of Pennsylvania. 2014 Winner, “Best Paper” in the Philosophy, Theory and Critique Division of the

International Communication Association. 2007 William Payden Award for Faculty Excellence. School of Journalism and Mass

Communication. University of Colorado. 2005 "Culture, Trade and UNESCO." Research grant awarded by the CU Center for Advanced

Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences (CARTSS). Funds to conduct interviews with officials and do archival research at UNESCO headquarters in Paris.

2005 "Global Activism and Communication Rights." Research grant awarded by the CU Institute for Ethical and Civic Engagement. Funds to cover travel costs to participate in and do research at major events in Slovenia (Sept. 2005) and Tunisia (Nov. 2005) pertaining to communication rights.

2003 Participant in the 2003-04 de Tocqueville seminar, sponsored by the de Tocqueville Initiative and the Center to Advance Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences (CARTSS). University of Colorado, Boulder.

2003 Invited participant in a two-day workshop to coincide with the UN World Summit on the Information Society. The workshop is titled “IT Governance and the Politics of Civil Society.” Travel funding provided by the Social Science Research Council. December 13-14, 2003. Geneva, Switzerland.

2000 Co-investigator on grant from the National Science Foundation: “ITR/EWF: Research, Curriculum and Partnerships for Broadening the Information Technology Pipeline” (Principal Investigator: Robert Schnabel). The portion of the project in which I was co-investigator was the research and curriculum development project titled “Civic Competence, Digital Literacy, and Citizenship.” With grant funds, I team-taught a course with Professor Lynn Staeheli in the Geography department (called “Technology, Literacy and Citizenship”). Total grant amount: $448,655.

1999 Grant from the University of Colorado’s Alliance for Technology, Learning and Society (ATLAS) to convene a year-long faculty seminar during the 1999-2000 academic year on “Globalization, Information Technology, and Democracy.”). Grant amount: $41,040.

1999 Visiting Fellow, Centre for Media Policy and Practice, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia. Five-week visit for consulting and research collaboration on the project “Media Education, Political Education and Citizenship in a Digital Age.”

1999 Sabbatical leave. Spring semester. 1998 Fulbright Fellow, Council for International Exchange of Scholars, to lecture at the

University of Ljubljana in the Republic of Slovenia. Period: February - June. The award covered travel expenses and a six-month living stipend for my family and me.

1997 Fellow, Center for the Humanities and the Arts, University of Colorado. Research fellowship to participate in a faculty seminar on “Civility and Censorship.” Fellowship covered a one-course release during the Fall semester.

1997 University of Colorado, Council on Research and Creative Work, Conference Grant to support 12th EURICOM conference on “Communication, Citizenship and Social Policy.”

1994 University of Colorado, Council on Research and Creative Work, Small Grant for collaborative research project, "Rethinking Access: Theory, Policy and Practice of Access to Electronic Media."

1993 University of Colorado, Council on Research and Creative Work, Small Grant for research project, "The Quest for Community in the Age of Globalization."

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1992 Donald McGannon Communication Policy Research Award. Conferred annually through Fordham University for ethical and social relevance in published communication policy research. Award amount: $2,000.

1992 Purdue University Faculty Incentive Grant. Funds to pay for editorial assistance on the book project, Information Society and Civil Society. Award: $560.

1988 Cellular One Communication Award. Awarded by Ameritech Corporation for academic excellence. Award amount: $1,000.

1988 Ohio State University Presidential Fellowship. One year of living stipend for dissertation research, related expenses, and conference travel, awarded for academic excellence.

2.7. Other Research Activities

In the 2003-04 academic year, I was a faculty participant in a seminar sponsored by the CU Tocqueville Center for the Study of America in a Globalizing World. Participants included faculty and doctoral students. Each week, participants presented work in progress and engaged in discussions about it. My project for the seminar was subsequently published as a journal article by the title “Communication, global justice and the moral economy.”

