Past proceedings
Second International Communication Conference
Glocal 2.0 Blogging: Evolution Treated as Evolution Papers
The majority of the content daily published on the world wide web is user generated, most of it posted on blogs or other social media platforms. The exact number of blogs is impossible to state at any given point due to the highly decentralized and dynamic character of the blogosphere. The evolution of the Internet is driven by that dynamic and decentralized nature of this new rhetorical opportunity that is becoming more available and easier to use. There is a growing need for sophisticated discussion of social media including blogs, blogging, blogosphere and social software in general. The International Conference Glocal 2.0: Blogging: Evolution treated as Revolution invited researchers and practitioners (bloggers) for a discussion and analysis, as well as for sharing thoughts and experiences on the emerging networked society we live in.
- Citizen Journalism and the Glocal Framework (pdf) Minka Zlateva, University of Sofia "St. Kliment Ohridski", Bulgaria
- Web 2.0: Impact on Mainstream Media (pdf) Zoran Ricliev, Utrinski Vesnik, Macedonia
- Blogs in Education: A New Didactical Challenge (pdf) Radmila Zivanovic, ISPPI, Macedonia
- At Home in your City: A case study of two years of hyperlocal citizen journalism Niels Hendriks, Limburg University College, Belgium
- Blogging Archeology: Creating an Open Access Source for Knowledge (pdf) Vasilka Dimitrovksa, University of Belgrade, Serbia
- Is There Educational Blogging in Romania? (pdf) Gabriela Grosseck, University of West Timisoara & Carmen Holotescu, University of Politechnica of Timisoara, Romania
- Blogging and Parlamentary Ellections in Croatia 2007 (pdf) Vedran Obucina, University of Zagreb, Croatia
- My Blog is My CV... or Not? (pdf) Novica Nakov, Free Softwere Macedonia Marija Kostovska, University Saraevo, Bosnia and Hercegovina
- Community Building through CMC in Iranian University e-Forums (pdf) Hamid Dolatabadi, University of Exeter, UK
- Blogging as a Way of Crafting Commodified Identity (pdf) Zala Volcic, University of Queensland, Australia & Mojca Plansak, CMFE, Slovenia
- Blogosphere as a Visual Culture Watch (pdf) Suzana Milevska, Euro-Balkan Institute, Macedonia








