INTERNATIONAL SHORT COURSE 2026
Automation and Communication: AI, Creativity, and Media Work
Department of Communication Science
Faculty of Social and Political Sciences
Universitas Diponegoro
Online via Zoom | July 2026
Rationale
Automation is no longer a peripheral feature of communication. It has become a central force shaping how content is produced, circulated, amplified, moderated, and monetised. In the contemporary communication landscape, generative AI, recommendation systems, automated decision-making, and synthetic media increasingly influence what becomes visible, credible, and valuable. As a result, communication is being reorganised not only as a set of technologies but also as a field of labour, cultural meaning, algorithmic governance, and everyday life.
This transformation is especially significant for media work and cultural production. Generative AI is changing established ideas of authorship, originality, and authenticity, while platform logics continue to reward speed, visibility, and engagement. Creative workers, journalists, and content creators—including those navigating intimate media economies—are now required to adapt to an environment where automation can accelerate workflows but also intensify precarity, competition, opacity, and dependency on platform infrastructures. The expansion of automated communication raises urgent questions about human value, labour conditions, the management of digital identities, and the political economy of mediated work.
At the same time, automation is rapidly reshaping the public sphere and political communication. AI-assisted news production, algorithmic recommendation systems, and automated amplification influence how publics encounter information and how trust is negotiated. The intersection of new AI tools with persistent political logics complicates the circulation of cross-platform disinformation, while digital attention economies intensify urgency and hype in crisis and environmental communication. These developments make it crucial to examine public debates on AI, interrogating how narratives are framed, whose voices are amplified, and how automated systems impact fairness and legitimacy in decision-making.
Beyond the public arena, automated media ecosystems are fundamentally altering everyday practices, extending even into platformised family life. The pervasive datafication and surveillance inherent in these systems raise critical ethical and governance issues concerning digital wellbeing, privacy, and child data rights, highlighting how deeply automation is woven into the social fabric.
These interconnected challenges are particularly urgent in Southeast Asia and the broader Global South, where digital infrastructures are often adopted under unequal conditions of access, regulation, language, and cultural representation. Understanding AI and automation in communication therefore requires context-sensitive approaches that move beyond West-centred assumptions, foregrounding local realities, diverse cultural experiences, and the geopolitical contexts that shape AI legitimacy and adoption.
The 2026 International Short Course, “Automation and Communication: AI, Creativity, and Media Work,” is designed as a month-long academic forum to address these multifaceted issues. The programme combines conceptual framing, thematic sessions, and methodological insights—including the use of automated content analysis—to strengthen critical understanding of AI across media and communication. By bridging discussions on cultural labour, public trust, crisis amplification, and everyday platformisation, the event opens pathways for collaborative research, academic writing, and international scholarly exchange.
Course Objectives
- Develop a critical understanding of how automation reshapes communication across production, distribution, moderation, and governance.
- Examine the implications of AI and algorithmic systems for creativity, cultural labour, journalism, trust, and platformed visibility.
- Analyse key issues related to misinformation, synthetic media, fairness, and legitimacy in automated communication environments.
- Generate research-informed reflections that connect Southeast Asian and Global South perspectives with contemporary debates on AI and media work.
Course Topics
Platform Cultures, Youth Creativity, and the Mainstreaming of AI Aesthetics
Course Description:This session discusses platform culture, youth creativity, and how AI aesthetics are beginning to be mainstreamed in digital creator practices. Drawing from TikTok and youth culture, this session highlights how platforms shape creative expression, media work, and the normalization of visual forms as well as new aesthetics associated with AI.
Automated Communication, Digital Labor, and Platform Power
Course Description:This session examines how automated communication, digital labor, and platform power are intertwined in the contemporary media landscape. The discussion will highlight how platforms regulate visibility, monetization, and infrastructural dependency, as well as how these conditions shape digital work experiences, power relations, and new vulnerabilities for media workers and creators.
