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Call for Papers

Theme: Enhancing Global Community, Resilience and Sustainability 
Through Intercultural Communication
Type: 20th International Conference on Cross-Cultural Communication
Institution: International Association for Intercultural
Communication Studies (IAICS)
   Harrington School of Communication and Media, University of Rhode
Island
Location: Kingston, RI (USA)
Date: 31.7.–4.8.2014
Deadline: 1.2.2014

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The International Association for Intercultural Communication Studies
(IAICS) is soliciting submissions for the 20th International
Conference on Cross-Cultural Communication to be held at the
University of Rhode Island, USA, July 31-August 4, 2014.

People around the world are interconnected, interdependent and
mobile. Scholars and practitioners are more aware of the necessity to
develop strong intercultural relations, based on mutual understanding
in the context of intercultural interaction. Intercultural
Communication has become a dominant paradigm connecting a range of
disciplines. Globalization and increased diversity heighten the risk
of communication failures and misunderstandings due to ethnocentrism,
prejudice, sexism and environmental, social, and technological
issues. They include Climate Change; Pollution and Resource
Depletion; Global Food and Water Supply; Impact of Information
Technology and Social Media; Political Oppression, Conflict and War;
Poverty; Societal Security and Personal Safety.

Global communication plays a key role in solving these problems.
Increasingly we must learn to rely on each other, build resilience,
resolve conflicts peacefully, and strive for social equity by
enhancing intercultural communication.

The conference theme focuses on aspects of interpersonal, inter-group
and international communication. We must address both theoretical and
empirical studies, as well as develop new conceptual and
methodological approaches to affirm the centrality of the discipline.
Collaborative research needs to stress communication and embrace
synergies by joining efforts with other disciplines, including
environmental and health sciences, business, engineering and
information systems.

Conference Goals

- provide scholars, educators and practitioners from different
  cultural communities with opportunities to interact, network and
  benefit from each other’s research and expertise related to
  intercultural communication issues;
- synthesize research perspectives and foster interdisciplinary
  scholarly dialogue for developing integrated approaches to complex
  problems of communication across cultures;
- advance the methodology for intercultural communication research
  and disseminate practical findings to facilitate understanding
  across cultures;
- foster the importance of global cultural awareness and involve
  educators, business professionals, students and other stakeholders
  worldwide in the discourse about diversity and intercultural
  communication issues.

Themes

Topic areas are broadly defined as, but not limited to, the following:

- Advertising and marketing
- Business communication
- Climate change and pollution
- Conflict, mediation and negotiation
- Corporate culture and management
- Communication failures
- Communication pedagogy
- Crisis/risk communication
- Critical cultural awareness
- Cross-cultural adaptation
- Cultural identity
- Culture and diplomacy
- Diversity of languages and cultures
- Ethnocentrism and stereotypes
- Environmental communication
- Ethnic studies
- Gender issues
- Global community
- Global food and water supply
- Group/Organizational communication
- Health communication
- Immigration and mobility
- Intercultural communication competence
- Intercultural communication in global context
- Intercultural communication and politics
- Intercultural conflict
- Intercultural education practices
- Intercultural interaction in science
- International journalism
- Interpersonal communication and relations
- Linguistics and intercultural communication
- Localization and globalization
- Media and social research
- Multiple cultures and interculturality
- New media and visual communication
- Philosophy and human behavior patterns
- Poverty
- Power in intercultural communication
- Psychological communication studies
- Public opinions and public policy
- Public relations
- Racial discrimination and ethnic relations
- Resource depletion
- Religion/spiritual communication
- Resilience among cultures
- Rhetorical communication
- Social equity
- Stereotypes and stereotyping
- Sustainability and globalization
- Translation studies
- Understanding across cultures
- Verbal and nonverbal communication

Guidelines for Submissions

Categories: Abstract, panel proposals, and workshop proposals may be 
accepted.

- Abstract, 150-250 words in English, including positions,
  affiliations, email addresses and mailing addresses for all authors.
- Panel proposals reflecting the conference theme may be
  submitted. All panel proposals should provide a 100-word rationale
  and a 100-200 word abstract of each panelist's paper; include
  affiliation and email addresses for each panelist.
- Workshop proposals relevant to the conference theme may be 
  submitted. Proposals should be 3-5 pages in length, single spaced.

Deadline: Please submit abstracts and complete panel proposals by 
February 1, 2014. All submissions will be peer-reviewed.

Submission to: [email protected]

Conference language: English


Contact:

Prof. Guo-Ming Chen, IAICS Executive Director
Department of Communication Studies
University of Rhode Island
10 Lippitt Road, Room 310, Davis Hall
Kingston, RI 02881
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.uri.edu/iaics/




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