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Article No. 5
Impact of Media on Conflict Resolution and
Education
in the New Europe
Noemi Marin
Department of Communication
Florida Atlantic University
nmarin@fau.edu
and
Laura Lengel
School of Communication Studies
Bowling Green State University
lengell@bgnet.bgsu.edu
Introduction
For the New Europe, the year 1989 constitutes a
pivotal time when social, political, cultural, national and
international arenas converged in opening the "Iron Curtain" to the
world. The fall of communism and its consequences created undeniable
changes impacting not only citizens of the countries in the region,
but also scholarship from all walks of academia, in the West and
East alike. Over a decade later, countries from this area
had changed borders, political systems, and sociocultural
dimensions to address democratization and civic participation for
all ethnic groups in a more open cultural context of a New Europe.
Adding to such dramatic changes, mass media and information and
communication technology, primarily the Internet and technological
advances of the last decade of the 20th century, present
a complex arena for civic participation in the region.
Research on civil society, such as that of Isaac
Abeku Blankson (2002) and Marwan Kraidy (2002) elsewhere in this
issue of Global Media Journal, suggests that citizens are
struggling in their complex negotiation processes in relation to the
transformations they are experiencing locally, regionally and
globally. These transformations often occur against a backdrop of
relative insecurity, continuing to remain pertinent to the civic and
democratic problematic prevalent in Central and Eastern Europe (Lengel,
1998). And yet, in spite of economic instability, ethnic
tensions, political turbulence, and human rights threats, citizens
living with changes in their societies seek opportunities to develop
a new discourse through which a society forms and declares its
values and identity (Kluver & Powers, 1999).
Media plays a part in this discovery. Much research
has been conducted on the impact of the media on transformations in
the New Europe since the fall of communist rule (see for instance,
Boyd-Barrett & Rantanen, 2000; Ekecrantz & Olofsson, 2000; Hammond &
Herman, 2000; Lengel, 2000; Marin, 2000; Rantanen, 2001; Rantanen,
2002). Scholars and media practitioners alike argue that information
and communication technology (ICT) advances intercultural
sensitivity, growth in participatory democracy, mutual tolerance,
and open, peaceful dialogue. Conversely, like more ‘traditional’
media, ICT can act as a vehicle for increasing ethnic, cultural and
political conflict, particularly in regions historically known for
their cultural or political tensions.
Looking at some of the most important challenges
pertaining to media presence and its impact on the entire
Southeastern European region, the study argues for a better
understanding of both challenges and strategies salient for
education, literacy and civic awareness in the area. Accordingly,
the article examines how the role of media and
mediated-communication is intertwined with educational and civic
programs designed to invite multiple perspectives beneficial
to all participants in Southeastern European arena. In
particular, the study provides first an overview of specific
challenges in relation to media and conflict resolution in the
region. Second, by presenting strategies and programs from
Southeastern Europe, the article emphasizes the interconnectedness
of media, mediated-communication and educational goals developing
media literacy aimed to empower the participants within the area.
Last, the essay focuses on the relationship between media and
higher education in Southeastern Europe and Central and
Eastern Europe, in order to define some of the future challenges
pertinent to an ongoing international effort to expand civic
awareness and intercultural contributions and create more democratic
venues in the world.
Media, Culture and Conflict Resolution in
Southeastern Europe
Within the last decade Southeastern Europe has
experienced an intensification of political and ethnic tensions and
border disputes reignited by war. These tensions and disputes have
received international attention and have served as the focal point
of debates on civic discourse and democracy. Media and its
impact and been and remain inherent to these discussions.
Centralized communication media can strengthen a sense of
‘Other-ness’ on the part of minority communities (see for instance,
Connor, 1994). In an article on Central and Eastern European media,
‘The News Media and the Transformation of Ethnopolitical Conflicts’,
Dušan Reljic (2000) argues "It is not surprising then that ethnic
tensions and separatist demands are on the increase throughout the
world. In ethnically diverse communities, the media often serves to
reinforce existing differences and thus accelerate a disintegrating
effect on the homogeneity of the population."
