[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] New JAMMR Journal Issue on 'Media Coverage of COVID-19 Pandemic' published
Fri May 07 13:20:04 GMT 2021
Noureddine Miladi is pleased to announce the publication of _Issue 14.1_
of the /Journal of Arab and Muslim Media Research/ (JAMMR), which has an
interesting line up of timely papers on media coverage of COVID-19
pandemic. The journal is an international refereed academic platform,
published by Intellect in the UK. You may access the papers of this
issue as well as other issues from the JAMMR’s homepage.
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-arab-muslim-media-research
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-arab-muslim-media-research>
We trust you will find this publication a valuable resource for research
about media, communication and society in the Arab World and the Middle
East.
*__*
*_JAMMR: 14.1-_*
Volume (14): Issue (1); April 2021.
**
*The virus of the ‘others’? Corona and discursive othering in Arab media*
Authors: Carola Richter <https://www.intellectbooks.com/carola-richter>,
Abdulrahman Al-Shami
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/abdulrahman-al-shami>, Sahar Khalifa
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/sahar-khalifa>, Soheir Osman
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/soheir-osman>, Samuel Mundua
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/samuel-mundua>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00022_1
**
*Abstract: *
The spread of fear of the coronavirus and related insecurities around
the pandemic have fuelled nationalist and increased exclusionary
tendencies in countries all over the world. In North America, for
instance, anti-Asian racism increased when former US President Donald
Trump dubbed the virus the ‘Chinese virus’. A nationalist agenda has
been strengthened in many places, including the Middle East and North
Africa (MENA) region; and hateful narratives blaming ‘others’ for the
pandemic, legitimizing a retreat to the protection of national borders
and policies, are being spread in different media outlets. This article
comparatively investigates processes of /othering/ with regard to
COVID-19 in four MENA countries – Egypt, Iraq, Oman and Yemen – and
asks, who is held responsible for the coronavirus crisis in different
countries? How is othering revealed in media coverage related to
COVID-19? What (in)sensitive language can be identified? The study looks
at mass media coverage at the peak of the global lockdown during the
spring of 2020. The media analysis reveals a strong emphasis on mostly
national identities as articulated lines of demarcation in all four
cases. A homogenizing and demonizing /othering/ was detected in
particular in the cases of Yemen and Egypt, but also Iraq, when blame
was attributed to political adversaries. The Omani case was
characterized by a more subtle /othering/ that focused strongly on the
importance of citizenship.
*Social media and the COVID-19 pandemic: The dilemma of fake news
clutter vs. social responsibility*
Moez Ben Messaoud <https://www.intellectbooks.com/moez-ben-messaoud>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00023_1
**
*Abstract: *
This article examines the relationship between fake news and social
media as increasingly important sources of news, at a time when
mainstream media no longer have exclusive control over news production
and dissemination. It has been evident that few media outlets and
professionals tend to draw conflicting news about COVID-19 from social
media feeds, which are largely produced by common citizens with mostly
no journalism training. This pervasive use makes social media key
sources to scores of media outlets for news, whether it is related to
COVID-19 or public affairs issues, even though it is susceptible to
torrents of credibility and accuracy issues.
As a result, of the overwhelming spread of fake news on coronavirus,
which is contributing to framing events from several angles, media
professionals are now obliged to track and vet information circulating
on social media. Due to the scale of disinformation spreading on the
Web, it has become imperative that the credibility and accuracy of news
is thoroughly verified. Media organizations have already been putting in
place various mechanisms to monitor false news.
This article will attempt to identify and assess these monitoring
efforts in the Arab world. For this purpose, I have put together a list
of Arab observatories launched on the internet in order to monitor fake
news circulating in relation to COVID-19, and to discuss their methods
of monitoring work, in the context of mobilization carried out by
governments and many organizations such as the World Health Organization.
This article is pinned down on social responsibility approach which
helps pave the way the different propositions to combat fake news and
avoid abuses in social media uses. This article proposes an evaluation
of the monitoring initiative via-a-vis fake news and proposes a set of
guidelines for improving the work of such monitoring bodies. Hence, this
research reveals that social media outlets have diversified their goals
to match the power of the conventional media in disseminating
information and bringing up issues for debate. However, in the light of
the framework of social responsibility, social media actors have to
constantly develop a set of ethical practices to be observed by users,
establish codes of conduct regulating content production, and lay down a
code of integrity to assure accuracy in news and information transmission.
