----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Jessica Coates <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, March 9, 2010 3:49:53 PM
Subject: [CCi] FW: [CC Asia-Pacific] Call for Papers (POSTGRAD ONLY): "Yes, 
We’re Open!": A Special Issue of Platform Journal

ccAustralia is guest editing a special issue of PLATFORM: Journal of Media and 
Communications and we're calling for papers. PLEASE NOTE to be eligible to 
submit, you must be a current graduate student (no more than 6 months after 
graduation) undertaking Masters, a PhD or international equivalent. PLATFORM is 
a biannual open-access online graduate journal published by the Media 
and Communications Program of the School of Culture and Communications at the 
University of Melbourne.

Through the special issue, ccAustralia and PLATFORM ask the question, ‘Is 
“open” the new black?’ The last few years has seen a huge increase in the 
uptake of CC licences. Hollywood, President Obama, Yoko Ono and even Coca-Cola 
have used the licences to help them manage content. But should we be open 24/7? 
When should we flip the sign around?

We're calling for papers right now on anything to do with being open; 
motivations for adopting open strategies, open business models, open access and 
government transparency, open educational resources, open formats and open 
standards. Abstracts are due 26 April 2010. Full papers are due 2 August 2010. 
Full submission information available 
at http://creativecommons.org.au/platform/callforpapers or below.

We look forward to your ideas/papers!
 -- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "CC Asia-Pacific" group. 
(http://groups.google.com/group/cc-asia-pacific/)
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/cc-asia-pacific?hl=en




_elliott 


project officer, ccAustralia



07 3138 9597
0405059367

[email protected]
http://creativecommons.org.au
http://cc.popcult.cc


            

A project of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Creative 
Industries and Innovation's Legal and Regulatory Impasses and Innovations 
research program in conjunction with the QUT Faculty of Law's Intellectual 
Property: Knowledge, Culture and Economy research program.

SPECIAL ISSUE (OCTOBER 2010)
YES, WE’RE OPEN!: WHY OPEN SOURCE, OPEN CONTENT AND OPEN ACCESS?

With Mozilla Firefox pushing towards a 25% share of the web browser market and 
the number of Creative Commons licensed works reaching more than 250 million in 
2009, perhaps it is time to ask, ‘Is “open” the new 
black?’ Hollywood, President Obama, Yoko Ono and even Coca-Cola are all 
experimenting with new approaches to copyright management and commercialisation 
designed to help, not hinder, digital sharing. The concept of "open" has 
embedded itself across sectors, industries and communities like an internet 
meme, which begs the question, ’Why open?’

The new commons are flourishing on digital networks, bringing together fields 
of academic thought, from computer science to economics, from sociology to law. 
As these models proliferate, communities, platforms and philosophies are 
emerging, but so are a number of issues. How successful are collaborative 
projects at including a diverse range of people and adapting and evolving to 
the changing media landscape? Are commercial models a mutually beneficial use 
of user-generated content and user-led innovation, or do they exploit their 
participants’ efforts for profit? Will this space hold true to Yochai 
Benkler’s The Wealth of Networks or is this just a digital rehash of the old 
problem of Garrett Hardin’s “The Tragedy of the Commons”?

And above all, should we be open 24/7? When should we flip the sign around?

In this special issue of PLATFORM: Journal of Media and Communication, guest 
edited by Jessica Coates and Elliott Bledsoe in collaboration with Creative 
Commons Australia, we encourage submissions by postgraduate students working in 
media studies or related fields which critically examine the legal, social and 
technical parameters of open source, open content and open access. Possible 
topics might include:


        * Can copyright build communities? 
        * Motivations for adopting open strategies; motivations for being 
involved in open projects 
        * Open business models; what models are out there? What’s working? 
What’s not? And what can we learn from them? 
        * Governmental and political trends towards transparency and how open 
access can improve the democratic process 
        * Open Education; Open Educational Resources and their impact on 
academies, classrooms and learning 
        * Open design; conceptualising, manufacturing and distributing products 
from open schematics 
        * Open formats and open standards 
        * Measuring the commons; metrics, analytics and tracking the impact of 
open initiatives
SUBMISSION DEADLINES:

26 April 2010: Abstracts/Proposals (500-800 words)
2 August 2010: Full Papers (6,000-8,000 words, including 200 word abstracts and 
six keywords)

Submissions to: [email protected]. Please include 'Platform Special 
Issue Submission' in the subject line.


      

<<inline: ccAustralia (for email) logo.png>>

<<inline: cci (for email) logo.png>>

<<inline: qut law (for email) logo.png>>

_______________________________________________
CCi mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/cci
-- 
لقد تلقيت هذه الرسالة لأنك مشترك في المجموعة "CC Arab World المشاع الإبداعي" من 
مجموعات Google.
للنشر في هذه المجموعة، أرسل بريدًا إلكترونيًا إلى [email protected]
لإلغاء اشتراكك في هذه المجموعة، أرسل رسالة إلكترونية إلى 
[email protected].
للحصول على مزيد من الخيارات، يمكنك الانتقال إلى هذه المجموعة على العنوان 
http://groups.google.com/group/cc-arab-world?hl=ar.

Reply via email to