Journalism in the Automation Age: Human–Machine Relations, Newsroom Transformation, and the Future of Media Work
Course Description: This session discusses how automation transforms human-machine relations in the newsroom, journalistic routines, and the future of media work. The main focus includes newsroom transformation, changes in journalistic authority, and how media organizations adapt to automated technologies in the production, selection, and distribution of news.
AI Narratives, Platform Responsibility, and Quality Journalism in Indonesia – Ambaa
Course Description: This session examines how narratives about AI are shaped in the Indonesian digital public sphere and how this relates to platform responsibility and quality journalism. This session reviews issues of credibility, information curation and distribution, and the challenges of maintaining journalistic quality amidst platform and digital media ecosystem transformations.
Generative AI, Cultural Labour, and Creative Industries
Course Description: This session discusses how generative AI affects cultural labor and creative industries, including issues of authorship, originality, and the value of creative work. The discussion highlights how AI restructures the cultural production process, alters the roles of creative workers, and sparks new negotiations regarding human creativity amidst platform industrialization.
AI, Deepfakes, and Democracy: Political Communication in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Course Description: This session explores how AI, deepfakes, and synthetic technologies affect political communication and democracy. This session focuses on visual manipulation, disinformation, public trust, and how the development of AI technologies alters the dynamics of political participation, campaigns, and public perceptions of truth and informational authority.
From Green Values to Digital Engagement: Communicating Sustainable Consumption in the Platform Era
Course Description: This session discusses how green values, environmental knowledge, and digital engagement can drive the communication of sustainable consumption in the platform era. The discussion focuses on how sustainability messages, digital engagement, and consumer attitudes interact in shaping more environmentally responsible behavior.
Digital Cultures, Gender, and Platformed Political Subjectivity
Course Description: This session examines how digital cultures, gender, and platform environments shape contemporary political subjectivity. With a focus on social media, identity, and public participation, this session explores how gendered digital experiences influence how individuals understand themselves, network, and engage in everyday political life.
Children in Automated Media Ecosystems: Platformised Family Life, Digital Wellbeing, and Child Data Rights
Course Description: This session focuses on children and families within automated media environments. It examines platformised everyday life, digital wellbeing tools, and the implications of datafication, surveillance, and governance for child rights and communication practices.
Course Schedule
| Date | Theme |
| Wednesday, 01 July 2026 | Opening & Course Introduction |
| Wednesday, 01 July 2026 | Platform Cultures, Youth Creativity, and the Mainstreaming of AI Aesthetics |
| Friday, 03 July 2026 | Automated Communication, Digital Labor, and Platform Power |
| Tuesday, 07 July 2026 | Journalism in the Automation Age: Human–Machine Relations, Newsroom Transformation, and the Future of Media Work |
| Thursday, 09 July 2026 | AI Narratives, Platform Responsibility, and Quality Journalism in Indonesia |
| Friday, 14 July 2026 | Generative AI, Cultural Labour, and Creative Industries |
| Tuesday, 16 July 2026 | AI, Deepfakes, and Democracy: Political Communication in the Age of Artificial Intelligence |
| Thursday, 21 July 2026 | From Green Values to Digital Engagement: Communicating Sustainable Consumption in the Platform Era |
| Tuesday, 22 July 2026 | Digital Cultures, Gender, and Platformed Political Subjectivity |
| Thursday, 23 July 2026 | Children in Automated Media Ecosystems: Platformised Family Life, Digital Wellbeing Dashboards, and Child Data Rights |
Note: The remaining weeks of July may be used for essay development, consultation, and editorial preparation, subject to the organising committee’s final arrangement.
Kontak
Jl. dr. Antonius Suroyo, Universitas Diponegoro, Kampus Tembalang, Kota Semarang, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia. Kode Pos 50275
Telp : 024-7465408
Email : admin.komunikasi[at]live.undip.ac.id