In the academic year 1999-2000, I convened (with a colleague in Geography) a year-long faculty seminar on Globalization, Information Technology, and Democracy, funded by a $41,000 grant from the University of Colorado’s Alliance for Technology, Learning and Society (ATLAS). The grant provided for graduate research assistantships and faculty course reductions for individuals from several different CU departments and colleges (Anthropology, Sociology, Geography, Political Science, Philosophy, English, and History, and the Schools of Business, Law, and Journalism and Mass Communication). The grant also was used to bring a visiting lecturer (Professor Kevin Robins) to CU for a week to meet with the seminar and CU classes, as well as to give a public lecture. The seminar, which met twice a month, examined the impact of the globalization of communication and information technology and services on conceptions of citizenship and the practice of democracy.

Research Conferences Organized:

1. The Content and Context of Digital Culture. Three-part symposium held at the University of Colorado, Boulder, during academic year 2011-2012. Events on: November 7-8, 2011, February 27-29, 2012, March 13-14, 2012.

2. A Rights Revolution? Communication Rights and Global Justice. Research colloquium held at the University of Colorado, Boulder. April 1-3, 2005.

3. What’s Left in Communication Research? Colloquium of the European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM). Piran, Slovenia. September 17-20, 2003. (with Prof. Janet Wasko)

4. Information Society Visions and Governance: The World Summit on the Information Society and Beyond. Colloquium of the European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM). Padua and Venice, Italy. May 5-7, 2003. (with Prof. Claudia Padovani)

5. Communication, Citizenship, and Social Policy: Re-Thinking the Limits of the Welfare State. 12th Colloquium of the European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM). Boulder, Colorado. October 2-5, 1997. (with Prof. Jean-Claude Burgelman)

6. Global Media and Global Responsibility: A Time to Choose. 9th MacBride Roundtable on Communication. Boulder, Colorado. October 1-2, 1997.

7. Re-Thinking State and Local Telecommunications Policy. Conference featuring speakers from industry, government, academia, and non-profit sectors. Boulder, Colorado. December 11-12, 1995.

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8. 5th International Colloquium on Communication and Culture. Piran, Yugoslavia, August 1991. (with Prof. Slavko Splichal)

* I raised funds for several of these events, did planning and on-site management, coordinated review processes, and was moderator and/or discussant for panels (in collaboration with colleagues, as indicated). Several publications have resulted from these events.

2.8. Work in Progress

Exquisite Citizen: Media and Activism in the Digital Age. I am completing a book of essays, under contract with Paradigm Publishers, on the intersections of media, civil disobedience, and political violence.

Media and Global Justice. I am co-editing a collection of essays on the uses of media in social justice activism with Dr. Paula Chakravartty (New York University).

3. TEACHING EXPERIENCE

3.1. Courses Taught at the University of Colorado J1001: Contemporary Media Analysis (undergrad) J2011: Media and Public Culture (undergrad) J3771: Communication and Media History (undergrad) J4201/5201: International Mass Communication (grad/undergrad) J4871 Special Topics: Technology, Literacy and Citizenship (undergrad) J4871/5871: Special Topics: Alternative Media J4791/5791: Mass Communication and Public Opinion (grad/undergrad) J4321/5321: Media Institutions and Economics (grad/undergrad) J6051: Theories of Mass Communication (grad) J6301: Communication, Media, and Concepts of the Public (grad) J6551: Telecommunication Policy (grad) J6871 Special Topics: Media and Cultural Policy (grad) J7011: Proseminar in Communication Theory I Fall (grad) J7021: Proseminar in Communication Theory II Spring (grad) J7871: Special Topic Seminar: The Idea of Global Civil Society (grad) J7871: Special Topic Seminar: Communication, Media, and the Structure of Public

Space (grad) J7871: Special Topic Seminar: Communication, Modernity, and Spatial Relations

(grad) TELS 6000: Emerging Communication Technologies (grad)

3.2. Courses Taught at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia Communication Technology and Society Media and Public Opinion