*The significance of digital media in local public space crisis
management: The case of Poland, the United Kingdom and Italy*
Ilona Biernacka-Ligieza
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/ilona-biernacka-ligieza>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00024_1
*Abstract: *
This article recognizes the potential and possibilities of digital media
in COVID-19 crisis management in different democratic systems. It is the
comparative analysis of information management during the COVID-19
pandemic in Poland, the United Kingdom and Italy. From the theoretical
approach, the crisis management usually deals with two main models. The
first one is defined as the post-reactive model, which is based on
reacting to events after the first symptoms of the crisis and the
communication model remains the top-down process. The second one is
described as the pro-reactive model, which is based on building a
dialogue space with the participatory community and it is the bottom-up
communication process. In this case, the community becomes an active
partner in bridging the crisis. The main goal of the proposed article is
to examine the ways in which digital media influences the quality of
strategic communication management in local public spaces and what type
of crisis management strategy is applied to each political culture. The
article discusses the pros and cons of information distributed through
digital platforms by both the media and public institutions in terms of
community awareness and crisis governance. The article applies a mixed
method approach, which includes content analysis (media and governmental
digital services), interviews (with the authorities’ members and media
representatives) and social media network analysis (mainly Facebook).
The analysis has been ongoing since the beginning of the pandemic in
Europe (March–September 2020). The research has demonstrated that the
shape and distribution of information during the pandemic were of great
importance for the quality of information strategy activities. The
problem was noticeable disinformation at all levels, which was the
result of a lack of control over the message and the pursuit of
sensation or conspiracy. It was clearly observed that without the
support of crisis communication during the pandemic by the media, mainly
digital platforms, it would be impossible to implement it. In all three
countries, social media was the ‘information management centre’ in the
COVID-19 era, but the activity of individual municipalities was slightly
different. As far as the urbanized and semi-urbanized level is
concerned, some consistency can be observed. In all three cases,
communication on social media platforms was conducted very intensively
and with the use of various tools (texts, statistics, instructional
videos, scientific articles, infographics, etc.). All the ‘organizers’
of the local public sphere (presidents, mayors, journalists, service
representatives) tried to keep in touch with the inhabitants.
*Insta-hate: An exploration of Islamophobia and right-wing nationalism
on Instagram amidst the COVID-19 pandemic in India*
Benson Rajan <https://www.intellectbooks.com/benson-rajan>, Shreya
Venkatraman <https://www.intellectbooks.com/shreya-venkatraman>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00025_1
**
*Abstract: *
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought to light a crisis of racism and
violence on social media by right-wing nationalists in India. Twitter
and Instagram have become the online spaces to spew misinformation about
the pandemic. Instagram pages such as /Hindu_Secret/ and /Hindu_he_hum/
have been unrelenting and vicious in spreading Islamophobic campaigns
using the COVID-19 pandemic. This has opened up opportunities for
targeting the Muslim community in India.
This study positioned itself within the theoretical framework of Stuart
Hall’s encoding and decoding theory to uncover the visual and textual
codes used to create stigma and blatant stereotypes that dehumanize and
demonize certain communities using social media. This is an explorative
inquiry that engaged in a semiotic analysis of the Instagram pages of
/Hindu_Secret/ and /Hindu_he_hum/. The study found encoded stereotypes
of threat in the use of colour, religious structures, clothes and other
physical markers of cultural identity in generating content for
Islamophobia. Coronavirus was portrayed to have Islamic parentage in the
memes; thus, it portrayed the Muslim community of nurturing and
intentionally spreading the virus across India.
*Mapping the fake news infodemic amidst the COVID-19 pandemic: A study
of Indian fact-checking websites*
Kaifia Ancer Laskar
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/kaifia-ancer-laskar>, Mohammad Reyaz
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/mohammad-reyaz>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00026_1
*Abstract: *
Fake news, a term that was never heard a decade back, has established a
subculture of misinformation and disinformation, whether intentionally
or unintentionally, on social media by its users. The personal bias as
well as unverified content sharing through the click of a button has not
only led to the epidemic of fake content across the world, but in
countries like India, it has also led to lynching and violence in
various places. This article tries to find the rate of debunked
fact-checked content during the COVID-19 pandemic in India related to
the enforcement of the nationwide lockdown, false claims of cure or
immunity boost, political blame gaming, the impact of the pandemic on
economy, religious polarization, as well as fake news on related issues
concerning other countries apart from India. We try to discern in this
article whether fact-checked items of disinformation were more on
communal issues than the cure/claims of alternative medicines. We also
try to unearth if there are a larger number of international items
covered by the fact-checking sites given the status of the COVID-19
crisis in other countries than the lockdown (issues related to
nationwide lockdown declared in India). Using content analysis of two
fake news debunking websites Boom Live and Alt News, for six months
(March–August 2020) during the COVID-19 pandemic, we argue that there
were a lesser number of disinformation or fake news on treatment-related
fake news compared to those on polarizing issues. We also posit that
there were more fake news on the nationwide lockdown imposed in India
than on its impact on the economy. In a bid to map the fake news and
disinformation debunked by these two select websites, we find that the
genealogy of fake news works with our personal biases and fears, thereby
making media literacy all the more indispensable given the reach of
internet-based news. The urgent need for stringent regulations by an
autonomous body of the government to curb the fake news ecosystem is
recommended by us along with emphasizing digital media literacy.
