New journal: JOMEC: coming soon.

JOMEC Journal

Introduction

JOMEC is an online peer reviewed journal dedicated to publishing the highest quality innovative academic work in Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies. It welcomes work that is located in any one of these disciplines, as well as interdisciplinary work that approaches Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies as overlapping and interlocking fields. JOMEC is particularly interested in work that addresses the political and ethical dimensions, stakes, problematics and possibilities of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies.

As well as publishing regular themed and open issues, JOMEC also aims, from time to time, to intervene quickly into selected political discourses and debates, by publishing ‘rapid responses’ to political issues: responses that are always rigorously scholarly but that may be politically partisan, punchy and polemical, and that are not slowed down by a cumbersome publishing apparatus or timeline.

JOMEC is a peer reviewed online open access academic journal run by an editorial collective based in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University. It is peer reviewed with an international Editorial Board and Advisory Panel.

Publication Schedule and Submissions

The first issues of JOMEC are scheduled for publication in 2012. To discuss publication, or to submit a paper, please contact Paul Bowman: BowmanP@cf.ac.uk

JOMEC Editors

Paul Bowman (Cardiff University, UK)

Iñaki Garcia-Blanco (Cardiff University, UK)

Kerry Moore (Cardiff University, UK)

Verica Rupar (Cardiff University, UK)

Karin Wahl-Jorgensen (Cardiff University, UK)

Andrew Williams (Cardiff University, UK)

Editorial Board

Christopher Anderson (City University of New York, USA)

Emma Bell (Universite de Savoie, Chambery, France)

Anita Biressi (Roehampton University, UK)

Marcel Broesrma (Groningen University, Netherlands)

Patrizia Calefato (Bari University, Italy)

Matthew Carlson (University of Saint Louis, USA)

Samuel Chambers (Johns Hopkins University, USA)

Jeremy Gilbert (University of East London, UK)

Zahera Harb (Nottingham University, UK)

Michael Higgins (Strathclyde University, UK)

Peter Lee-Wright (Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK)

Seth Lewis (Minnesota University, USA)

Donald Matheson (Canterbury University, New Zealand)

Henrik Ornebring (Oxford University, UK)

John Richardson (Newcastle University, UK)

Richard Stamp (Bath Spa University, UK)

Yan Wu (Swansea University, UK)

Advisory Panel

Benjamin Arditi (UNAM, Mexico)

Stuart Allan (Bournemouth, UK)

Lilie Chouliaraki (London School of Economics, UK)

Rey Chow (Duke University, USA)

John Corner (Leeds University, UK)

Nick Couldry (Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK)

Mark Deuze (Indiana University, USA)

Natalie Fenton (Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK)

Ted Glasser (Stanford University, USA)

Lawrence Grossberg (University of North Carolina, USA)

Gary Hall (Coventry University, UK)

Philip Hammond (London South Bank University, UK)

Douglas Kellner (University of California at Los Angeles, USA)

Oliver Marchart (University of Lucerne, Switzerland)

Robert McChesney (University of Illinois, USA)

Brian McNair (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)

Toby Miller (University of California Riverside, USA)

Meaghan Morris (Sydney University, Australia & Lingnan University, Hong Kong, China)

John Mowitt (Minnesota University, USA)

Heather Nunn (Roehampton University, UK)

John Storey (Sunderland University, UK)

John Street (University of East Anglia, UK)

Terry Threadgold (Cardiff University, UK)

Liesbet Van Zoonen (Loughborough University, UK)

Barbie Zelizer (University of Pennsylvania, USA)

Contact

Dr Paul Bowman: BowmanP@cf.ac.uk

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