ICA 2026: KoWi Salzburg in Full Force
Eight colleagues from the Communication Studies Department represented KoWi Salzburg at the 76th ICA Conference in Cape Town—delivering award-winning research and emerging scholarship across critical divisions of global communication studies.
The International Communication Association’s annual conference brought together leading scholars from around the world to examine Communication and Inequalities in Context. From June 4–8, the Communication Studies Department sent a substantial delegation: Ricarda Drüeke, Corinna Peil, Nils Förster, Mhairi Louise Rundell, Thawab Hilal, Hanan Badr, Thomas Birkner, and Antonia Bockamp.
A Major Award for Research on Digital Care and Labor
Ricarda Drüeke and Corinna Peil’s paper, “Mediated Care Assemblages: Maintaining Kinship and Work under Digitalization on Family Farms,” earned two prestigious honors: the Top Four Paper Award and the John Garrison Memorial Award for Applied Research from the Interpersonal Communication Division.
The research examines qualitative case studies of family-run agricultural operations, revealing how digital technologies reshape daily work, intergenerational relationships, and the distribution of labor and care responsibilities. Rather than treating digitalization as purely technical innovation, Drüeke and Peil theorize how it demands new forms of communicative care and maintenance work—”mediated care assemblages.” The findings directly address unequally distributed communicative labor emerging under digital transformation, a theme that resonated deeply with the conference’s central focus on communication and inequality.
Emerging Scholarship on Sport and Media
Thomas Birkner brought emerging research to prominence at the International Sport and Media Symposium, where he presented his media analysis framework alongside selected master’s theses by Viola Birkenmaier and Jonas Frey. The panel demonstrated the department’s commitment to developing and showcasing student research on international platforms.
Critical Voices on Progress, Exile, and Activism
Nils Förster, Mhairi Louise Rundell, and Thawab Hilal presented collaborative work at the Philosophy, Theory, and Critique Research Escalator, posing critical questions about the constructive and destructive dimensions of scholarship on inequality.
Hanan Badr contributed extensively across multiple divisions addressing urgent contemporary issues. She moderated a roundtable on exile journalists alongside international scholars including Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova, Celeste González de Bustamante, Carlos Arcila Calderón, Anda Rozukalne, and Summer Harlow. Badr also presented a joint paper with Carola Richter developing a theoretical framework on exile journalism, and collaborated with Alice Beazer on research exploring pro-Palestinian activists in Germany.
Antonia Bockamp presented research on how NGO discourses frame exiled journalism, foregrounding questions of voice, representation, and displacement.
A Department on the Global Stage
This collective presence at ICA 2026 reflects the department’s engagement with pressing questions about technology, labor, care, voice, and social inequality—research that speaks directly to how communication shapes inequality and how communities navigate digital transformation.


