Clearly, Southeastern Europe is one such region
where ethnic tension has had such a disintegrating effect. Primarily
in the last decade, political and civil changes in the region have
dramatically altered citizens’ perspectives on democracy, civic
participation and cultural tensions, among others. Throughout CEE
and SEE, hate speech has been increasingly prevalent online (Gaines,
2000). Racist discourse continues to be disseminated on the regional
media. Journalists exacerbated already existing tensions (Thompson,
1994; Pech, 2000). George Krimsky (1996), co-founder of the
International Center for Journalists, notes "irresponsible and
inaccurate journalism (or its nefarious cousin, the hate-mongering
media) can fan the flames of violence in ethnic or communal
confrontations." Irresponsible journalism has played such a vast
role in the increase of conflict in the region, that media
practitioner Maida Berbic of Radio Kameleon in Tuzla,
Bosnia-Herzegovina has announced, "The media started the war in the
former Yugoslavia; they will have to end it, too" (cited in Burton,
2001). These articles present a number of efforts addressing, in
particular, the role media, higher education, and ethnic tension
play in CEE and SEE toward democratization and civic participation.
In the face of these concerns, there are efforts to
link media and education to combat ethnic tension and increase
cultural sensitivity and awareness in the region. As mentioned, the
media have played an increasingly important role in the educational
process in CEE and SEE. Lubecka (2000) suggests in the New Europe
‘the newly empowered local governments show much interest in
creating citizens who value and understand democracy, its privileges
and duties, and who, because of participatory competencies, help
bring reforms. Media provide significant support to create a new
awareness of acting ‘civis’" (p. 37). Polish television series such
as Young People Vote, Civis Polonus, and The River
Speaks, all which are geared to educate youth in the region,
have played a role in raising awareness about civil society in adult
as well as youth audiences (Lubecka, 2000l; Remy & Strzemieczny,
1997). In Macedonia, the television series Nashe Maalo [Our
Neighborhood] has been reportedly reducing ethnic tension in the
nation (IJNet, 2000, September 12). Reaching 95% of Macedonian
households, Nashe Maalo portrays ethnic Albanian, Macedonian, Roma
and Turkish children playing together harmoniously, hence, creating
the civic ground to diminish ethnic tensions from the area. As
research indicates that ethnic Macedonian children, after viewing
Nashe Maalo, were more willing to invite children from the other
ethnic identities represented in the program into their homes, the
results need to speak for themselves in the ways media can
impact conflict-resolution in an area torn among too many ethnic and
cultural tensions in the last decade (Common Ground Productions,
2002).
Thus, ethnic reconciliation, post-conflict recovery
and civil society building are the goals for programs such as Nashe
Maalo. They are also shared as overarching tasks of an on-going vast
project established by the Office for Central and Southeastern
Europe (IWA/OCSE) and the Institute of World Affairs (IWA) and
supported by the Center for Civic Society in South-eastern Europe
(CCS). The organizations have established three Centar za građansku
suradnju (Centers for Civic Cooperation) in eastern Croatia and
northeastern Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina to ease ethnic tension
and facilitate minority refugee return (Primorac, n.d.). The Centers
are each overseen by two multi-ethnic coordinators and a
multi-ethnic board of educators, media practitioners and business
leaders who develop programs on conflict resolution and to raise
awareness about ethnic discord. The Centers provide "the
institutional vehicle through which people can translate good
intentions into practical activities" (Primorac, n.d.). Accordingly,
such Centers attempt to reach ethnic and cultural groups along with
creating precedence on tolerance and cooperation strategies so much
needed in the history of Southeastern Europe.
One of the three Centar za građansku suradnju, in
the Bosnia-Herzegovina municipality of Gradačac, in conjunction with
the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe, has involved
media practitioners in efforts such as the Citizen Action Election
Program. The program was created in response to the Code on Media
Rules for Election developed by the Sarajevo-based Independent
Media Commission (IMC), which indicates "all broadcast and print
media shall give fair coverage and equitable access to all
registered political parties, coalitions, and independent candidates
in elections at any level in Bosnia and Herzegovina" (IMC, 2000, p.
1). This program involved, first, a series of ten, hour-long
phone-in radio broadcasts focusing on election issues leading up to
the April 2000 national elections. Second, to prepare for the
October 2000 elections, local radio station “RADIO GRADAČAC” hosted
eight broadcasts featuring local representatives on the importance
of voting, electoral laws and procedures, women in politics,
democracy, civil society building, education, and human rights in
Bosnia-Herzegovina (CGS-Gradačac, n.d.).