3.3. Courses Taught at Purdue University COM 250: Mass Communication and Society (undergrad) COM 435: Communication and Emerging Technologies (undergrad)

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COM 533: Documentary Television (grad/undergrad) COM 562: Mass Media Institutions (grad/undergrad) COM 563: Public Policy in Telecommunication (grad/undergrad) COM 632c: Communication Technology in Social Change (grad)

3.4. Advising and Committee Work

Graduate Advising Anderson, Michael (M.A., 2002): A case study in art and social change: Adbusters Magazine. Baysha, Olga (Ph.D., 2012). The Mythologies of Modernity with a Schizophrenic Network Dynamic. Briziarelli, Marco (Ph.D., 2012). Revolution and Restoration: Mediating the Experience of the Red Brigades. Colby, Dean (M.A., 1997). What is welfare reform? Collebrusco, Anthony (M.A., 2012). “You've got to be realistic”: The political and economic challenges of documentary filmmakers in Boulder and Denver, Colorado. Day, Wan-Wen (Ph.D., 1999). The pathology of modernity? Cultural dialogue and Taiwan’s small-scale media. de Saint Just, Josseline (M.A., 2001). In search of the intellectual. de Souza, Sergio (Ph.D., 1998). Elusive autonomy: Brazilian communications policy in an age of globalization and technological change. Demont-Heinrich, Christof (Ph.D., 2006). English by popular demand: American prestige press discourses on language and globalization in a post-Cold War world. Ditzel, James (M.A., 1995): Advertising’s impact on four Colorado newspapers’ story selections. Ellis, Erik (M.A., 1996): Welcome to Lilliput: The shrinking of the general interest in magazine publishing. Hume-Jones, Kathleen (M.A., 1996): Personal news and community ties: Changes in news content of three small-town Colorado newspapers, 1950-1990. Khleif, Richard (Ph.D., 2007). Beltway power brokers: An examination of the Heritage Foundation. Lustyik, Katalin (Ph.D., 2003). The transformation of children’s television: From communism to global capitalism in Hungary. [Postdoctoral Fellow, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand] Maney, Michael Strickland (M.A., 2001): An analysis of the network news coverage of the May 2000 Disney-Time Warner cable dispute. McGinley, Jennifer A. (M.A., 2005): Towards a democratization of media: Considering weblogs as alternative and citizens’ media. McNeil, Christie (M.A., 1997): The U.S. influence on European telecommunications policy: A case study of public interest as consumer interest. Morest, Claude (M.A., 1997): Agents, interests, and discourse in the communication policy process: A case study of S.1822, the Communications Act of 1994. Oblak, Tanja (Ph.D., 2001). University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. Images of electronic democracy. Owens, Cara Bottjen (M.A., 2010). Is your newspaper helping you understand technology? The framing of network neutrality in U.S. newspapers. Rochat, Robert Scott (M.A., 1997): Is electronic copyright a net loss? The potential conflict between a strong intellectual property policy and an electronic “public space.” Rodriguez, Carol Diaz (M.A., 1994): Bilingualism and the growth of Spanish-language media in the United States.

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Ryu, Seung-Kwan (M.A., 1997): A study of the activation of cable TV as public interest media: A comparative approach focusing on local origination channels of cable TV in Korea and the U.S. Schack, Todd A. (Ph.D., 2006). The cultural war on drugs: The language of drug discourse, 19th century to the present. Terry, Joseph (Ph.D., 2013). Policy for culture’s sake? Cultural theory, popular music and the Canadian state. van Dooselaere, Gwendoline (M.A., 2007). Woza Moya: A case study of a South African NGO as it relates to HIV/AIDS education and awareness. Volčič, Zala (M.A., 1998): Media, post-socialism and the public sphere: A case study of Slovene public service broadcasting. Volčič, Zala (Ph.D., 2003). Serbian spaces of identity and belonging: Narratives of Serbian nationalism by the last “Yugo” generation. [Winner, Thomas Edwin Devaney Dissertation Fellowship, CU Center for the Humanities and the Arts, 2002-2003; and winner, AEJMC’s Nafziger-White Dissertation Award, 2004] Yusof, Arfah (M.A., 1997): Telecommunications for the developing world: The development of telecommunications in Malaysia as a member of the south east Asian region.

