- Archive
- May 25
- November 24
- July 24
- November 23
- October 23
- May 23
- March 23
- September 22
- August 22
- June 22
- May 22
- February 22
- November 21
- October 21
- September 21
- June 21
- May 21
- October 20
- May 20
- April 20
- March 20
- February 20
- October 19
- July 19
- May 19
- February 19
- January 19
- December 18
- November 18
- September 18
- June 18
- May 18
- April 18
- March 18
- January 18
- December 17
- November 17
- October 17
- September 17
- August 17
- July 17
- June 17
- May 17
- April 17
- March 17
- January 17
- December 16
- November 16
- October 16
- August 16
- June 16
- May 16
- April 16
- March 16
- January 16
- December 15
- September 15
- May 15
- March 15
- February 15
- October 14
- September 14
- June 14
- March 14
- December 13
- November 13
- June 13
- April 13
- March 13
- February 13
- January 13
- December 12
- November 12
- October 12
- June 12
- May 12
- April 12
- March 12
- January 12
- November 11
- October 11
- August 11
- July 11
- May 11
- April 11
- March 11
- February 11
- January 11
- December 10
- November 10
- October 10
- August 10
- July 10
- June 10
- May 10
- February 10
- January 10
- December 09
- November 09
- October 09
- September 09
- August 09
- July 09
- Categories
News
-
We are proud to celebrate two special recognitions awarded at the 2025 Swiss Association of Communication and Media Research (SACM) Annual Conference last week in Chur.
Our team members Sarah Daoust-Braun and Noemi Festic received the Saxer Award for Best Presentation for their work on how motives for digital communication mitigate the chilling effects of dataveillance. This research is part of the Media Change & Innovation Division’s project The Chilling Effects of Dataveillance: Conceptual Advances and Empirical Evidence for Switzerland, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation.
Our former team member Kiran Kappeler, now a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Tracking and Society at the University of Copenhagen, was also honored with the Dissertation Award for her outstanding cumulative dissertation entitled “Negotiating Digital Technology Use in the Highly Digitized Swiss Society – A Mixed-Method Analysis of the Digital Practices of Individuals.”
Kiran’s doctoral work is based on her collaboration in three Media Change & Innovation Division’s projects: The Chilling Effects of Dataveillance: Conceptual Advances and Empirical Evidence for Switzerland and The Significance of Algorithmic Selection for Everyday Life: The Case of Switzerland, both funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation, as well as the World Internet Project - Switzerland.
We warmly congratulate them for their well-deserved achievements!