Howard Giles, U of California - Santa Barbara, presented the keynote address, "Communicative Parameters of Elder Abuse at the conference on Elder Abuse in Context, Leyden Academy on Vitality and Aging, Rijnsburgerweg, The Netherlands, 30 March 2011.
Karen Myers, U of California - Santa Barbara, delivered the keynote address, "Organizational Membership: Vocational Socialization, Organizational Entry, and Assimilation" as part of the 53rd annual Harold J. Plous Award Lecture. The event was held on Friday, 1 April 2011 at the Mosher Alumni House on the UCSB campus.
The International Journal of Communication (IJoC) is pleased to announce the publication of a Special Section, "Network Multidimensionality in the Digital Age," coedited by Manuel Castells, Peter Monge, and Noshir Contractor. Human communication networks, like those typically found in the network society, are highly complex and relationally rich in that they often connect different types of objects with multiple types of relations. This special section presents seven articles that explore the implications of this network multidimensionality. The articles cover a broad array of issues including network sociomateriality, network power, network exclusion, the semantic web, network fuzziness, and network spheres. The theoretical implications of network multidimensionality are explored and a number of relevant social examples are examined including the degrees of freedom in WikiLeaks networks, the kinds of power in societal networks, and the network changes that occur when technologies and other sociomaterial objects are brought inside the network. The keynote article by Bruno Latour argues that network multidimensionality eradicates the long-standing theoretical distinction between individual and society. Collectively, these papers provide a rich compendium of ideas and arguments on the theoretical and practical implications of network multidimensionality. Read this new Special Section published 11 April 2011 at http://ijoc.org.