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The Kenneth Harwood Outstanding Dissertation Award is an academic prize awarded each year by the Broadcast Education Association for the best doctoral dissertation in field of broadcasting and electronic media. The prize was established by Kenneth Harwood, Professor at the University of Houston and a former President of the BEA. The award offers $1,000 for the outstanding Ph.D. dissertation in broadcasting and electronic media. The award was established through gifts started by Professor Harwood and a donation from a friend of BEA.[1]

Origin[edit]

The award has been named after Professor Kenneth Harwood (1915–2009), one of those who made systems development a science. professor Börje was a Swedish engineer and computer scientist, and Emeritus Professor of Business Information Systems at the Department of Computer and Systems Science, Stockholm University and Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm. Börje Langefors was a pioneer of IT and one of the initiators of ‘Informatics’ as an academic area of study. He was the first IT professor in Sweden and one of the first in the world. Börje contributed strongly to put Sweden on the international IT map and brought into a focus in particular to the user's role in data processing. Börje Langefors brought more than 20 graduate students to degree most of which today are professors who in turn have brought their students to graduates.

Award criteria[edit]

The following quality criteria are applied for the evaluation of individual doctoral thesis:

  • Relevance: Articulate, well-defined and well-motivated research question(s)
  • Articulate and well-reflected research design
  • Comprehensiveness: Chosen and used well described theory base
  • Well described empirical base
  • Validity of knowledge (empirically and theoretically well-grounded)
  • Contribution validity and durability (abstraction) to further research
  • Innovative value in knowledge contributions
  • Independence (of author's own contribution)
  • Communicability: Clarity, transparency and conceptual clarity
  • Internal coherence: holistic and coherent argument
  • Subject (IS field) congruency
  • Ability to serve as a 'Role model'
  • International exposure /review

Prize Committee[edit]

Every year in spring (usually in May), a prize committee assesses the theses submitted by the universities/institutions in Sweden and nominates the best dissertation, which is finally announced in connection with SISA's annual conference. Information about this conference can be found here. The members of Committee for Börje Langefors Award 2011-2012 were:

Börje Langefors Awards during the period 2011-2015 are sponsored by Nethouse and Sitevision

Kenneth Harwood Outstanding Dissertation Award Winners[edit]

Year Title Author University Source
2013 "First year students in a foreign fabric: A triangulation study on Facebook as a method of coping/adjustment." Shane Tilton Ohio University [2]
2012 "The Impact of Federal Communications Commission Practices on Communication Policy Making 2001-2004: An Investigation of the Policy Shift From Public Service Idealism to Market Forces Pragmatism" Beth C. Fratkin University of Utah [3]
2011 “Viral Viewers: Examining Parasocial Interaction on Local TV News Web Sites” Joy Chavez Mapaye University of Alaska, Anchorage [4][5]
2010 "Rescuing Men: The New Television Masculinity in 'Rescue Me,' 'Nip/Tuck,' 'The Shield,' 'Boston Legal' and 'Dexter.' " Pamela Hill Nettleton Marquette University [6][7]
2009 "The Sounds of 'Radio': A Cultural History of Radio's Aesthetic Definition as a Broadcast Medium for Aural Communications in 1920s America." Shawn VanCour University of Wisconsin [8]
2008 “Department Stores and the Origins of American Broadcasting, 1910–1931” Ronald J. “Noah” Arceneaux University of Georgia [9]
2007 "Children's cognitive processing of internet advertising" Mary McIlrath University of California, Santa Barbara [10][11]
2006 "How Violence and Frustration in Video Games Affect Aggression" Kevin D. Williams University of Georgia [12]
2004 “Radio, community and identity in South Africa: A rhizomatic study of Bush Radio in Cape Town” Tanja Estella Bosch Ohio University [13]
2003 "Localism, Community, and Commercial Television, 1948-1960: A Value Analysis." John Armstrong University of California at Berkeley [14]
2002 "Radio’s Development in Rural America." Jacob J. Podber Ohio University [15]
2001 "The Role of Motivation in Policy Considerations Addressing Television Violence" Paul Haridakis Kent State University [16]
2000 "Interactivity and the 'Cyber-Fan': An Exploration of Audience Involvement Within the Electronic Fan Culture of the Internet." Vic Costello University of Tennessee [17][18]
1999 “Controlling Technology: Internet Service Providers and Copyright Liability.” Matt Jackson Indiana University [19]
1997 "Information and Markets and the Market for Information: An Analysis of the Market for Television Audiences" Patricia F. Phalen Northwestern University [20]
1996 "Broadcast Law and Segregation: A Social History of the WLBT-TV Case" Steven D. Classen University of Wisconsin [21]
1994 "The paradox of public: The public and the public interest in communication technology regulation in the United States, 1934 - 1988." Michael Edward Lenert The University of Texas [22]

References[edit]


Category:Academic awards Category:Communication