*Communication ethics for online social movements: A study on Arab
social networks on Twitter*
Asma H. Malkawi <https://www.intellectbooks.com/asma-h-malkawi>, Khamis
Ambusaidi <https://www.intellectbooks.com/khamis-ambusaidi>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00027_1
*Abstract: *
Social media increasingly play a role in transforming activist movements
in the Arab world into digital forms. This study examines the link
between adherence of network members to digital communication ethics and
the level of the movements’ success based on the conceptual grounding in
communication theories of Jürgen Habermas and Taha Abdurrahman. We tried
to evaluate the link between the success of online social movement
actors and their ethical contents by asking: What are the ethical
implications of online social movements that do succeed in actualizing
their goals? Do social network users discuss communication ethics to
agree on terms of use within these movements? What are the important
issues of communicative action and challenges of rational discussion in
Arab social media use? We used two case studies: the hashtag
/#with_the_teacher/ launched to support teachers’ rights in Jordan in
2019, and a Twitter network of Arab users discussing digital
communication ethics. We used mixed-methods and case studies approaches;
data collected from Twitter were analysed using social network analysis
followed by qualitative content analysis. Key findings demonstrate
positive effects of activists’ engagement in social networks, and that
commitment to digital communication ethics, whether stemming from
secular or religious frames of reference, is significant for the success
of online social movements. The case of /#with_the_teacher/ network
proved itself to be an example of successful digital protest and ideal
model for rational ethical communication. Content analysis revealed that
teachers formed a social network that exhibited strong solidarity and
cohesion, and relied – perhaps unconsciously – on rules and principles
of ethical discussion, including truthfulness, credibility,
transparency, respect, accuracy and responsibility. Content analysis of
the ‘communication ethics’ network demonstrated that the majority of
content was religiously oriented, produced mainly by religious figures,
educational institutions, or accounts with pseudonyms that are
influential by the sheer number of their followers.
*The Muhammad cartoon controversy in New Zealand newspapers*
Shah Nister Kabir <https://www.intellectbooks.com/shah-nister-kabir>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00028_1
*Abstract: *
This study examines the construction of the controversy surrounding the
cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, as it appeared in three New Zealand
newspapers and discursively identifies how three New Zealand newspapers
framed Islam and Muslims from an Orientalist perception. This study
argues that these newspapers framed the issue of Muhammad cartoon
controversial image in a way that reinforces the notion of a clash of
culture between Islam and ‘the West’ and identified that Islam is a
threat to the civilization. The metaphors employed, the visual texts
incorporated, the terminologies they imposed appear to dehumanize Islam
and Muslims, which also violates the philosophical stand of the freedom
of expression. The news frame that these newspapers adopted in covering
the controversial cartoon issue also supports an elite political agenda
without respecting the religious norms of a minority group. However, the
dehumanization of Islam and Orientalist perception of clash of cultures
were mostly salient in their editorials. Therefore, the news frame
conflicts with editorials’ construction of the issue in most cases.
Furthermore, while one newspaper’s editorials dehumanized Islam and
Muslims by espousing Orientalist perception of clash of cultures, the
other two played a constructive role towards Islam and Muslims.
*/Book Reviews: /*
*/Routledge Handbook on Arab Media/**, Noureddine Miladi and Noha Mellor
(eds.) (2021)*
Helena Hägglund <https://www.intellectbooks.com/helena-hagglund>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00029_5
*/The Role of the Social Media in Empowering Saudi Women’s
Expression/**, Hend T. Alsudairy (2020)*
Reem Ali Al Derham <https://www.intellectbooks.com/reem-ali-al-derham>
DOI: 10.1386/jammr_00030_5
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]