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The study by Anna Hrbáčková and Alice Němcová Tejkalová from ICSJ FSV UK, which examines how male and female athletes perceive women working in sports journalism – an environment still strongly influenced by masculine norms. The article was published in one of the world’s top journals, Journalism.
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A new international study within the TISP project, involving researchers Karolína Pštross and Tereza Klabíková Rábová from the Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism at the Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University, demonstrates that the crucial factor isn’t whether countries have been more exposed to extreme weather events, but whether people living in these countries attribute them to climate change.
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Anežka Kuzmičová became the first speaker from a non-Anglophone country to deliver a keynote at the United Kingdom Literacy Association International Conference.
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A new study by Miloš Hroch from ICSJ FSV UK and Petr Szczepanik from the Faculty of Arts, Charles University, attempts to untangle this often-invisible network of intermediaries and presents its own typology. The article “Playlisting the Periphery: Platform Intermediaries and East-Central European Music Visibility in Spotify’s Geography” was published in the prestigious journal New Media & Society.
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A new study by a research team from the Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism at the Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University has uncovered another alarming trend—fashion brands strategically remain silent about key environmental issues. The analysis reveals that more than three-quarters of even the most "responsible" brands fail to disclose what happens to their unsold products. The research, published in Corporate Communications: An International Journal, was conducted by Denisa Hejlová, Angga Ariestya, Petra Koudelková, and Soňa Schneiderová.
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Doctoral studies can take on many forms in the public imagination. For some, it’s seen as “just a slightly longer thesis,” while for others, it evokes a vague idea of academic research. However, the reality is far more complex. Read the interviews with our Ph.D. students.