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[ecrea] Joint ECREA/ IAMCR Cfp to edited volume: “When the Local meets the Digital: Implications and Consequences for Environmental Communication”
Sat Nov 25 00:25:58 GMT 2017
The ECREA Science and Environment Section would like to invite you to
submit an abstract for an edited volume with the tentative title "When
the Local meets the Digital: Implications and Consequences for
Environmental Communication" (see below). In relation to this, you are
also invited for participating in the webinar on this same topic on 15
March 2018. More info on that will follow. The edited volume and the
webinar are a joint initiative with the Environment, Science and Risk
Communication Working Group of IAMCR. Please see invitation below for
more information.
Best regards,
Pieter Maeseele (vice-chair) and Annika Egan Sjölander (chair)
On behalf of the ECREA SEC Management Team
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*CALL FOR PAPERS: *
**
*When the Local meets the Digital: Implications and Consequences for
Environmental Communication *
**
*Volume editors: * Joana Diaz Pont, Pieter Maeseele, Annika Egan
Sjölander, Maitreyee Mishra, Kerrie Foxwell-Norton
**
*Publisher: * IAMCR/Palgrave Series
**
*RATIONALE *
Recent changes in territorial and digital capabilities of communication
pose new challenges for environmental communication, with particular
impacts and consequences at the local level. On one hand, a redefinition
of environmental problems is called for from the well-known maxim "think
globally and act locally" to the new "think locally and act locally". On
the other, social media and the emergence of collaborative platforms
having an impact on the local level are exposing multifaceted realities.
For example, the discourses on the multiple benefits of /SmartCities/,
or platforms such as /AirBnB/, /Uber/ or /Amazon/, contrast with their
physical and social consequences on the ground. In the intertwining of
the local and the digital, new injustices arise. Shared are social and
environmental impacts that trigger the emergence of social movements and
local platforms to fight the effects of decisions taken at distant
territorial levels and in digital spaces disconnected from the local.
These distant decisions often support profits and extractivist interests
that are the target of local protest.
The intersections of place and digital media raise new questions for
environmental communication scholars. For instance, about how place and
the digital effect local decisions and social relations. Individual
attitudes and behaviors of citizens find their most direct expression at
the local level, where ideologies are embodied in certain models of
environmental behavior. The local becomes the digital, physical and
ideological space for different modes of behavior, encompassing a
continuum where participation and commitment to environmental issues can
acquire a collective voice in the form of advocacy groups or social
movements. Alternatively, digital spaces can result in the
fragmentation, reformulation and creation of politics and political parties.
This edited book will explore the interplay of the local and the digital
in environmental communication (research). Some questions that can guide
contributions:
- How is environmental communication impacted by the intertwining of the
local and the digital?
- How are digital media influencing environmental communication at the
local level?
- What is/could be the role of environmental communication in the
emergence of local environmental activism, networking, and political and
social participation?
- What is/could be the role of journalism and news media - mainstream
and/or alternative - in navigating the local and digital?
- What are the local experiences of digital collaborative platforms (eg.
/AirBnB/, /Uber/ or /Amazon/) that in so many instances have become
extractive platforms?
- How, if at all, are environmental or social movements created or
redefined in response to these new injustices originating in distant
digital spaces?
- How does the prevailing political economic system impact on the local
experience of 'Green Growth' initiatives, such as SmartCities?
- Other questions are of course also welcome
The editors welcome papers from various theoretical, conceptual, and
empirical approaches. Empirical studies should be based on quantitative
and/or qualitative methods, including case studies and best
practices. Literature reviews are also welcome. Contributions must be
in English. Submissions should have the form of extended abstracts,
consisting of an outline of the chapter of about 1200 to 1500 words.
Abstracts are due *15 January* 2018 to
thelocalandthedigital[at]gmail[dot]com.
This edited volume is a joint initiative of the Environment, Science and
Risk Communication Working Group of IAMCR and the Science and
Environment Communication Section of ECREA. The authors of the accepted
abstracts will be invited to present their proposal during a webinar
taking place *15 March* 2018 14-16h CET (UTC+1). Authors will be
notified of the acceptance by *26 February *2018 and the submission of
draft chapters will be expected by *16 May* 2018.
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