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From an article written for Spectra, NCA's newsletter distributed to its members History The International Federation of Communication Associations (IF) came into being after extensive discussions among various national communication associations, all of whom had their own agendas within the larger discourse of communication. These discussions started during meetings at the International Communication Association (ICA). ICA had created its own problem by defining "international" as "multi-national in membership" and then not being able to live up to its name. Rather than buying into the competition for the few scholars who can travel abroad, as the International Association of Mass Communication Research (IAMCR) and ICA do, or joining one large association, the National Communication Association (NCA) of the U.S., for example, the founding members of the International Federation sought for ways to strengthen local communities of communication scholars in acknowledgement of their own approaches to theory and research. The Federation idea that did emerge in these discussions became a loose family of communication associations, supporting communication scholarship worldwide and each other as needed. It adopted another meaning of "international," cooperation among diverse national associations and communication across national and cultural boundaries. About half of its current members were early supporters of this idea, offering organizational assistance. Members The Federation has organizations as its members, not individuals. It does not compete with associations whose individual members discuss their scholarship at regular meetings, publish their results, and ready their students for academic positions. It merely provides an international web to their proceedings. Federation members must be democratically organized, non-discriminatory on the familiar dimensions, and committed to the study of human communication. Membership is free and decided by vote. Only active participation is expected. The current members are: Australian & New Zealand Communication Association ALAIC -- Latin American Communication Research Association The Association for Chinese Communication Studies Canadian Communication Association Center for the Study of Communication and Culture Chinese Communication Association Croatian Communication Association Deutsche Gesellschaft für Kommunikationsforschung Deutsche Gesellschaft für Publizistik und Kommunikationswissenschaft Finnish Society for Communication Research Institute of Development Communication INTERCOM -- Sociedade Brasileira de Estudos Interdisciplinares de Communicacao International Communication Association Israel Communication Association Korean Society for Journalism and Communication Studies National Communication Association (of the US) Through these associations alone, the vast majority of communication scholars in the world are represented in the Federation. Projects A continuous project of the Federation is to facilitate the self-organization of communities of communication scholars. By providing know-how and international recognition, the Federation was instrumental in the founding of at least two new national communication associations. Currently there are numerous small and barely recognizable scholarly communities in search for their identity. The Federation encourages such efforts. Another project is to make the often excellent but largely unknown publications of national communication associations accessible to each other. For a few years, the Federation assembled the content pages of these publications in their original language, distributed hardcopies of them for local reproduction, and enabled libraries from all over the world to subscribe. This service has given way to our web site, http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/~ifcaweb, which provides access to most of these journals. One should mention that in developing countries the Internet is not as easily available as in the US and going electronic was a mixed blessing. The Federation publishes a bi-annual IFnewsletter, which is electronically distributed to Federation members and interested others who reproduce it locally, forward it electronically to their individual members, or feature it on their web sites. The sharing of scarce resources is of foremost concern for the Federation. The Canadian Journal of Communication (CJoC) and the Australian Journal of Communication (AJoC), for instance, have offered to make their back issues available without charge to fledgling institutions. CJoC worked with a Bulgarian university, although it ran into a snag when state authorities did not want the journals to pass. AJoC is in contact with a Chinese university. Some thirty years of the Journal of Communication, Human Communication Research, and Communication Research have gone to the University of Jena in former East Germany, which is trying to build its media collection in conjunction with a new department on communication. This is an easy way for publishers and individual communication scholars who no longer need their collections to help others to scholarly literature. Now NCA's Publications Committee wants to facilitate such efforts, making resources from their association available. Taking advantage of the economy of scale of publishing, publishers of communication journals in the US could easily expand their readership outside North America by printing additional copies and sending them in bulk and near cost to communication associations abroad. The converse can have great benefits as well. If the big associations, NCA and ICA, would distribute non-US communication journals to their members, this would certainly add new perspectives to communication scholarship. I understand that NCA is considering this possibility. Appreciating each other is a prerequisite for cooperation. Professional associations too often are concerned with themselves and know little of what happens outside. Although lack of mutual knowledge did not divide IAMCR and ICA, for example, the Federation was please to participated in the planning for an international conference on the "Digital Divide," November 16-17, 2001, at the University of Texas, Austin, cosponsored by ICA, IAMCR, and IF. This is one example worthy of duplication elsewhere. Working in North America, we may not appreciate the immense scholarly resources we have available for travel, publications, and research, until we visit our colleagues abroad. Sharing some of these resources with those less fortunate is a small effort compared with the benefit that a world of communication has in store for all of us.