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[ecrea] CFP: Social Media and Political Change: Journal of Communication Special Issue
Sat Jun 11 21:16:34 GMT 2011
Social Media and Political Change: Journal of Communication Special
Issue (Revised Version 1.1)
_http://faculty.washington.edu/pnhoward/publishing/jofcspecialissue.html
_
The "Arab Spring" as well as recent events in other parts of the world
have demonstrated that new communication technologies, such as mobile
phones and the internet, are simultaneously new tools for social
movement organizing and new tools for surveillance by authoritarian
regimes. Though communication theory necessarily transcends particular
technologies, software, and websites, digital media have clearly become
an important part of the toolkit available to political actors. These
technologies are also becoming part of the research toolkit for scholars
interested in studying the changing patterns in interpersonal,
political, and global communication.
How have changing patterns of interpersonal, political, and global
communication created new opportunities for social movements, or new
means of social control by political elites? The role of social media
in new patterns of communication is especially dramatic across North
Africa and the Middle East, where decades of authoritarian rule have
been challenged-with varying degrees of success. Social media-broadly
understood as a range of communication technologies that allow
individuals to manage the flow of content across their own networks of
family, friends and other social contacts-seem to have had a crucial
role in the political upheaval and social protest in several countries.
Mass communication has not ceased to be important, but is now joined
with a variety of other media with very different properties that may
reinforce, displace, counteract, or create fresh new phenomena.
Research on social media and political change outside North Africa and
the Middle East is also welcome, especially if it is about countries and
communities managed by authoritarian regimes, or by emerging democracies
where democratic institutions and practises may be deepening or
thinning. Also welcome are manuscripts on media industries, the
political economy of telecommunications policy, and research that uses
original data or existing data in original ways--as long as such
manuscripts fit the thematic interest in social media and political
change. Manuscripts should contribute to advancing our understanding of
both social media and political change.
This Special Issue seeks original qualitative, comparative, and
quantitative research on social media and political change, particularly
as related to events in North Africa and the Middle East, but we are
also receptive to work on political change in other parts of the
developing world. We would welcome manuscripts from a diverse range of
methodologies, and covering diverse communities and cultures.
Methodological innovations or mixed method approaches are particularly
encouraged, and manuscripts on the interpersonal and intergroup aspects
of social movement organizing are central interest. Whatever the
approach, our goal is to select manuscripts that are grounded in the
actual use of social media in promoting or resisting political change in
developing countries and regions. If you have questions regarding the
appropriateness of a potential submission, please contact Prof. Philip
N. Howard (_pnhoward@uw.edu_).
Deadline for Submission is August 15th, 2011, through
_http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jcom_. Manuscripts must confirm to all
JOC guidelines, including the use of APA 6th edition format and a limit
of 30 pages total manuscript length. Please indicate your desire to be
considered for the special issue in your cover letter. For additional
information, including updates in the production timeline for the issue,
revisit this page. For style guidelines and examples of articles
published in this journal, see the journal website. Given the tight
production deadlines, good manuscript that vary too far from submission
guidelines are likely to be rejected.
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