Supervision of Undergraduate Honors Students

Balogh, Heather (B.A., 2004), ETA: A Profile of a terrorist group and the involvement of media. Smith, Jessie (B.A., 2004), Filth or art? Analyses of Godard’s Hail Mary, Scorcese’s Last Temptation of Christ, and Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ. Beckwith, Kendra (B.A., 2004), Mainstream vs. alternative: The development of the alternative and mainstream press, and what it has done for women’s issues agenda. Hubbell, Kristen (B.A., Magna Cum Laude, CU, 2000), Newspaper coverage of the war in Kosovo. Meade, Melissa (Purdue, 1992), Feminist media criticism. Thomas, Amy (Purdue, 1990), Advertising images of the information age.

Committee Member on Theses and Dissertations Al-Najran, Talal (M.A., CU-SJMC, 1994). Alters, Diane (Ph.D., CU-SJMC. 2002). Ampuja, Marko (Ph.D., University of Helsinki, 2010). Andrejevic, Mark (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2001). Borchert, Mark (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1997). Bucciferro, Claudia (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2010). Calkins, Lauren (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2004). Caplan, Jeremy (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2004). Clark, Lynn (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1998). Cohen, Adrienne (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2009). Colby, Dean (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2004). Cornwell, Nancy (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1997).

Crawford, Patrick (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2007). de Frank, James (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1997). Delva, Paul (M.A., Purdue-Communication, 1991). Dixon, Tim (M.A., CU-ITP, 1994). Elmoudden, Sanae (Ph.D., CU Communication, 2008). Fernback, Jan (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1998). Finney, Mark (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2007). Fleming, Katie (M.A., CU-Political Science, 2010). Gorišek, Saša (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2000). Grothe, Andre (M.A., CU-ITP, 2004). Hamilton, Harriet S. (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2007).

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Harrison-Miller, Dianne (M.A., CU-SJMC, 1994). Hartman, Michael (M.A., CU-Anthropology, 1994). Hegbloom, Maria (Ph.D., CU Communication, 2008). Hirsch, Dov (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2006. Hodgson, Kelly (M.A., Purdue-Communication, 1992). Hood, Leona (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2001). Hunter, Anne-Barrie (M.A., CU-SJMC, 1998). Ingersoll, Alex (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2008). Issac, Adrienne (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2010). Jafar, Abu (Ph.D., Simon Fraser University, 2010). Jung, Donald (Ph.D., Purdue-Communication, 1991). Kaneva, Nadia (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2007). Kwik, Stefanus (M.A., CU-ITP, 1994). Labbe, Brett (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2010). Longan, Michael (Ph.D., CU-Geography, 2000). Lustyik, Katalin (M.A., CU-SJMC, 1998). Martin, Patricia (Ph.D., CU-Geography, 2003). Masia, Seth (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2007). McDonald, Darlene (M.A., CU-ITP, 1993). McKenna, Sean (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2000). McQuaide, Thomas (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2002). Nedderman, Cheryl (M.D., CU-SJMC, 2004). Obata, Yuri (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2004). Padovani, Cinzia (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1999). Pathania, Geetika (M.A., Purdue-Communication, 1992). Petersen, Carolyn Collins (M.A., CU-SJMC, 1996). Rajgopal, Shoba (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2003).

