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[ecrea] Call for chapters -- ‘Social media and political communication in Central and Eastern Europe’.
Sun Sep 28 19:31:13 GMT 2014
CALL FOR CHAPTERS
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Contributions are solicited for an edited volume on ‘Social media and
political communication in Central and Eastern Europe’.
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Within the national and transnational field of politics in Central and
Eastern Europe (CEE) political actors – political parties, interest
groups, NGOs, think-tanks, social movements and campaigners - have been,
with various degrees of enthusiasm, adapting social media (Twitter,
Facebook, Google +, Youtube, or blogs etc.) as part of their media
management and communication strategies. Within the CEE region, social
media have become buzzwords facilitating and defining digital
revolutions in political communication, which policy-makers have been
advancing to facilitate relationships between governments, state
institutions and citizens. Also individual politicians in CEE have been
building political capital thanks to their engagement with social media
in their everyday political communication practices. For examples, Radek
Sikorski, the Polish Foreign Affairs Minister, conducts ‘Twitter
diplomacy’ and engages in lively tweet-chats with David Cameron and
other European pol
itical leaders on issues not exclusively reserved to foreign affairs.
Social media in Central and Eastern Europe have been pervading political
elites, but what does it mean in terms of political participation among
citizens in the part of the world defined by the heritage of the
socialist/authoritarian past and maturing media systems? Do social media
platforms encourage greater political participation? Do social media, if
at all, reshape the quality of relationships between citizens and
political elites and state institutions? Can social media facilitate
change of power relationships within political economies among CEE
states or do they perpetuate political status quo(s)? We raise those
questions to examine the role of social networking sites (SNS) as social
spaces in which diverse forms of political participation can take place.
Identifying what forms of political participation occur, understanding
the patterns of participation and the motivations for participating
offers insights into how, if at all, SNS drive participation within the
conte
xt of a nation’s democratic culture. We are looking to examine if
political participation online translates into civic participation and
agency enhancing or hindering qualities of democracy in the region of
Europe in which democratization has been one of the biggest priorities
since the end of the Cold War.
The aim of this edited volume is to present state of the art research on
political communication and social media in the CEE region. The
scholarship at the crossover of political communication, social media,
and civic participation has been one of the most dynamic research areas
in political and media studies, but so far, little attention has been
paid to the analysis of the role of social media in transforming
political communication in this part of the world. With the rise of
digital platforms and advancement of the digital revolution among CEE
states, political elites and political parties have been adopting social
media to reach out to electorate, citizens, and stakeholders alike. The
tense relationship between the media and democracy in CEE has emerged as
a result of the political economy transformation which post-1989 has
been further complicated by media convergence, Internet technologies,
and the use of social media platforms in political processes. This book
aims to
fill this gap and analyse the complex relationship between forms of
political communication, social media, and civic participation. By
accounting for research avenues in the field of political communication,
this book aims to consider transformational and cultural features
accompanying the use of social media in the fields of politics in CEE.
The aim of this book is to bring together innovative and current
research on the role of social media in transforming the dynamics of
political communication, that not only explores the types of tensions
between ‘old’ and ‘new’ media, but accounts for economic and cultural
forces driving those changes. A diversity of empirical national-case
studies is welcome.
We particularly encourage comparative studies featuring political actors
in the CEE region.
We also encourage contributions from various contexts in which social
media platforms are used in political communication (e.g. political
parties, activist groups, social movements, the EU institutions).
Chapters might include, but are by no means limited to the following themes:
-social media users and their characteristics in the context of
political communication;
-adoption of social media strategies and tactics in political communication;
-the role of social media platforms in national and European election
campaigns;
-relationship between ‘old’ and ‘new media’ including the role of social
media in reporting political news stories in CEE;
-the relationship between political participation on SNS, civic
participation and community action, ‘new’ versus ‘traditional’ forms of
political participation;
-social media as drivers of political participation in activist/issues
campaigns in CEE (e.g. the LGBT movement; environmental and human right
groups; pressure groups);
-social media, the state surveillance practices, transparency and
democratic accountability in CEE;
-social media platforms as mediators of political and social change in CEE.
We are seeking contributions from researchers exploring the above themes
in the following national settings or in comparative research studies:
the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia, Latvia,
Lithuania, Estonia, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Ukraine, and Russia.
Keen interest in the proposal has already been expressed by Routledge to
include this volume into their on-going and successful 'BASEES\Russian
and East European Studies.' The collection will be comprised of
approximately 10-12 chapters of around 7,000 words. Publication has been
scheduled for 2016.
The deadline for a 400 words abstract and short (3-4 line) biography of
author/s is 31 October 2014. Abstracts should be sent to the editors of
this volume, Dr Pawel Surowiec (Bournemouth University, United Kingdom,
(psurowiec /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)) and Dr Vaclav Stetka (Charles University,
the Czech Republic, (stetka /at/ fsv.cuni.cz)). The editors welcome preliminary
expressions of interest and encourage potential authors to contact them
for further information.
Dr. Pawel Surowiec
Lecturer in Propaganda Studies
Bournemouth University
The Media School
Fern Barrow, Poole
Dorset, BH12 5BB, UK
Tel. 01202 965236
Email: (psurowiec /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)
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