As indicated in this brief overview, the role media
plays in developing intercultural awareness and sensitivity
continues to demonstrate the engaging processes called into action
by strategic mediated information and media access in the region.
While some of these examples invoke local access and/or
participation, the overall challenge media is faced with in the
ethnically sensitive areas such as Southeastern Europe remains an
important dimension, providing a forum for civic discourse and more
democratic venues in the making. Conflict resolution in the region
continues to appear at the forefront of the challenging tasks for
media and mediated communication approaches. Accordingly, additional
perspectives on the relationship among media, education, and media
literacy provide complimentary dimensions necessary to address the
complex interconnectedness of cultural, national, and
international issues within the Southeastern European social,
cultural and political arena of the last decade.
From Media Criticism to Media Literacy
While media remains a controversial and critical
issue for the entire world, for Southeastern Europe it is even more
important to learn rather than critique the media, to create it. The
Women in the Global Digital Community Research and Practitioner
Group (Lengel et al., 2002), in its presentation to representatives
of the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs, state that communities traditionally disenfranchised from
access to information should have increased opportunities to create
it. NGOs such as the Women’s Learning Partnership (WLP) offer media
literacy training so that women and partner NGOs of WLP can generate
content to be disseminated by information and communication
technology. WLP argues that information has become a valuable
commodity and those who can produce knowledge embody power (Women’s
Learning Partnership, 2002).
Other NGOs such as UNITED for Intercultural Action,
the European network against nationalism, racism, fascism and in
support of migrants and refugees, posts Information Leaflets on its
website to teach activists. In its Leaflet on ‘Working with the
Media: Information on using the media for anti-racist activists,"
UNITED suggests the media is one of the best tools to change
perceptions of the world and to persuade people to take action
against injustice. The organization states that activists may not
like the "commercialism and sensationalism of many media outlets"
however "it is necessary to realize that the media cannot be ignored
altogether. They are one of the key pillars of today's society. If
you want your organization to have any impact you need to have good
co-operation with the media. And in many cases the media also play a
very positive
role in the fight against racism!"
(UNITED, n.d.). The Leaflet offers practical advice on writing press
and sending press releases, developing relationships with media
practitioners, understanding target audiences, and educating
journalists as to the activists’ mission and goals. The organization
promotes joint training sessions with anti-racist NGOs, journalists'
unions and schools of journalism.
Another initiative linking the creation of media and
education is the Confidence-building Measures (CBM) Programme,
established following the Summit of Heads of State and Government of
the Member States of the Council of Europe in Vienna, 1993. One of
the main objectives emerging from the Summit was protection of
national minorities. This resulted in the Framework Convention
for the Protection of National Minorities drafted by the Council of
Europe and the CBM, which was designed to improve tolerance and
understanding between the diverse communities of Europe
(Council of Europe, 1999, October). The CBM addresses tolerance and
understanding in various areas including the media, human rights,
education, culture, and transfrontier co-operation. The Programme
raises awareness about misrepresentation of national minorities by
the media. It also provides support for project development by NGOs,
local and regional authorities, media, and educational
organizations. It funds projects which, in practical and concrete
ways, advance knowledge of intercultural communication, media
criticism, human rights, democratic citizenship, and "provide
opportunities for people from different communities to work together
towards a common objective" (Council of Europe, 1999, October). In
1999 alone, the Programme funded the following media-related
educational projects:
|
Organization |
Nation |
Project Description |
|
CINES Press Center |
Croatia |
Media activities of CINES Press Center |
|
Society of Young Journalists |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
School of Journalism: training of young
journalists to provide independent, free and multicultural
information |
|
Media Mind |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Promotion of Human Rights Consciousness
through Independent Mass-media |
|
Croatian Association RODA |
Croatia |
Minorities in the Media |
|
Council of Europe’s Office in Mostar |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Youth radio |
|
Arin-Berd |
Armenia |
Producing TV educational programmes on
intercultural issues in Armenia |
|
Latvian Human Rights Committee |
Latvia |
Seminar for journalists "International and
regional standards in the field of minority rights" |
|
Latvian Human Rights Committee |
Latvia |
Radio broadcasts for the Latvian language
training |
|
Human Rights Project |
Bulgaria |
Documentaries about the cultural heritage
and modern identity of Roma in Bulgaria |
|
Youth Initiative Supporting Center |
Armenia |
Mass media coverage action on national
minorities in Armenia |
|
Lithuanian Journalism Center |
Lithuania |
Journalist training for national minority
mass media in Lithuania |
|
Centre for Educational and Social Research
"Baltic Insight" |
Latvia |
Promoting integration and social cohesion in
Latvia through minority language mass-media |
|
Center for Civic Initiative |
Lithuania |
Overcoming stereotypes of national
minorities in mass media |
|
Ukrainian Legal Foundation |
Ukraine |
Seminar for journalists "International and
regional standards in the field of minority rights" |
|
United Roma Union |
Bulgaria |
Development of Roma public relations |
Source: Council of Europe (1999).
