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[Commlist] Call for proposals - Protagoras symposium: Europe facing populists in power: communication strategies and practices
Mon Jan 13 20:26:46 GMT 2020
Protagoras symposium: “Europe facing populists in power: communication
strategies and practices”, IHECS Bruxelles/Brussels, June 4 & 5, 2020
Call for Paper Proposals
See the complete call on our website: http://protagoras.ihecs.be/aac4.html
Deadline for Proposals: February 7, 2020
Since the early 2000s, "populist" governments as well as governments
with a populist coalition partner, both right wing and left wing, have
led to democratic paradigmatic shifts such as the advent of the
so-called "illiberal" democracy in Hungary, the "conservative
revolution" in Poland, the "entrepreneurial populism" in the Czech
Republic and the unprecedented "anti-system" coalitions set up in Italy
and Greece (Taguieff, 2015; Dieckhoff, Jaffrelot & Massicard, 2019).
Once in power, populists seek to control all aspects of the state. By
practising a form of mass clientelism in order to win the loyalty of the
people (Laclau, 2005) or by distinguishing themselves by means of their
undeniable hostility towards organised civil society and the media,
populists can be described through their constitutive anti-elitism and
assumed anti-pluralism. Research shows that a key element of populist
strategies is the discursive construction of the "homogeneous", "good",
"honest", and "hard-working" people on the one hand, in opposition to
the "lazy" and "corrupt" elites on the other hand (Canovan, 1999; Jamin,
2009; Mudde, 2004; Taggart, 2004; Tarchi, 2015). However, the notion of
populism – as it is regularly framed in the news – remains blurred. Some
scholars conceive populism as a communication phenomenon and describe
populism as an expression of political communication content and style
(De Vreese et al., 2018). Populism as content refers to communicating
and staging elements deriving from its ideological corpus. Populism as a
style describes a characteristic set of elements to present these ideas
(Charaudeau, 2011). For others, populism can only be fully understood
through the decisive role played by (digital) media (Reinemann et al.,
2019). As such, the aim of this international symposium is to bring
together academic scholars from a wide variety of communication-related
disciplines to discuss how “populist" European political parties and
European leaders communicate during the exercise of their mandate at
local, regional or national territorial level.
We are looking for proposals of 500-word abstracts (*.doc/*.docx). Paper
proposals may include case studies, empirical analyses, and theoretical
pieces. Practitioner perspectives and cross-disciplinary studies will be
particularly welcome.
Proposals must be sent by e-mail before February 7, 2020 to
(colloque /at/ protagoras.be) <mailto:(colloque /at/ protagoras.be)>. All proposals
will undergo a double-blind review process. Authors will be notified by
15 March at the latest. Participation fee is 100 Euros.
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