Redal, Wendy (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1997). Rennie, Elinor (Ph.D., Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia, 2003). Rubenstein, Geoffrey (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1998). Rubinoff, Donna (Ph.D., CU-Geography, 2003). Russell, James (M.A., CU-Geography, 2000). Russo, Anna Maria (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2003). Ryu, Donghyup (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2012). Schoechle, Timothy (M.A., CU-ITP, 1995; Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2004). Simpson, Donna (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2000). Skogberg-Eastman, Cari (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2008). Spratte, Tobin (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2010). Streissguth, Michael (M.A., Purdue-Communication, 1990). Swenson, Tamara (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2009. Tawil, Helga (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2004). Vazquez, Cynthia (M.A., Purdue-Communication, 1992). Vidali, Martina (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2002). Virnoche, Mary (Ph.D., CU-Sociology, 1999). Wagner, Doug (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 1999). Waggoner, Nicole (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2005). Walker, Denice (Ph.S., CU-SJMC, 2010). Webb, Lindsay Nayer (M.A., CU-SJMC, 2005). Weispfenning, John (Ph.D., Purdue-Communication, 1992). White, Krista (M.A., CU-Art History, 1996). Wu, S.-J. (M.A., CU-ITP, 1995). Zeiger, Dinah (Ph.D., CU-SJMC, 2007).

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4. SERVICE

4.1. Service to the Profession

Founding and current editor of the book series Critical Media Studies: Institutions, Politics, and Culture. Rowman & Littlefield and Lexington Publishers, 1997 – present. More than fifty books have been published to date (the first in 1998), with several others in press and under contract. My responsibilities include working closely with authors, reviewers and the publisher during all stages of review, acquisition, revision and production. I also have solicited projects on specific subjects.

Chair, IAMCR Task Force on Media and Communication Policy. 2006-2009.

Co-founder and board member, European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM), 1992 – present.

North American Editor, Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies (Taylor & Francis), 2004 – present.

Editorial boards:

Editorial board: Television and New Media, 1999 – present

Editorial board: Javnost/The Public, published in Slovene and English by the Slovene Ministry of Education, 1993 – present.

Editorial board: Revista Brasileira de Políticas de Comunicação (RBPC – The Brazilian Journal of Communication Policies), published in Portuguese.

Editorial board: Dixit: Communicacion, Profesion, Conocimiento. Communication journal, published in Spanish by the Catholic University of Uruguay.

Advisory board: Global Media Journal: Mediterranean Edition. 2005-present.

Advisory board: Interactions: Studies in Communication and Culture. 2008-present.

Advisory board: New Media and Society, 1997 – 2006.

Advisory Board, Ablex Publishers' Communication and Information Science Series, 1990-1992.

Manuscript and proposal reviewer for the following publishers (periodical titles in italics):

Ablex; Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (paper competitions); Blackwell; Communication Studies; Communication Theory; Communication Yearbook; Critical Studies in Mass Communication; Guilford; International Communication Association (paper competition); International Journal of Communication; Javnost/The Public; Journalism Monographs; Political Behavior; Oxford; Routledge; Rowman & Littlefield; Sage; Technology Studies; The Information Society; University of Illinois; University of Minnesota; Westview, Harvard Journal of Press and Politics; Continuum: The Journal of Media and Cultural Studies; Canadian Journal of Communication; International Journal of Cultural Studies; Media, Culture and Society.

Reviewer for tenure and/or promotion:

University of Washington (2014), Texas A&M University (2014), University of Oregon (2010), Emerson College (1992), University of Denver (2009), University of Houston (1996), York University (2008), University of Texas at San Antonio (1996), Southern Illinois University (2011), University of Ljubljana, Slovenia (1998, 2008), Miami University, Ohio (2003); Queensland University of Technology, Australia (2003), University of New Mexico (2006), University of Iowa (2006), University of Massachusetts-Amherst (2006).

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Grant and fellowship reviewer:

Ministry of Education, Science and Sport, Republic of Slovenia (2002); Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (1994, 2007, 2014); City University of New York (1990); University of Padova (2002).

Elected member, International Council of International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR), 2004 – 2011.

Member, IAMCR Task Force for the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), 2004 – 2005.

Member, IAMCR Publications Committee, 2004 – 2011.

Vice-president, IAMCR Political Economy Section, 1994 – 1999.

Editor, IAMCR Political Economy of Communication section newsletter, 1994 – 1997.