Along with the mentioned challenges and strategies
pertinent to the impact of media on conflict resolution and on media
literacy in the area, it is important to remember the inherent
dimension that education and in particular higher education play in
empowering more and more participants to the cultural, civic, and
global discourse of the new millennium. After all, information
communication technology (ICT) and media access remain in developing
countries or areas key dimensions for civic participation in the
world.
Media and Education: Challenges for Increased Civil
Participation
Realizing that educational efforts need be developed
in relation to media, mediated-communication, and media access to
information, various centers in Southeastern, Central and Eastern
Europe identify as primary task perspectives incorporating the above
mentioned challenges to democratic participation. Accordingly,
one of the goals of the Centar za građansku suradnju is to educate
citizens about media and its social and political impact on local,
regional and national audiences. Aligning to similar strategies,
other organizations such as the International Research & Exchanges
Board (IREX), a USAID-funded effort in Bosnian media development,
provide equipment and education for journalists, through training
programs in Bosnia and in the US, through fellowships to attend
American universities. The Soros Media Center and the BBC also
provide training and education programs for media practitioners
(Burton, 2001).
More needs to be done, however, to increase media
literacy among non-practitioners in the New Europe. Further, more
needs to be done from within the region. Researchers have
analyzed the uncritical adoption of Western-media style in emerging
democracies. Palmer (2001), for example, suggests that "in societies
with severe ethnic divides, democratic institutions need to go far
beyond standard democratic procedures to ensure adequate ethnic
representation and minimize conflict between ethnic groups" (p. 3).
Facing such challenges, increasing numbers of organizations link
media and education for civil participation in the region.
Along with all educational programs in Central and
Eastern Europe and Southeastern Europe during the last decade,
higher education had been impacted by dramatic changes within the
framework of civil and civic transformations taking place. By
bringing to the academic table issues pertinent to a more inclusive
intercultural and democratic perspective, the challenges for
curricular development in higher education reflect fundamental
questions on the processes old and new alike that face students,
faculty, and education administrations in their attempts to
articulate civic and democratic changes (Marga, 1994; Svejnar,
2000). Since education and its formative processes remain some of
the most important issues articulated in terms of information and
communication technology available for faculty and students, how can
media and ICT contribute to higher education curricula and faculty
development? And also how do these challenges articulate effective
strategies to reflect the need for faculty and students alike to
diminish ethnic tensions, and create more interculturally sensitive
participants able to engage in civil and civic discourse in
and of the world?
Accordingly, looking at some of the challenges
pertinent to the transformation of higher education, mediated
communication, and intercultural dimensions of participation in the
new millennium, this study emphasizes the imperative for more
intercultural training and media literacy for faculty, in
particular, within academic institutions in SEE. That is not to say
that such learning experiences do not exist in the region. On the
contrary, there are some important educational programs in SEE
reflecting or assessing intercultural awareness and sensitivity in
light of media and new technological advances in the world. While
the current efforts at bridging media, education and civic
participation in the region are a sound beginning, we argue for more
curricular development and training programs for faculty from the
region, to advance computer-mediated strategies for intercultural
awareness and cooperation as well as further exploring the usage of
media pertinent to an open and free[d] world.
What are then some of the challenges for higher
education in terms of novel political, social, and cultural
perspectives defining Central and Eastern Europe and Southeastern
Europe? Within the context of transition, the challenges for
education in the region continue to be articulated within a large
body of literature on the subject (see for instance, Bollag, 1999;
Hermochova, 1999; Kuklinski, 1993; Lajos & Szucs, 1998; Mannova,
Preston & Lengel, 2000; Marga, 1994; Marin, 2001; Marin, 2002;
Svejnar, 2000). Before 1989, a centralized system of education was
the prevailing model pertinent to all Central and Eastern European
and Southeastern European countries, emphasizing more ‘pure’ theory
areas of study, leaving the applicative function of education aside.
