2006 ANZCA conference program Adelaide 4-7 July
ANZCA 2006 CONFERENCE PROGRAM 4-7JULY, NAPIER BUILDING, NORTH TERRACE CAMPUS UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE SOUTH AUSTRALIATIME / TUESDAY 4TH JULY 2006 PRE-CONFERENCE DAY
1.30-5.30pm / MEDIA ETHICS FORUM NAPIER LG 15
3PM
/ ANZCA REGISTRATION OPENS - FOYER OF NAPIER BUILDING, NORTH TERRACECAMPUS OF UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
5.30PM
/JOINT WELCOME COCKTAIL MEDIA ETHICS AND ANZCA DELEGATES FOYER OF NAPIER 102 UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE, NORTH TCE CAMPUS
7.00PM /EXECUTIVE MEETING AT CAFÉ BUONGIORNO RUNDLE STREET
WEDNESDAY 5TH JULY 2006 DAY ONE8.30-9.30 / INDIGENOUS WELCOME CEREMONY BY PROFESSOR ROGER THOMAS
WELCOMING OF DELEGATES TO THE UNIVERSITY BY PROFESSOR MICHAEL INNES (EXECUTIVE DEAN OF FACULTY OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES)
WELCOMING OF DELEGATES TO SOUTH AUSTRALIA AND OPENING OF CONFERENCE ON BEHALF OF THE PREMIER BY LINDSAY SIMMONS MP
ANZCA PRESIDENT’S SPEECH DR COLLEEN MILLS NAPIER 102
9.30 10.30 /
INTRO BY PROFESSOR MIKE INNES
PLENARY KEYNOTE SPEAKER PROF. TOM O’REGAN NAPIER 102
10.30-11 / BREAK- MORNING TEA FOYERTime / NAPIER LG23
STREAM A / SPEAKER/PAPER / NAPIER LG24
STREAM B / SPEAKERS/PAPERS / NAPIER G03
STREAM C / SPEAKERS/PAPERS
11.00-11.30 / CHAIR - MARY GRIFFITHS / CHAIR KERRY GREEN /
CHAIR JOY CHIA
CommunicationTechnologies
/ Email as an affective technology:Susan Yell
/ Activists, MediaCommunication / Sky Channel and the battle for Australians’ hearts and minds: the ACTU’s use of media in the ‘Your Rights at Work’ campaign
Kathy Muir
/ Public Relations / Empowering publics: the potential and challenge for public relations practitioners in creative approaches to two way symmetric public relationsAnne Lane
11.30-12.00 / CommunicationTechnologies /
Are We There Yet? - Going Digital in 2008 and the Adoption and Diffusion of Digital TV in Australia since January 1, 2001
Niranjala (Nina) Weerakkody
/ Activists, MediaCommunication / Islamic Communities and Media Activism in Australia
Mark Balnaves
/ Public Relations / Challenges for public relations: working in an international frameworkAnne Surma and Kate Fitch
12 00-12.30 / Communication technologies / The paradox of connection: what pulls the plug on household ICTs?Jocelyn Williams
/ Activists, media an communication / News on the net: a critical analysis of the potential of online alternative journalism to challenge the dominance of mainstream news mediaPatricia (Trish) Bolton
/ Public Relations / Great Expectations: Understanding undergraduate students’ perspectives on public relations careersRobina Xavier
12.30-1.15 /LUNCH
1.15-1.45 / CHAIR MARY GRIFFITHS / CHAIR SAL HUMPHREYS / CHAIR TERRY FLEWCommunication and civil society / Civil Society, Empowered or Overpowered? The Role of the Mass Media in ‘Promoting Democracy’ Worldwide
Michael Barker
/ Old and new media / Crosscutting Revisited:The Impact of Historical Research into Early Cinema on a Key Element of Classical Narrative CinemaGauthier Phillipe
/ Indigenous media and communication / Situated communication: Identity and rhetoric in the Kumeyaay Web presenceConstance Kampf
1.45-2.15 / Communication and civil society / Young, Fast and Dead: marketing communication solutions to change P-Plate driver behaviourAmanda Burell
/ Old and New media / Dreams of Excess and Mobility: The Media Worlds of New Zealand ChildrenGeoff Lealand
/ Indigenous media and communication / The Tracker: Road Film ExtraordinaireSusan Barber
2.15-2.45 / Communication and Civil Society / Problems In 'Political' Documentary: Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11Dugald Williamson
/ Old and New Media / Beyond broadcasting: facing the future of australian content in the digital audiovisual environment?Jason Bosland
/ Indigenous media and communication /Nui and Rau – Telling Indigenous Stories
Tina Engels-Schwarzpaul
2.45 3.15 / COFFEE BREAK3.15-3.45 / CHAIR DONALD ALEXANDER
