International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics 6.1: Special issue - EU Kids Online

The new special issue of the International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics on EU
Kids Online has just come out. More information can be found below. Apologies for
cross-posting.

Special issue: EU Kids Online
International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics, 6.1 (Intellect Books)
Guest editors: Liza Tsaliki and Leslie Haddon

As new media are rapidly becoming embedded in everyday life across Europe and elsewhere,
there are pressing questions regarding access and inequalities, the nature and quality
of use, the implications for children’s social and educational development and the
balance between online opportunities and risks for children and their families.
The project ‘EU Kids Online’, a 21-country study funded by the European Commission’s
Safer Internet Plus Programme, has pulled together and analysed European research on
children’s experiences of the Internet, aiming to address the wider challenge of how,
systematically, to manage cross-national comparisons. Although the project covers the
various Internet experiences of children and youth more generally, given the wider
policy discussions there is also a particular interest in the risks (and opportunities)
of the online environment. This Special Issue of the International Journal of Media and
Cultural Politics presents five original research articles drawn from the activities of
the network.

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CONTENTS
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=1780/

* Commonalities and differences: How to learn from international comparisons of
children's online behaviour (Uwe Hasebrink, Kjartan Olafsson, Vaclav Stetka)

*  Comparing media coverage of online risks for children in southern European countries:
Italy, Portugal and Spain (Giovanna Mascheroni, Cristina Ponte,  Maialen Garmendia,
Carmelo Garitaonandia, Maria Francesca Murru)

* Opportunities of Web 2.0: Potentials of learning (Ingrid Paus-Hasebrink, Christine W
Wijnen, Tanja Jadin)

* Protection and access: To regulate young people's internet use (Thomas Wold)

* Disclosure of personal and contact information by young people in social networking
sites: An analysis using Facebook™ profiles as an example (Tatjana Taraszow, Elena
Aristodemou, Georgina Shitta, Yiannis Laouris, Aysu Arsoy)

* Pornographication: A discourse for all seasons (Clarissa Smith)

* Sending a Message: Violence as political communication (Andrew Calabrese)

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ABOUT THE JOURNAL

The International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics (MCP) is committed to analyzing
the politics of communication(s) and cultural processes. It addresses cultural politics
in their local, international and global dimensions, recognizing equally the importance
of issues defined by their specific cultural geography and those which traverse cultures
and nations. MCP promotes critical, in-depth, engaged research on the intersections of
sociology, politics, cultural studies and media studies and invites sharp, contemporary,
stimulating analyses of issues of live concern for a broad range of cultures and nations
and for the international community.
Edited by Katharine Sarikakis and Neil Blain.
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