Thus, the study of media, considered to be treated more from
an application and practice perspective rather than theoretically,
was not a part of the curriculum. Further, university life
generally, and university curricula specifically remained isolated
from the world outside communist rule (Hermochova, 1997). Marga
(1994) a former Minister of Education in post-communist Romania,
reminds us that that state centralized all university matters,
including curriculum decisions, and maintained a separation of
teaching and research. This separation resulted in curricula that
did not benefit from new knowledge emerging from research. Also, the
state, in its control of university curricula, forbade topics such
as media, which it regarded as a direct link to the West (Marga,
1994, p. 175).
As mentioned previously, the year 1989 liberated not
only the political and social rights for citizens in the New Europe,
but also opened up the academic world to a need to reconstruct and
innovate the programs and perspectives on education, culture and
democracy. It was not easy, however. Funding problems, problems
resulting from privatization, new management structures all played a
part to slow or even halt efforts to incorporate novel concepts, new
technological advances, and increased opportunities for students and
faculty to connect with other communities both within and outside
CEE and SEE.
During the complex processes affecting education
standards in the more open New Europe, the challenges have occurred
in curriculum design, teaching and research standards as Hermochova
(1997) points out. However, there have also been additional
conceptual and cultural problems, due to the advances in media and
information and communication technology, particularly increased
information access through the World Wide Web. Not surprisingly,
there are numerous educational programs sponsored mostly by
international institutions and organizations, aiming to assist all
SEE countries in their efforts towards better education and
democratic participation in the world.
In Europe, organizations and institutions like the
PHARE Democracy Program, UNESCO-CEPES (Centre Européen pour
l'Enseignement Supérieur) in Bucharest, the European Cultural
Foundation, the Open Society Institute, the Euroregional Center for
Democracy, and the Research Centre for Interethnic relations in
Transylvania at Babes-Bolyai University of Cluj, Romania address
education and civil participation in CEE and SEE. Across the
Atlantic, the Fulbright Program, the American Council of Learned
Societies (ACLS), and the Institute of International Education (IIE)
all demonstrate the importance of the educational challenges faced
in the CEE and SEE to improve not only educational outcomes
but also create civic awareness for students and faculty alike.
The Intercultural Institute of Timisoara, the UNESCO
European Centre for Higher Education (CEPES), the Higher Education
Support Program and the Euroregional Center for Democracy (
GOTOBUTTON BM_3_ www.regionalnet.org) provide important
opportunities for citizens in SEE to participate in civil society,
to become educated in terms of democratic approaches to social,
cultural and political approaches on the tensions and transitions in
the area, as well as to offer increased awareness of media
representation. All such institutes and organizations
articulate the imperative for a broader perspective on
international, national, and European views on identity and public
discourse while inviting students and academics alike to partake
within the problematic of global democracy.
One example is a ‘Media and Intercultural
Communication’ program, offered through distance learning channels
by the Südosteuropäisches Medienzentrum (Southeast European Media
Center) in Sofia. This program, established by the European
University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder) and St. Kliment Ohridski
University in Sofia, is open free of charge to SEE students and is
supported by the Stability Pact for Southeastern Europe (European
University Viadrina, 2002).
Another example is the Intercultural Institute of Timisoara,
sponsored by the Council of Europe, that targets civic
involvement at the K-12 level (IIT, n.d.). The IIT projects carry
over 20 programs, including programs on critical media awareness,
such as "The Press and Tolerance".
Most of these programs reflect strategic actions to
reestablish tolerance and coexistence in an area where recent wars,
social and cultural disintegration contributed numerous interethnic
and international conflicts. Along with media programs, the
Institute houses the Banat Network for Intercultural Citizenship
Education which uses the Internet as a tool for co-operation and
exchanges across the borders (Banat, 2001). Similarly, summer school
programs stemming from the sponsorship of the Open Society Institute
(OSI) assist with numerous venues designed to familiarize
faculty and student population with new global standards of research
and educational approaches within novel disciplinary and
interdisciplinary studies such as gender, culture, media, and
European identity.
