215,587 research outputs found
Academic Program Review
Department of Communication and Journalism Self Study Report for Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism, Self Study Report, Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism Self Study Report Academic Program Revie
Department of Media and Communication Graduate Employability Forum 2020
Recorded sessions from Swinburne's Department of Media and Communication Graduate Employability Forum 'Getting a Job in Covid Normal', 5 November 2020
APR
Department of Communication and Journalism Response to Reviewers' Report for Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism, Response to Reviewers' Report, Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism Response to Reviewers' Report Academic Program Revie
APR
Department of Communication and Journalism Action Plan for Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism, Action Plan, Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism Action Plan Academic Program Revie
The great tabu : a half century of population and family planning communication
"This project was supported by the Office of Population, U.S. Agency for International Development, AID/csd-1059."For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/The author discusses the tabus on contraceptive and sex-related communication that have been common throughout history up to the present. He traces the development of the birth control movement and shows how, in order to gain legitimacy, Margaret Sanger and other early leaders had to drop their stress on female, sexual, and social liberation and to "desexualize" family planning communications. As a result, the emphasis in birth control messages shifted from sexual consequences to social benefits, thereby making family planning acceptable to the medical profession and the eugenicists. Because Western ideology has dominated the international planned parenthood and population planning movement, current family planning communications, worldwide, reflect these Western attitudes toward sex and reproduction. The author discusses current problems in family planning communications including the quality of family planning communication personnel, the small percent of family planning budgets devoted to communications, the lack of good, useful communications research, the agro-communication bias that assumes the ideal communication strategy for family planning is interpersonal communication, and the myth that communicating family planning is more difficult than communicating new ideas in other sectors of development. The author concludes by speculating on the future of population communications
APR
Department of Communication and Journalism Reviewers' Report for Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism, Reviewers' Report, Academic Program ReviewDepartment of Communication and Journalism Reviewers' Report Academic Program Revie
COM 421T : Strategies Of Communication
Daystar University, School of Communication, Language and Performing Art
OrganiZational communication and organiSational communication: Binaries and the fragments of a field
In this paper, I employ personal narrative to help cast light on connections and tensions between organiZational communication research, as produced in the United States, and organiSational communication research, as produced in Aotearoa New Zealand. I address the issue by highlighting three sets of differences between these bodies of research: canonical, institutional and theoretical. I then unpack how these differences are apparent in my own university before sketching out three ways in which we might productively use such tensions to achieve radical engagement, and critique disciplinary others, identities, and locations
Rethinking Communication in Changing Global Contexts
Department of Communication and Journalism will be hosting a Summer Conference on contemporary critical/cultural Communication Studies (CCCS). The conference will also be the concluding part of a national graduate seminar, The Leading Edge of CCCS, that will be offered through the month of June
Conferences and meetings as a communication technique
"This project was supported by the Office of Population, U.S. Agency for International Development, AID/csd-1059."For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/The author examines the extent to which conferences and meetings have been involved in the development of the population/family planning field and particularly in the development of communication as a component of population/family planning programs. Significant international, regional and problem-oriented meetings that have taken place during the last decade are reviewed in terms of their purpose, subject matter, sponsorship, and impact on world awareness and national policies and programs. Topics covered include the roles of various agencies and organizations which organize and fund conferences related to population communication, conferences with and for the mass media, conferences and meetings as components of specific projects, and the development of meetings on the national level. A detailed case study of a conference is presented to show how conferences are planned, conducted and evaluated, and to identify desirable and undesirable aspects of conference management. The author concludes by taking an overall look at conferences and identifying their positive elements and their major shortcomings, by presenting guidelines for conference planners and managers, and by assessing trends and alternatives for population/family planning conferences in the future.1. Introduction -- 2. Conference Varieties and Purposes -- 3. Some Important Conference Examples -- 4. Use of Commercial Resources Conference: A Case Study -- 5. Some Guidelines for Better Conferences -- 6. A Look Ahea
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