Slow journalism. State of the art and future prospects

Italiano
International conference.
 
In occasione della presenza a Roma di Peter Laufer, James Wallace Chair Professor in Journalism at the School of Journalism and Communication e autore di Slow News: A Manifesto for the Critical News Consumer (2014), il Dipartimento di Comunicazione e Ricerca Sociale promuove, in collaborazione con la rivista “Problemi dell’Informazione”, un convegno sullo stato dell’arte e le prospettive future del movimento “slow journalism”.
 
L’appuntamento è per venerdì 17 dicembre 2021, dalle ore 9.00 alle ore 12.30 presso l’aula P2, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, in diretta Zoom (ID riunione 812 9436 0390; Passcode 408044).
 
Il primo panel sarà dedicato alla domanda di informazione che viene dalle giovani generazioni, e a come la logica “slow” può inserirsi in questa importante fetta di mercato. Intervengono Nico Drok e Liesbeth Hermans, Windesheim University of Applied Sciences, Alessio Cornia, School of Communications, Dublin City University, Matthew Lee, associate editor e a co-fondatore di “Delayed Gratification”.
Il secondo panel sarà invece dedicato allo spazio che il giornalismo “slow” può avere nel mainstream, anche in termini di contaminazione reciproca con le logiche sempre più “fast” che lo contraddistinguono. Intervengono Helen Boaden, ex Direttrice di BBC News, Susan Greenberg, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Roehampton, Terry Phillips, ex corrispondente CBS News.
L’incontro si terrà in inglese.
 
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On the occasion of the presence in Rome of Peter Laufer, James Wallace Chair Professor in Journalism at the School of Journalism and Communication and author of Slow News: A Manifesto for the Critical News Consumer (2014), the Department of Communication and Social Research is promoting, in collaboration with the journal “Problemi dell'Informazione”, a conference on the state of the art and future prospects of the “slow journalism” movement.
 
The appointment is for Friday 17 December 2021, from 8.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. at Aula Blu1, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, and via Zoom (Meeting ID 812 9436 0390; Passcode 408044).
 
The first panel will be dedicated to the space that “slow” journalism can have in the mainstream, also in terms of mutual contamination with the increasingly “fast” logics that distinguish it. Speakers: Helen Boaden, former Director of BBC News, Susan Greenberg, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Roehampton, Terry Phillips, former correspondent for CBS News.
 
The second panel will be devoted to the demand for information from the younger generations, and how the “slow” logic can fit into this important market segment. Speakers: Nico Drok and Liesbeth Hermans, Windesheim University of Applied Sciences, Alessio Cornia, School of Communications, Dublin City University, Matthew Lee, associate editor and a co-founder of Delayed Gratification.
 
The meeting will be held in English.

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