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Assistant Professor of Journalism & Mass Communication - Notice of Filing

University of Wisconsin Madison
United States, Wisconsin, Madison
21 North Park Street (Show on map)
May 29, 2025
Job Summary:

The School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison seeks a full-time Assistant Professor beginning August 18, 2025, with a research agenda focused on Artificial Intelligence and the quality, integrity, and credibility of news and public-interest communication. Candidates should have a demonstrated commitment to excellence in research and teaching and a PhD in communication or related fields such as media studies, information studies, sociology, psychology, computer science, data science, political science, public health, and science and technology studies. We are a methodologically diverse department and seek candidates with strengths in qualitative, quantitative, and/or computational approaches to media and communication research. Regardless of focus, our ideal candidate will have a substantial research agenda that sheds critical light on how AI and related technologies change the work of journalism and other knowledge-producing institutions in the democratic public sphere, in a moment of diminishing institutional trust and rising concern about "information disorder" in countries around the world.

Areas of emphasis may include, but are in no way limited to, the following:

- Use of AI by, and influence on, news organizations, political parties, libraries, public health agencies, schools, universities, and other public-facing institutions;

- The role of AI in creating, disseminating and combating mis- and disinformation, monitoring information quality, and intervening to improve the information ecology;

- The relationship between AI, media manipulation, and trust in news, environment and health communication, and other forms of public information;

- Impact of AI on strategic communication campaigns and industry;

- Racial, gender, class, and other biases in the development and deployment of AI and algorithmic systems;

- Investigating AI and algorithmic infrastructures through code audits, reverse engineering, technography/ethnography, and other methods;

- AI governance regimes and information quality, in the US and internationally;

- AI, digital labor, and the public sphere;

- AI, geopolitics, and international/global communication;

- The history of AI and related technologies in public life;

- The impact of AI on digital and news literacy practices;

- AI, digital platforms, and platformization/enclosure of public information;

- Implications of AI systems for democratic participation and social, political, and economic inequality, including racial and gender inequality.

The successful candidate will advance the educational mission of the College of Letters & Science that values, prioritizes, and actualizes evidence-based and student-centered teaching and (undergraduate student) mentoring. They will contribute to an inclusive, fair, and equitable environment that fosters engagement and a sense of belonging for faculty, staff, students and members of the broader community.


Responsibilities:

The successful candidate, as a member of the College of L&S, will proactively contribute to, support, and advance the college's commitment to equity among all aspects of their teaching, mentoring, research, and service. In addition to developing and maintaining a robust research portfolio in the area of AI and communication, the successful applicant will participate in interdisciplinary and collaborative efforts with other departments, schools and colleges, and will mentor highly motivated master's and doctoral students in this area of high demand and societal impact. The standard teaching load is four courses per academic year, typically including one graduate seminar per year. University and professional service is required appropriate to career stage.


Institutional Statement on Diversity:

Diversity is a source of strength, creativity, and innovation for UW-Madison. We value the contributions of each person and respect the profound ways their identity, culture, background, experience, status, abilities, and opinion enrich the university community. We commit ourselves to the pursuit of excellence in teaching, research, outreach, and diversity as inextricably linked goals.

The University of Wisconsin-Madison fulfills its public mission by creating a welcoming and inclusive community for people from every background - people who as students, faculty, and staff serve Wisconsin and the world.

For more information on diversity and inclusion on campus, please visit: Diversity and Inclusion


Education:

Required
PhD
A PhD in communication or related fields is required by the start of the appointment.


Qualifications:

Successful candidate must engage in high-quality research and teaching commensurate with experience. The successful candidate will demonstrate experience with fostering or the ability to foster an inclusive and equity-centered teaching, learning, mentoring, departmental, and research environment where all can thrive.


Work Type:

Full Time: 100%

It is anticipated this position requires work be performed in-person, onsite, at a designated campus work location.


Appointment Type, Duration:

Ongoing/Renewable


Anticipated Begin Date:

JULY 05, 2025


Salary:

Negotiable
ACADEMIC (9 months)


Additional Information:

A competitive recruitment and selection process was conducted for this employment opportunity and a U.S. worker was not selected. An application for Alien Employment Certification is being filed on behalf of an alien to fill the employment opportunity. Anyone with documentary evidence relative to the application, or available workers, wages and/or working conditions, may contact the Regional Certifying Office of the Department of Labor at the following address:

U.S Department of Labor
Employment and Training Administration
Office of Foreign Labor Certification
200 Constitution Avenue, NW Room N-5311
Washington, DC 20210


How to Apply:

The position has been filled. This posting is mandatory to meet a United States Department of Labor requirement. See the job posting for more details.


Contact:

Lucas Graves
lucas.graves@wisc.edu
608-263-3399
Relay Access (WTRS): 7-1-1. See RELAY_SERVICE for further information.


Official Title:

Assistant Professor(FA040)


Department(s):

A48-COL OF LETTERS & SCIENCE/JOURN & MASS COM/JN & MASS


Employment Class:

Faculty


Job Number:

316067-FA


The University of Wisconsin-Madison is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to, including but not limited to, race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, age, pregnancy, disability, or status as a protected veteran and other bases as defined by federal regulations and UW System policies. We promote excellence by acknowledging skills and expertise from all backgrounds and encourage all qualified individuals to apply. For more information regarding applicant and employee rights and to view federal and state required postings, click here

To request a disability or pregnancy-related accommodation for any step in the hiring process (e.g., application, interview, pre-employment testing, etc.), please contact the Division Disability Representative (DDR) in the division you are applying to. Please make your request as soon as possible to help the university respond most effectively to you.

Employment may require a criminal background check. It may also require you and your references to answer questions regarding sexual violence and sexual harassment.

The University of Wisconsin System will not reveal the identities of applicants who request confidentiality in writing, except that the identity of the successful candidate will be released. See Wis. Stat. sec. 19.36(7).

The Annual Security and Fire Safety Report contains current campus safety and disciplinary policies, crime statistics for the previous 3 calendar years, and on-campus student housing fire safety policies and fire statistics for the previous 3 calendar years. UW-Madison will provide a paper copy upon request; please contact the University of Wisconsin Police Department.
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