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[ecrea] CFP - Societies in Flux: Media, Democratisation, and Political Socialization
Thu Jul 21 10:40:56 GMT 2016
Interactions: Studies in Communication and Culture (Volume 8, Issue 3 -
Fall 2017)
Societies in Flux: Media, Democratisation, and Political Socialization
Guest Editors: Nael Jebril (Bournemouth University), Matthew Loveless
(Center for Research and Social
Progress), and Jamie Matthews (Bournemouth University)
Call for Papers
Issue 8.3 of Interactions: Studies in Communication and Culture (Fall
2017) seeks to compile an empirically-based understanding of the role of
media in countries in transition as it relates to individuals’ political
attitudes, values, and behaviour.
There is a corpus of work across several disciplines such as political
science, mass and political communication, anthropology, and sociology
on political socialisation. However, they have not coalesced into an
understanding – much less a theoretical body of knowledge - of
individual political socialization via traditional and new media in
periods of national change.
One reason for this is the depth of each of these fields given that the
wide swath of potential media (i.e.: television news, electoral
campaigns, social media, public radio, inter alia) and potentially
related political outcomes (personal efficacy, voting, political
knowledge, etc.) interact in a variety of contexts. In particular, the
context of democratization shifts the (theoretical) ground under the
feet of existing theories by blurring the distinction between private
and public media, motivations for individuals’ media consumption, and
the debut of the new technologies of social media in a world dominated
by traditional print and broadcast media theories. Thus, the assumptions
underpinning well-established theories of the West find little firm ground.
Media scholars must confront the troublesome reality that elements of
both democracy and authoritarianism coexist in countries in transition.
In this context, the simple and normative assumption of a positive
relationship between changes in the quantity and quality of information
sources (and the expansion of freedom of expression) and successful
democratic socialization can be misleading. Investigations into media
effects (at the individual level) may find the formation and change of
individuals’ attitudes a more fertile area of research as well as one
that is more closely related to democratisation theory.
This requires a break away from deductive approaches. We should stop
thinking about the media in terms of static, traditional models which
are inadequate for explaining the dynamic processes of democratisation.
We may well need more inductive research that is theory-generating
rather than theory-testing. Put slightly differently, there is a need to
enhance our knowledge about the dynamics of media audiences in
transitional contexts. Studies need to enhance our understanding of how
information-seeking behaviour and/or preferences for political
information consumption are affected by rapid changes to political and
information environments and how audiences make sense of complex media
transformations that accompany political transitions. This may require
integrating theories of non-mechanical media effects and democratisation
in order to shed light on the relationship between individuals’ media
behaviour and choices and the subsequent take-up of democratic values
following regime changes. Therefore, meaningful research will likely
explore media use, contextualise analyses that are conducted at various
levels (cross-nationally or ideally with times series/panel data), and
be open - if not responsive - to the grey areas of inductive feedback
that are likely in countries and societies in transition.
We seek empirical and theoretical answers to the following questions:
1. How does regime change affect audience’s reliance on and perceptions
of news media?
2. How do individuals’ media consumption change during democratic
transitions? What do they consume and to what political effect?
3. What are the most likely political outcomes for individuals – i.e.
values and attitudes - to be affected by media during transition?
4. What is the role of international media in fomenting, encouraging,
or catalysing public support for democratization?
5. Are there individual-level differences in media choice consumption
and/or effects across democratizing, transitioning, or
post-authoritarian contexts?
6. To what extent and how do the internet and social media influence the
role of traditional media in democratization?
7. Ultimately, to what extent does the success of democratic political
socialization require – genuinely require – a free media? Is there
empirical support for the necessity of free media – the new marketplace
of ideas - in the normative theory of democratization?
8. How effective are the internet and social media in influencing the
development of individuals’ democratic attitudes, values, and behaviour?
Further details on the general state of research on media and change for
democracy can be
found at:
https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/Media%20and%20Democratisation_0.pdf
Submission guidelines
Prospective authors should submit an abstract not exceeding 250 words
directly by email to
Nael Jebril ((njebril /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)
<mailto:(njebril /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>) and Matthew Loveless
((matthew.loveless /at/ cersp.org) <mailto:(matthew.loveless /at/ cersp.org)>) by
*23 September 2016.*
Please include your name, affiliation and contact details in all
correspondence. All abstracts will
be peer-reviewed and authors will be notified about the outcome of the
review by 7 October
2016.
A selection of authors will be invited to submit a full paper (from 6000
to 8000 words) due on 15
January 2017.
Full paper submissions are to be
-original, scholarly manuscripts that follow the journal’s submission
guidelines
(http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/MediaManager/File/2015%20ISCC%20NfC%20.pdf)
-formatted according to Intellect House Style guidelines
(http://
www.intellectbooks.co.uk/MediaManager/File/Intellect%20style%20guide.pdf
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/MediaManager/File/Intellect%20style%20guide.pdf>
)
-sent in Microsoft Word .doc/.docx format ONLY as e-mail attachments to
(njebril /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk) <mailto:(njebril /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)> and
(matthew.loveless /at/ cersp.org) <mailto:(matthew.loveless /at/ cersp.org)>
All submissions will be peer-reviewed and the issue is scheduled for
publication in Fall 2017 (November).
Interactions: Studies in Communication and Culture is published by
Intellect and is online at
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=165/
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal%2cid=165/>
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