One novel media and education project promoting
global views on scholarship, democratic and civic participation is
Frontera (Frontiers of New Technology Education, Research and
Action) which has provided the dialogic space for students to
discuss and assess information and communication technology and its
role in opening up the gates of a ‘global village’ for all digital
citizens. Small student teams from a range of institutions such as
the People’s Friendship University in Moscow to Daystar University
in Kenya have participated in the program. Through computer mediated
communication, the Frontera teams work together across
national borders and cultural differences, to explore ethnicity,
nation, and citizenship, the potential for democratic dialogue (Lengel
& Murphy, 2000). Showing how computer mediated communication is
capable of forming the basis for cultural and intercultural
awareness of its citizens-participants, the project offers insight
on the role of media representation of global communities, and the
challenges and opportunities that communication technology offers
regions in transition like the New Europe.
Faculty must be open to such international
initiatives and the extra organization and flexibility required for
their success. Olson and Kroeger argue internationalizing faculty is
"the first most critical step" in creating more international
universities (2001, p.133) Creating innovative curricular,
development and training programs that draw on and are implemented
by media and ICT is an element of this "most critical step." This is
particularly important in CEE and SEE areas where there is limited
funding for educational innovations examining the media.
Hence, reiterating the important role media, access
to information, and mediated-communication carries on ethnic
tensions, civic discourse and the continuous efforts for democratic
participation, the study articulates the need for multicultural
integration and for better understanding of the complex
relationships created among media, conflict resolution, and
education in Southeastern Europe. The overview provided is
intended to signal the salience of such issues and challenges to all
participants in the region and to offer a locus for novel and
critical approaches on the impact of media on cultural and civic
involvement for the new millennium.
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- _ftnref3We define the New
Europe as nations in Eastern and Central Europe (CEE), Southeastern
Europe (SEE), the Newly Independent States and the Russian
Federation. In this article, however, we focus primarily on Eastern
and Central Europe (CEE) and Southeastern Europe (SEE).
- _ftnref4At the Women in the
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Public Policy, September 2002 Istanbul, Turkey.
PHARE Democracy Program of the European Union
supports the activity and professional work of NGOs and
not-for-profit organizations. It aims to contribute to the
consolidation of democratic societies in Central and Eastern Europe.
For more information, please see <
http://europa.eu.int/comm/enlargement/pas/phare/index.htm
>.
Examples here focus primarily on Romania, a country
where intercultural and national tensions continue to reveal the
salience of intercultural tasks as the one proposed by this study.

About the Authors
About Noemi Marin
Noemi Marin is a leading researcher of
international and intercultural communication in Romania. She holds
degrees from the University of Bucharest, California State
University, Northridge, and a Ph.D. from University of Maryland,
College Park. Her work on the public discourse from Eastern and
Central Europe has been published in Migration–A European Journal
of International Migration and Ethnic Relations, East European
Politics and Societies, among other publications both in the US
and Europe.
Dr. Marin is currently Assistant Professor in the
Department of Communication at Florida Atlantic University, and has
taught classes at University of Maryland, College Park on rhetorical
studies, gender studies and intercultural communication.
Dr. Marin's academic experience is distinguished by
numerous awards from Romania and the US, publications on Romanian
culture and communication. She and Dr. Lengel were recently awarded
a grant to internationalize higher education in Southeastern Europe
from the Institute of International Education. Contact:
nmarin@fau.edu
About Laura Lengel
Laura Lengel (Ohio University, 1995) began her
research on culture, technology, education, and media representation
when she was a Fulbright Scholar and American Institute of Maghreb
Studies Fellow in Tunisia (1993-1994). Her books, Computer
Mediated Communication (Thurlow, Lengel and Tomic, forthcoming
2003), and Culture and Technology in the New Europe: Civic
Discourse in Transformation in Post-Communist Nations (Lengel,
ed., 2000), and articles which have appeared in, among others, the
UNESCO Encyclopedia of Life Support Sciences, Journal of
Communication Inquiry, Convergence: The Journal of Research into New
Media Technologies, address international and intercultural
communication, the impact of information technology, and field
research methodology.
Dr. Lengel is currently an Associate Professor in
the School of Communication at Bowling Green State University, and
was previously Associate Professor in Communication at Richmond
American International University in London. Contact:
lengell@bgnet.bgsu.edu
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