曹晋:Professor Vincent Mosco is a world-renowned scholar and founder of the political economy of communication.He is currently Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Queen's University in Canada and was Head of the Department of Sociology,Queen's University,and also formerly the Canada Research Chair in Communication and Society.His work The Political Economy of Communication has been translated into nineteen different languages,and has become one of the most influential textbooks for political economy students worldwide.His other important books include Knowledge Workers in the Information Society and The Digital Sublime:Myth, Power, and Cyberspace. Professor Mosco's latest book is To the Cloud: Big Data in a Turbulent World which deals with the social implications of new developments in information technology.In January 2014 he was named the recipient of the Professional Freedom and Responsibility award given by the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication for his outstanding contribution to media research and teaching.
文森特·莫斯可:Associate Professor of Communication at University of Toronto, Canada. Her research focus since the mid-1990's has been on the social and policy aspects of information and communication technologies (ICTs),with particular concerns towards issues of gender, youth and political economy.Her research promotes the notion of the public interest in 1CT policy;publications,community outreach and student supervision have as their goal the promotion of a wider popular discourse on information and communication policy issues and media reform in Canada and internationally for a diverse public and policy audience. This includes an ongoing commitment to building participatory scholar-activist networks.
莱斯莉·里根·谢德:ssociate Professor of Communication at University of Toronto, Canada.Her research focus since the mid-1990's has been on the social and policy aspects of information and communication technologies (ICTs),with particular concerns towards issues of gender, youth and political economy.Her research promotes the notion of the public interest in 1CT policy;publications,community outreach and student supervision have as their goal the promotion of a wider popular discourse on information and communication policy issues and media reform in Canada and internationally for a diverse public and policy audience.This includes an ongoing commitment to building participatory scholar-activist networks.