An event held earlier this week celebrated this year’s recipients of the LU Arts’ scholarships.
Professor Sabina Mihelj appeared on 'The Fall of the Berlin Wall with John Simpson' on BBC4.
A group of academics from the School of Social Sciences and Humanities at º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ have been awarded funding to examine how AI-voice-based technologies, such as the Amazon Echo, help people with disabilities live independently and explore how they may shape the future of social care.
Communication and Media has achieved some fantastic results in the recently published Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2020.
In late June 2019, Professor Sabina Mihelj and Professor Susan Reid, travelled to Los Angeles to participate in the opening of the ‘Watching Socialism: The Television Revolution in Eastern Europe’ exhibition at the Wende Museum.
Very little is known about the motivations that drive people to share political news on social media and how these might be contributing to changes in our online civic culture. If we can learn more about the things people try to achieve when they share news online—and the extent to which these motivations might reinforce or undermine the distribution of false or misleading information—liberal democracies can start to think about how they can reduce important online harms.
Dr Vaclav Stetka (PI) and Professor Sabina Mihelj (Co-I) have been awarded an ESRC standard research grant for a project titled "The Illiberal Turn? News Consumption, Political Polarisation and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe" (£817,000).
On Wednesday 20th February, undergraduate students and academic staff in Communication and Media went on an extracurricular field trip to the famous BBC Studios at Media City, Salford, Manchester