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[Commlist] CFP Book on Everyday Democracy: Building Resilience Against Polarization and Radicalization
Mon Oct 21 14:31:57 GMT 2024
CFP deadline Nov 22nd: Book on Everyday Democracy: Building Resilience
Against Polarization and Radicalization
This CFP, requiring no payment from the authors, is a shared space where
scholars and practitioners explore various aspects of everyday
democracy, particularly in the context of polarization and
radicalization. Polarization, aligning societal differences along a
single dimension, poses significant risks to democracy by fostering
opposition and conflict (McCoy et al., 2018). Radicalization, often a
consequence of polarization, involves individuals or groups moving away
from mainstream ideologies toward more extreme positions, sometimes
leading to violence (Schmid, 2013).
By examining how everyday democracy interacts with these processes, this
book aims to provide new insights into how democratic resilience can be
built in the face of polarization and radicalization. Through a broad
approach encompassing various societal systems and institutions, the
book explores the complexities and nuances of these challenges, offering
a deeper understanding of everyday democracy and its potential to
mitigate the risks of polarization and radicalization. Read more below
or
athttp://lnu.se/en/research/research-projects/project-the-book-everyday-democracy/
<http://lnu.se/en/research/research-projects/project-the-book-everyday-democracy/>.
Interested chapter contributors are welcome to propose chapters that
showcase the wide spectrum of research on polarization and
radicalization in relation to democratic values. Examples of topics
chapters can address in the three respective categories that form the
framework of the book, include but are not limited to the following:
1. Collaborative Forms:
• How participatory governance initiatives, such as citizen assemblies
or deliberative practices, can foster democratic resilience against
polarization and radicalization
• The role of digital platforms and open government practices can play
in promoting dialogue, common understanding and a cohesive society
• Ways in which citizen professionalism and public-work democracy can
foster everyday democratic engagement that counters radical ideologies
and polarization
• How collaborative action research methodologies can facilitate
depolarization and democratic discourse
• Avenues for interdisciplinary approaches (e.g. politics, sociology,
and science) to enhance the effectiveness of everyday democracy in
counteracting radicalization
2. Interaction Cases:
• Cities where shared governance of public spaces foster democratic
engagement and challenge local extremism or exclusion
• Art and cultural institutions, or local libraries, engaging e.g.
marginalized youth in democratic processes
• Schools where democratic practices have been implemented, making use
of e.g. participatory decision-making and curriculum design
• Everyday democratic practices in cities or local communities facing
different types of crises (such as inequality, climate change, or migration)
• NGOs and community-led fact-checking initiatives aiming to counter
microradicalization
• Lessons learned from the Dialogue to Change Approach (also known as
Dialogue to Action)
• The contribution by makerspaces, graffiti, and other art forms in
contributing to everyday democratic engagement in polarized communities
3 Research-Based Explorations:
• How media and social media shape everyday democratic discourse, both
promoting polarization and offering platforms for counter-radicalization
and democratic engagement
• The democratic potential of local histories and urban movements to
reclaim public spaces for equity and inclusion
• The impact of popular culture—music, films, and literature—on shaping
public perceptions of democracy and radicalization, both positively and
negatively
• The role of speculative thinking and conspiracy theories in fostering
or deepening political polarization
• Commonalities and differences in approaches to de-radicalization
across diverse global contexts
• Feminist perspectives on authoritarian populism as seen through the
boundary work in everyday life
Submission guidelines
If you are interested in contributing to this project, please submit an
extended abstract (max. 500 to 750 words) of your proposed chapter and a
short biographical note (max. 150 words) by 22 November 2024,
(toeverydaydemocracy /at/ lnu.se) <mailto:(everydaydemocracy /at/ lnu.se)>. Chapter
submissions and further editorial and peer reviews will be carried out
via a publishing platform.
The extended abstract must clearly state the intended analytical goals
and empirical/theoretical coverage of the proposed chapter while
clarifying how the proposed chapter addresses central themes of the
edited volume. If possible, indicate which category your chapter is best
suited for, i.e. as Collaborative Forms and Scholarly Approaches,
Interaction Cases or Research-Based Explorations.
Please include up to five indicative references you plan to use in your
chapter. While these references might change along the way, they are
useful to avoid potential overlaps among contributors.
The targeted academic publisher will be chosen after the selection of
abstracts is finalized. All chapters submitted should be original works
and must not be under consideration by other publishers.
Important dates
Deadline for extended abstracts: 22 November 2024
Notification of accepted chapter proposals: 29 November 2024
Initial chapter draft: 10 January 2025
Editorial review feedback: 17 January 2025
Deadline for full submissions: 20 February 2025
Peer review: March-April 2025
Submission of revised chapters: 16 June 2025
Expected publication year: Winter 2025/Spring 2026
Editors
Pernilla Jonsson Severson, Associate Professor in Media and
Communication Studies, Department of Media and Journalism, Linnaeus
University, Sweden
Contact:(pernilla.severson /at/ lnu.se)
<mailto:(pernilla.severson /at/ lnu.se)>
Emma Ricknell, Senior Lecturer, Department of Political Science,
Linnaeus University, Sweden
Contact:(emma.ricknell /at/ lnu.se) <mailto:(emma.ricknell /at/ lnu.se)>
Contact information
Please contact Pernilla Jonsson Severson (atpernilla.severson /at/ lnu.se)
<mailto:(pernilla.severson /at/ lnu.se)>if you have any questions regarding the
chapter proposal.
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