Emerging Scholars Network
The aims of the Emerging Scholars Network are to bring young-at-heart scholars together, to create and maintain lines of communication with researchers internationally, to promote universal values of solidarity, peace, equality and respect, to work on new ideas for research and teaching and to create an umbrella for future projects that are related to the study and analysis of communication.
Co-chair: Sibo Chen (Ryerson University, Canada) [Contact]
Co-chair: Steph Hill (Ryerson University, Canada) [Contact]
See the list of all current members of the Emerging Scholars Network Section. For more information about a given member, go to https://iamcr.org/members-contact (accessible only to IAMCR members).
To join the Emerging Scholars Network, login to your account and select My Sections and Working Groups from the menu. A number of IAMCR sections and working groups send notices and other information exclusively to their members. IAMCR members can join up to three sections or working groups.
This Network brings young-at-heart scholars together, to create and maintain lines of communication with researchers internationally, to promote universal values of solidarity, peace, equality and respect, to work on new ideas for research and teaching and to create an umbrella for future projects that are related to the study and analysis of communication. At conferences it attracts a wide range of papers that are discussed in an environment aimed at providing mentoring and networks that scholars can continue to build upon in their careers.
Do you have 30 minutes to spare at IAMCR conferences? Could you respond to a handful of emails throughout the year?
This year's theme is “Communication and Citizenship: Rethinking Crisis and Change". We call for general academic papers in Communication and Media Studies as well as papers addressing communication,...
This year's theme is "Human Rights and Communication". We call for general academic papers in Communication and Media Studies as well as papers addressing the relationships between human rights and communication.