Volume 38, Number 3: April 2010
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President's Message: Culture Clash

Barbie ZelizerIn mid March, the Chinese Information Office of the State Council released a report titled Full Text of Human Rights Record of the United States in 2009. Comprising nearly 10 pages of human rights violations in the United States, the report chronicled a panoply of incidents culled from the U.S. news media. They included violent crimes against property; racial discrimination; violations of civil and political rights (censorship, increased surveillance, detention and deportation); violations of economic, social, and cultural rights (homelessness, poverty, and unemployment); gender-based violations; and violations of human rights in other nations.

Criticizing the US for "posing as the world judge of human rights" and released through the Chinese news agency XINCHA the day after the U.S. State Department released its own report on international human rights violations, the report called the Americans on the hypocrisy of their own terms and criticized them for turning a blind eye to the violations in their own country.

Though the report was a somewhat crude public relations stunt and the details of the U.S. violations had been widely and readily recounted in the U.S. news media, the report's release nonetheless deserves consideration. It underscores the relativity of the claims we make about others and is particularly useful to those of us in ICA because it calls our attention to how universal claims can easily lose validity when confronted with on-the-ground conditions. Even in an area like human rights violations, where most would readily argue for maintaining the dignity of human life across national boundaries and geographic regions, shared assumptions about how life should be lived face bumps in the road when we embark on far-flung journeys. Those bumps should redirect our attention to the complexities of how issues unfold in practice.

This raises the difficult but open question of which criteria can generate agreement. While this is a goal we can and should fruitfully try to explore, in the meantime we might take note of these thoughts as we move into writing the final versions of our papers and presentations for Singapore. Though multiple issues - freedom of expression, attitudes toward GLBT individuals, the effects of so-called "soft authoritarianism" - drove our discussions as we contemplated the viability of holding a conference in Singapore, it is worth remembering that the calls to bypass Singapore as a conference site were also accompanied by sentiments from our own members that were not far from those expressed by the Chinese Information Office: Who among us is so free of violation as to censure others?

This is a roundabout way of saying that we can all do well to maintain respect for multiple ways of life as we travel to Singapore. To accept various social and cultural mores on their own terms, regardless of how we might feel about those terms, is a straightforward response to the limitations of universal claims. This is not a call to censor, silence or otherwise alter what ICA members feel needs to be said, regardless of whether or not they say it on Singaporean soil. But it is a call to recognize the futility of insisting on universal rules for everyone and a request to attempt to understand the complexity and multilayered nature of local conditions wherever and whatever they may be.

Register NOW for the 2010 ICA Conference in Singapore!

"Matters of Communication:
Political, Cultural, & Technological Challenges"

22-26 June 2010
Suntec Singapore Convention Centre

REGISTER NOW:
http://www.icahdq.org/conferences/2010/confreg.asp



SingaporeBUZZ

In 2010, ICA is plugged in with the latest social media trends to keep you connected before, during, and after conference.

Tweets and Texts?
Access important conference updates and last minute changes during the conference by checking out ICA's Tweets on Twitter. Or, sign up to have text messages sent directly to you during conference by emailing your name and mobile phone number to conference@icahdq.org.

See Singapore Differently
Share your experience and photography skills by uploading conference pictures on our photo docking station at the convention centre. Your photos could be displayed on ICA’s website and other promotional materials.

Connect with Fellow Conference Goers
ICA is now on Facebook and Linked In—search for ICA, join our group, and use the forums to meet other attendees, swap travel plans, or find a roommate.

Got a blog?
If you do, and you're writing about conference, let us know! Your blog could be featured on ICA's website. Send information about your blog to conference@icahdq.org.



INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION 2009 - 201

Executive Committee
Barbie Zelizer, President, U of Pennsylvania
Francois Cooren, President-Elect, U de Montreal
Larry Gross, President-Elect/Select, U of Southern California
Patrice Buzzanell, Immediate Past President, Purdue U
Sonia Livingstone, Past President, London School of Economics
Ronald E. Rice, (ex-oficio), Finance Chair, U of California - Santa Barbara
Michael L. Haley (ex-oficio), Executive Director

Members-at-Large
Aldo Vasquez Rios, U de San Martin Porres, Peru
Eun-Ju Lee, Seoul National U
Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNEasia
Gianpetro Mazzoleni, U of Milan
Juliet Roper, U of Waikato

Student Members
Michele Khoo, Nanyang Technological U
Malte Hinrichsen, U of Amsterdam

Division Chairs & ICA Vice Presidents
S Shyam Sundar, Communication & Technology, Pennsylvania State U
Stephen McDowell, Communication Law & Policy, Florida State U
Myria Georgiou, Ethnicity and Race in Communication, Leeds U
Diana Rios, Feminist Scholarship, U of Connecticut
Robert Huesca, Global Communication and Social Change, Trinity U
Dave Buller, Health Communication, Klein-Buendel
Robert F. Potter, Information Systems, Indiana U
Kristen Harrison, Instructional & Developmental Communication, U of Illinois
Ling Chen, Intercultural Communication, Hong Kong Baptist U
Walid Afifi, Interpersonal Communication, U of California - Santa Barbara
Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Journalism Studies, Indiana U
Richard Buttny, Language & Social Interaction, Syracuse U
David R. Ewoldsen, Mass Communication, Ohio State U
Dennis Mumby, Organizational Communication, U of North Carolina
Nick Couldry, Philosophy of Communication, Goldsmiths College, London U
Kevin Barnhurst, Political Communication, U of Illinois - Chicago
Cornel Sandvoss, Popular Communication, U of Surrey
Craig Carroll, Public Relations, U of North Carolina
Luc Pauwels, Visual Communication, U of Antwerp

Special Interest Group Chairs
J. Alison Bryant, Children, Adolescents amd the Media, Smartypants.com
David Park, Communication History, Lake Forest College
John Sherry, Game Studies, Michigan State U
Lynn Comella, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, & Transgender Studies, U of Nevada - Las Vegas
Vincent Doyle, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, & Transgender Studies, IE U
Margaret J. Pitt, Intergroup Communication, Old Dominion U

Editorial & Advertising
Michael J. West, ICA, Publications Manager

ICA Newsletter (ISSN0018876X) is published 10 times annually (combining January-February and June-July issues) by the International Communication Association, 1500 21st Street NW, Washington, DC 20036 USA; phone: (01) 202-955-1444; fax: (01) 202-955-1448; email: publications@icahdq.org; website: http://www.icahdq.org. ICA dues include $30 for a subscription to the ICA Newsletter for one year. The Newsletter is available to nonmembers for $30 per year. Direct requests for ad rates and other inquiries to Michael J. West, Editor, at the address listed above. News and advertising deadlines are Jan. 15 for the January-February issue; Feb. 15 for March; Mar. 15 for April; Apr. 15 for May; June 15 for June-July; July 15 for August; August 15 for September; September 15 for October; October 15 for November; Nov. 15 for December.



To Reach ICA Editors

Journal of Communication
Michael J. Cody, Editor
School of Communication
Annenberg School of Communication
3502 Wyatt Way
U of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0281 USA
cody@usc.edu


Human Communication Research
Jim Katz, Editor
Rutgers U
Department of Communication
4 Huntington Street
New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA
jimkatz@scils.rutgers.edu


Communication Theory
Angharad N. Valdivia, Editor
U of Illinois
228 Gregory Hall
801 S. Wright Street
Urbana, IL 61801 USA
valdivia@uiuc.edu


Communication Culture & Critique
Karen Ross, Editor
School of Politics and Communication Studies
U of Liverpool
Roxby Building
Liverpool L69 7ZT UNITED KINGDOM
karen.ross@liverpool.ac.uk


Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
Kevin B. Wright, Editor
U of Oklahoma
610 Elm Avenue, Room 101
Norman, OK 73019 USA
kbwright@ou.edu


Communication Yearbook
Charles T. Salmon, Editor
Michigan State U
College of Communication Arts amd Sciences
287 Comm Arts Building
East Lansing, MI 48824-1212 USA
CY34@msu.edu



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