Editor, association newsletter for IAMCR, 1995 – 1996.

Manager, association list server for IAMCR, 1994 – 2006.

4.2. University Service (major service activities at CU)

Member of CMCI (College of Media, Communication and Information) Implementation Committee. AY 2013-14. Chaired the committee that developed and proposed a plan for a new Department of Media Studies (developed curriculum and B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degree programs). Also served on the committee that proposed the new College. The College and the Department were approved by the CU Board of Regents in Spring 2014.

Chaired an interdisciplinary committee, with faculty from Linguistics, Anthropology, Geography, Film Studies, Communication, and Journalism & Mass Communication, to develop the framework for a Department of Media Studies. AY 2012-13. The culminating work of the committee was to submit a detailed report/proposal to the Provost, outlining the concept and rationale for a Department of Media Studies. This proposal provided the initial framework for the proposal that will go to the CU Board of Regents in April 2013, along with proposals for other academic units that are being proposed for a new College of Media, Communication and Information.

Chair, Digital Curation Postdoctoral Fellowship Search Committee. Applied for and obtained campus funding for a two-year postdoctoral fellow, and led a successful search to hire someone currently employed at CU-Boulder and working on various arts and journalism digital archiving projects.

Chair, ICJMT (Information, Communication, Journalism, Media and Technology) Steering Committee. Summer 2011 – Summer 2012. I chaired a committee, appointed by the Provost, that was charged with developing a proposal for a new College and a related Institute to respond to a growing campus-wide interdisciplinary interest in media and communication. The committee’s detailed report responded to a wide range of input from faculty, administrators, students, and external constituencies.

Associate Dean, SJMC (8/08 – 7/12). The position was fifty percent service, with my remaining duties being thirty percent research, and twenty percent teaching. My primary duties were as dean of graduate studies, which included chairing M.A. and Ph.D. admissions committees and the committee to evaluate doctoral student progress, organizing faculty and graduate student research colloquia, and conducting workshops for graduate students. The position came with other responsibilities, including serving as summer session dean, and serving on campus committees to represent the SJMC.

Member, ARPAC (Academic Review and Planning Advisory Committee), the standing campus committee responsible for program review of academic units, Spring 2009 – Fall 2011.

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Member, School of Information Task Force, a campus committee charged with exploring the development of a new School or College focused on the development and uses of information and communication technologies and applications, 2009 – 2010.

Chair, SJMC graduate curriculum strategic planning “cluster.” Developed plans for future curriculum revisions in the M.A. and Ph.D. programs, 2008 – 2009.

Member, SJMC ad hoc “Code of Conduct” committee, 2008 – 2009.

Head, SJMC Media Studies Sequence, 2007 – 2008.

Chair, SJMC ad hoc Committee on School Course Release Policies, 2007.

Member, Internal Review Committee for the Program Review of the Department of Comparative Literature, 2006.

Chair, SJMC Annual Faculty Evaluation Committee, 2003 – 2006.

Chair, SJMC Program Review Self-Study Committee, 2002 – 2003. Coordinated the production of all aspects of the report, wrote several major sections and appendices, and edited the entire document.

Member, SJMC Strategic Planning Committee, 2002 – 2003.

Member, SJMC doctoral Progress and Evaluation Committee, 1998 – 2005.

Director, Interdisciplinary Graduate Certificate Program in Media and Communication, 1995 – 2000.

Alliance for Technology, Learning, and Society (ATLAS) Steering Committee, 1997 – present.

48th Conference on World Affairs planning committee, and chair, Media and Communications subcommittee, 1995 – 1996.

SJMC Ph.D. Admissions Committee, 1995 – 1997; 2005, 2006).

SJMC Graduate Curriculum Committee, 1992, chair from 1993 – 2000.

SJMC Personnel Committee, 2000 – 2002.

SJMC Promotion and Tenure Committee, 2002 – 2004.

Chair, CU Law School Dean’s Advisory Committee on faculty re-appointment decision, 2002.