/ CHAIR IAN RICHARDS / CHAIR ANNE DUNN
Organisational communication / Towards a new construct for communication during organizational change
James Mahoney
/ Ethics of media and communication /Immoral interest: The journalist’s right to say “No” to the public’s right to know
Jolyon Sykes
/ Cross Cultural Communication / Contrasting definitions of self of migrants and stayersAli Green and Mary Powers
3.45-4.15 / Organisational communication / Perceptions Of Business Students Towards Skills And Attributes For Industry: How Important Is Communication?David Waller
/ Ethics of media and communication /The ethics of media relations: James Hardie - a lesson for all Practitioners
*Nicole Bridges, Gwyneth Howell, Rohan Miller
/ Cross Cultural Communication / Change in the tactics of persuasion? --- A critical discourse analysis of the Australian and Chinese newspapers coverage of Beijing’s two bids for the right to stage the Olympic GamesLei Gong
4.15-4.45 / Organisational communication / The Australian Style of Advertising: A comparison research study with the USA and EuropeMatthew Byrne
/ Ethics of media and communication /Producing news: negotiating defamation law in Australia and the US Tim Marjoribanks
/ Cross Cultural Communication / Media, Market and MigrationMohammed Musa
4.45-5.15 / Organisational communication /The Management of Diversity in the Northern Ireland Workplace: A Qualitative Study
Owen Hargie and David Dickson / Ethics of media and communication /Communicating Corporate Social Responsibility via the Internet: Examining the cultural bounds of representation through Walmart and Maersk Constance Kampf
5.15-6.30 / TASTE OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA WITH AFRICAN MUSICAL PERFORMANCE6.30-Late / PG DINNER AND PRESIDENTS DINNER
Time /
Stream D
NAPIER LG15
/ WEDNESDAY 5TH JULY 2006 DAY ONE CONTINUES11.00-11.30 /
CHAIR KATHYRN BOWD
Political communication / Emotional Framing in Australian Journalism Paul Corcoran11.30-12.00 / Political communication / Canberra’s Community Update: A model for disaster recovery communication Jolyon Sykes
12.00-12.30 / Political communication / UKI an understanding communication in advertising: A lost art in the age of globalisation Matthew Byrne
12.30-1.15 /
LUNCH
1.15-1.45 /CHAIR JOY CHIA LG 15
Public Relations / Stamping their ground: A study of public opinion and stakeholder relationships at Taronga Zoo Gina Courtney1.45-2.15 / Public Relations / Public Affairs as a chain of command function Zoë Hibbert & Brig. Mike Hannan
2.15-2.45 / Public Relations / Rhetorical theory and public relations Steve Mackey
2.45 3.15 / COFFEE BREAK
3.15-3.45 /
CHAIR DONALD MATHESON LG 15
Public Relations / Agents of conscience, control and/or compliance? Roles of communication practitioners in organizational value-setting Marianne Sison3.45-4.15 / Public Relations / Increasing transparency: Utilising criterion-referenced assessment to enhance student learning in public relations Robina Xavier, Amisha Patel
4.15-4.45 / Journalistic Communication / ‘Not elsewhere classified’: popular news and the struggle for recognition Stephen Harrington
4.45-5.15 / Journalistic Communication / THE PANTOMIME PUBLIC SPHERE : New Zealand broadcasting news 1923-1962 David Shellock
5.15-6.30 / TASTE OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA WITH AFRICAN MUSICAL PERFORMANCE URAS
6.30-Late / PG AND PRESIDENT’S DINNER
DAY TWO THURSDAY 6TH JULY 2006
8.30 9.45 / PLENARY KEYNOTE SPEAKER ASSOCIATE PROF. ANDREW KENYON NAPIER 102
INTRO BY CHIKA ANYANWU
Time / NAPIER LG23
STREAM A / SPEAKER/PAPER / NAPIER LG24
STREAM B / SPEAKERS/PAPERS / NAPIER G03
STREAM C / SPEAKERS/PAPERS
9.45-10.15 /
CHAIR MUSA MOHAMMED
/CHAIR RUTH ZANKER
/CHAIR CAROLINE HATCHER
Communication and Globalisation / Rights culture: content creators, cultural industries and the digital domainSimone Murray
/ Gender, media and communication /Gender in dialogue - but with whom, how, and where are the words to describe the “zigging and zagging between alternatives” Jilian Clare
