TheConversationis an independent, nonprofit publisher of commentary and analysis, authored by academics and edited by journalists forthegeneral public.

Join other CMCI faculty and PhD students onTuesday, Feb. 11, from 2:45 to 3:45 p.m. in CASE 422to find out how to get your scholarly work published inTheConversation.

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is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary thatpublishes short articles (800-1,000 words) by academic experts on timely topics related totheir research. CU Boulder has a partnership withthem, and editors fromTheConversationwill be on campus to let faculty and PhD students know whatthey are looking for and howtheprocess works. Journalism professorChristine Larson has written several pieces forTheConversationand will talk about her experience working withtheeditors.


How it works

Faculty members submit brief “pitches” for possible stories toTheConversationeditors, in response to topic-specific requests, or proactively to share research, scholarship or creative work of interest tothepublic. Pitches can be made directly to editors through a simple online form, or with facilitation from a campus communication partner from a school, college, institute orthecampus level.

Once a pitch is accepted, faculty collaborate directly with editors fromTheConversationto develop an article. Once complete,thepiece is published intheonline edition ofTheConversation, included intheoutlet’s outbound emails and made available to a network of potential republishers. CU Boulder also shares content by its authors through appropriate campus channels, includingCU Boulder Today, e-newsletters and social media.

In addition tothemeasurable visibility through readership ofTheConversationand its network of republishers,authors report significant increasesin requests for further academic collaborations, support for current or future grants or funding support, citations for scholarly articles, influence on policy by decision-makers and requests for media interviews (radio, print and TV).