School of Journalism and Mass Communication’s “J2001 and Pre-JMC Committee” (ad hoc committee to revise introductory writing courses and prerequisites for qualification as an undergraduate major), 1994 – 1998.

CU Archives Advisory Board, 1994 – 1999.

Public lectures and symposia organized:

“The Content and Context of Digital Culture.” Organized and ran three symposia at the University of Colorado-Boulder in academic year 2011-2012 (Nov. 7-8, 2011; Feb. 27-28, 2012, and March 13-14, 2012). The events included panels and several speakers from CU and other U.S. and foreign universities.

Cees Hamelink, Professor of Communication, University of Amsterdam, 4/1/05 (Crosman Lecture).

Janet Wasko, Professor of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon, 3/6/03 (Crosman Lecture).

Kevin Robins, Professor of Media and Communications, Goldsmiths College, University of London:, 4/28/00 (funded by ATLAS and SJMC).

Douglas Kellner, Professor of Philosophy, University of Texas-Austin, 4/8/96.

David Flaherty, Professor of History and Law, University of Western Ontario, 4/27/93 (co-organized with the Sociology Department).

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Slavko Splichal, Professor and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, 4/1-2/93.

Hanno Hardt, Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Iowa, 2/12-15/93.

The Politics of Technology in the New Communications Order. Panel featuring four members of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), 2/11/93.

Lars Qvortrup, Associate Professor, University of Odense, Denmark, 4/17/92.

4.3. Other Research-related Outreach Activities

Media Access Project, Washington, DC (4/02). I wrote a 20-page report for the Media Access Project, a Washington, DC-based public interest advocacy organization. The report, titled “Comments on the Belo and Media General Studies, and an Analysis of the Diversity Question,” was filed by MAP with the Federal Communications Commission on April 17, 2002. It analyzes evidence and arguments that have been used by industry lobbyists to persuade the commission to eliminate its current prohibition on newspaper-broadcast co-ownership in the same local market. The report can be found at: http://www.mediaaccess.org/filings/calabreseFCCfiling.pdf. Following the filing of this report, I was invited by the Denver Rocky Mountain News to write an article on the subject: “If FCC Chairman Powell Has His Way, Independent Voices Will Be Further Curtailed,” Rocky Mountain News, 24 May: 22B. Reprinted in the Salt Lake Tribune, 31 May 2003.

RAI (Radiotelevisione Italiana). (11/97). Produced a subcontractor’s report titled Surrendering Standards: Contemporary Dilemmas in the Commercialization of News and Current Affairs Programming in the United States, for RAI’s “2nd United Nations World Television Forum.” Contractor was Kevin Robins, Center for Urban and Regional Development Standards, University of Newcastle (UK), in association with the European Broadcast Union. I have since then published a substantially revised version of the report as “Political space and the trade in television news” (2000 – see above under “Book Chapters”), and an updated version of it is being published in Blackwell’s A Companion to Television (in press – see above).

Budapest University of Economics, Budapest, Hungary (6/95). Produced report on curriculum development in communication studies in the United States, and consulted on possible direction in curriculum reform at BUE.

Louisville Cable Re-Franchising Commission, Louisville, Colorado (1/95-5/95). Served as commission member and consulted on the expansion of cable interconnection and access services and facilities.

Indiana Economic Development Council (IEDC), Indianapolis, Indiana (12/90). Did policy-relevant research on rural telecommunications development in Indiana.

Online Computer Library Center (OCLC), Inc., Dublin, Ohio (1/87). Conducted study of electronic document delivery among scholars.

WOSU/TV-AM-FM, Columbus, Ohio (6/86). Directed field research and data analysis of viewer and listener characteristics of the WOSU public station audiences.

Health Spectrum, Inc., Columbus, Ohio (6/83 – 12/83). Researched applications of telecommunications for home health care delivery.

5. PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR).

International Communication Association (ICA).

European Institute for Communication and Culture (EURICOM).

Union for Democratic Communications (UDC).