/ Journalistic communication / Examining the changing face of television current affairs programmes in New Zealand from a 'political economy' perspectiveSarah Baker
10.15-10.45 / Communication and Globalisation / Communication and Control in the Globalising Organisation: A Research AgendaNeville Meyers
/ Gender in media and communication / Creative disabilities and vulnerable bodies in women in the bush.Susan Barber
/ Journalistic communication / Leadership and abuse: News framingof the Iraqi war and terrorism during the 2004 federal election
Kerry McCallum
10.45-11.15 / Communication and Globalisation / Supersize me: accounting for advertising in the public discourse on obesityJohn Sinclair* & Rowan Wilken / Gender in media and communication /
Challenging the Medium ? New Cognitions of Female Mobile Communication Technology
Stephanie Broege
/ Organisational Communication /Advocating communicator confidence: Empowering law students to be water walkers Patsy McCarthy
11.15-11.45 /COFFEE BREAK
11.45-1.15 / CHAIR – JOHN O’SULLIVAN / CHAIR - DONALD MATHESON / CHAIR - JOANNE JACOBS/ GERARD GOGGIN
WORKSHOP LG 15
/ Fixing a Heritage: inscribing Middle Earth onto New ZealandStan Jones
/ Screen and visual communication NAPIER LG 23 / Nuclearity in the News Story - The Genesis of Image Nuclear News StoriesHelen Caple
/ Communication technologiesNAPIER LG 24 / Colour my world. The consumption junction meets da digital lifestyle
Scott Rickard
WORKSHOP LG 15
/A Communication plan in less than three hours - I'd like to see that! Lawrie Kirk
/ Screen and visual communication NAPIER LG23 /The Paradox of 'Coming of Age': Deconstructing Youth Identity in Lolita and Thirteen Fleur Gabriel
/ Communication technologiesNAPIER LG24 / Gender Differences in Style and Usage of SMS as discussed in an On-line Chat Forum
Power and Horstmanshof
Screen and visual communication NAPIER LG 23 /What illustrations of sign language reveal about the design of process diagrams
Marilyn Mitchell
/ Communication technologiesNAPIER LG24 / Isolating the iPod: Institutionalised Individualisation and the Openness of Networked Technology
Michael Dieter
1.15-2.00 /LUNCH
2.00-3.00 /PLENARY SESSION KEYNOTE SPEAKER PROFESSOR JIM BARKER NAPIER 102
INTRO BY DEBORAH CHURCHMAN3.00-3.30 /
CHAIR MARK BALNAVES
/CHAIR STEVE MACKEY
/CHAIR GEOFF LEALAND
Old media versus new mediaNapier G03 / Mobile Television: Technology and Cultural Form
Gerard Goggin
/ Political communication Napier LG 23 /Disaster Memorials as Government Communication
Susan Nicholls
/ Online and internet communicationNapier LG 24 /
Encouraging collaboration: Using ICTs to effectively facilitate business collaboration Joanne Jacobs
3.30-4.00 / AFTERNOON TEA WITHOWEN HARGIE’S BOOK LAUNCH AND COFFEE BREAK
4.00-5.30 / ANNUAL AGM NAPIER 102
7.00-Late / CONFERENCE DINNER AT THE ITALIAN CLUB 262 CARRINGTON STREET ADELAIDE BETWEEN HUTT AND PULTNEY STREET
DAY TWO THURSDAY 6TH JULY 2006 CONTINUES Stream D
9.45-10.15 / CHAIR IAN RICHARDS LG 15
Journalistic communication /
John Howard the great communicator: No Really! Peter van Onselen
10.15-10.45 / Journalistic communication / Communication trends to non-profits Elizabeth Buchanan and Edwina Luck10.45-11.15 / Journalistic communication /
Motion will be denied: the liberal media’s coverage of the ‘Chicago 8’ trial Nick Sharman
11.15-11.45 / COFFEE BREAK11.45-12.15 / CHAIR CAROLINE HATCHER NAPIER G03
Organisational communication / Consequences for organisational leaders resulting from communication failure: An Australian case study
Donald Alexander
12.15-12.45 /
Organisational communication
/ Virtual communities of practice: A study of communication, community and organisational learningJo Hanisch and Deborah Churchman*
12.45-1.15 / Organisational communication / Organising Women? Work/Life Balance, Senior Executive Women, Gender Equity and Social Change. Margaret Peters
1.15-2.00 /
LUNCH
2.00-3.00 /PLENARY SESSION KEYNOTE SPEAKER PROFESSOR JIM BARKER NAPIER 102
INTRO BY DEBORAH CHURCHMAN3.00-3.30 / STREAM D NAPIER LG15 -CHAIR SUE YELL
Political communication / From Despotism to Democracy: Reporting Iraq’s December 2005 election in the Australian and Middle Eastern print media Ben Isakhan
3.30-4.00 / COFFEE BREAK AND
OWEN HARGIE’S BOOK LAUNCH BY COLLEEN MILLS
4.00-5.30 / ANNUAL AGM NAPIER 1027.00-Late / CONFERENCE DINNER AT THE ITALIAN CLUB 262 CARRINGTON STREET ADELAIDE BETWEEN HUTT AND PULTNEY STREET
DAY THREE FRIDAY 7TH JULY 2006
8.30-9.45 / PLENARY SESSION KEYNOTE SPEAKER PROF. MARSHA KINDER NAPIER 102
INTRO BY KAREN ORR VAREED
Time / STREAM A
NAPIER LG23 / SPEAKER/PAPER / STREAM B NAPIER 102 / SPEAKERS/PAPERS / STREAM C NAPIER G03 / SPEAKERS/PAPERS
9.45-10.15 / CHAIR – JOY CHIA / CHAIR NINA WEERAKKODY / CHAIR KERRY GREEN
Organisational communication /
Competition and cooperation: Organisational communication within the Australian Football League Tim Marjoribanks
/ Media and Gender / Comparing conflict styles in relationshipsPower and Jang
/ Journalistic Communication /Contesting the Middle Ground: The Regulation of Objectivity in ABC Journalism
David Nolan
10.15-10.45 / Organisational communication / Managing Corporate Identities in a Changing Environment: A Case Study of a Public Sector Shared Services ProviderJai Kim and Caroline Hatcher
/ Media and Gender / Creative disabilities and vulnerable bodies in women in the bush.Susan Barber
/ Journalistic Communication / Did ‘Media Wars’ change anything? An analysis of Australian journalism research and publications, 1995-2006Terry Flew and Jason Sternberg
10.45-11.15 / Organisational communication / More than just talk: Taking advantage of change communicationColleen Mills
/ Media and Gender /Gender in dialogue - but with whom, how, and where are the words to describe the “zigging and zagging between alternatives” Jillian Clare
/ Journalistic Communication /Telework as National Strategy: A Status Report for Communication Professionals Neville Meyers
11.15-11.45 /COFFEE BREAK
11.45-12.15 /CHAIR MARY POWER
/CHAIR SUE YELL
/CHAIR TERRY FLEW
Communication and development / The Social and Cultural Integrative Role of Asian Media Productions in the New Millennium: Pan-Asian and International Co-productionsTania Lim
/ Communication and civil society / The Impact of Digital Personae on Privacy: positive and negative rights in the case of kids at riskMark Balnaves
/ Old media versus new media / Creative virtuality: Online technology and the Dutch journalistic fieldBronwyn Cran
12.15-12.45 / Communication and development / Media And National Transformation In The Philippines: Paradigms And Praxis
Eduardo Zafra
/ Communication and civil society / The Television New Zealand Charter: Rethinking Deregulated BroadcastingAlan Cocker
/ Old media versus new media / Media literacy for citizen/consumers: a website case studyRuth Zanker
12.45-1.15 / Communication and development /When access radio meets the digital divide: community and access radio stations’ use of the Internet in Aotearoa New Zealand
Donald Matheson / Communication and civil society / Tackling the abuse of football officialsPeter Simmons
/ Old media versus new media / Radio, sound and the Web: Developing a new medium-specific practiceAnne Dunn
1.15-2.00 /
LUNCH
2.00-3.00 / PLENARY SESSION KEYNOTE SPEAKER PROF. ANNA EVERETT NAPIER 102INTRO BY CHIKA ANYANWU
3.00-
4.30 / Creative Industries Panel NAPIER 102
CHAIR MARY GRIFFITHS / Creativity and Innovation across the Tasman: The Creative Industries Agenda
Terry Flew, Julia de Roeper Susan Luckman, Peter Higgs, Matthew Sorell, Ruth Zanker, Geoff Lealand, Barry Burgan, Peter Thurmer Peter, Leigh Sutton, Peter Ramsey, Chika Anyanwu, Michael Innes, Donald Matheson, Ann Clancy
4.30-6.00 / AWARDS AND CLOSING CEREMONY
/
DAY THREE FRIDAY 7TH JULY 2006 CONTINUES STREAM D LG 15
8.30-9.45 / PLENARY SESSION KEYNOTE SPEAKER PROF. MARSHA KINDER NAPIER 102
INTRO BY KAREN ORR VAREED
Time / THEME / SPEAKER/PAPER
11.15-11.45 /
COFFEE BREAK