Archive for 2024

[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]

[Commlist] Cfp: Vol. 24 N.º 45 (2024) Youth views of the world

Tue Feb 27 14:16:28 GMT 2024



Cfp: Vol. 24 N.º 45 (2024) Youth views of the world and contexts of digital citizenship

Title: Youth views of the world and contexts of digital citizenship

(No payment is required from the authors)

Editors:
Maria José Brites - Universidade Lusófona, CICANT; (maria.jose.brites /at/ ulusofona.pt) <mailto:(maria.jose.brites /at/ ulusofona.pt)> Teresa Sofia Castro - Universidade Lusófona, CICANT; (teresa.sofia.castro /at/ ulusofona.pt) <mailto:(teresa.sofia.castro /at/ ulusofona.pt)> Paloma Contreras-Pulido - UniversidadeInternacional de La Rioja (UNIR); (paloma.contreras /at/ unir.net) <mailto:(paloma.contreras /at/ unir.net)>

Topics:
Children, youth, and news
Children, youth, and contexts of digital citizenship
Subtopics:

Algorithms and datafication
Audiences and news
Socialisation, families, and peer influence
News literacies
Information disorders
News resistance and avoidance
Theoretical reflection and future perspectives of the field
Methodological discussions
Participatory media
Decolonization of the field
Glocal news contexts
Glocal digital citizenship contexts


In this special issue, we aim to capture theoretical and empirical reflections that shed light on how, why, and where young people follow, understand and express what is currently happening in the world in the context of digital citizenship and information disorders (Wardle & Derakhshan, 2017). The COVID-19 pandemic and recent wars accelerated a torrent of fake news and other information disorders (Galan et al., 2019, Frau-Meigs et al, 2017), in which social media platforms revealed underlying ambivalences. This is why it is so pressing to consider diverse approaches in the investigation that identifies what, how and where young people from diverse contexts and geographies propose their views and expressions of what is happening in the world. By anticipating normative and/or decolonised definitions of news, we aim to apprehend research that assesses themes related with youth voices and views of the world, their (dis)connection with news and contexts of digital citizenship.

The research continually points to a shift from the traditional journalism environments to new opportunities for consumption and production (Clark and Marchi, 2017), fostering participative processes. By proposing the concept of “connective journalism”, Clark and Marchi (2017) highlight the need for sharing, having a self-view of the news stories, and considering making their stories. They also note a disruption between young audiences' needs and news outlets.

What are the social environments where these processes are grounded? Even if the peer group influence has an impact, family, and in particular parents, are at the centre of the socialisation process for seeking news and different views of the world (Brites et al., 2017; Edgerly et al, 2018a; Lemish, 2007; Silveira, 2019), including contexts for operating digital devices (Edgerly et al, 2018a). Self-socialization is found in other studies regarding youth information consumption: incidental and leisure (Boczkowski et al, 2018) and news avoidance and resistance (Brites e Ponte, 2018; Edgerly et al, 2018b).

These sociocultural environments pose additional challenges to news brands and the production of stories that fit young people’s interests and expectations. It is thus imperative to reflect on these timely issues, namely considering how young people regard and deal with algorithms (Swart, 2021), algorithmic literacy, and what are the implications for information selection and consumption processes in their everyday lives, and even to observe how in some cases this content is used for participatory, prosocial and citizen purposes, shaping initiatives that promote social change.

This special issue [under the project Youth, News and Digital Citizenship - YouNDigital (PTDC/COM-OUT/0243/2021); https://youndigital.com <https://youndigital.com/>] invites articles that theoretically and/or empirically tackle these and other dimensions, considering youth layers in terms of social, educational, gender, and cultural diversity, which demands to be studied and analysed within their relationship with digital media, news, platforms, and digital citizenship.

IMPORTANT DATES

Deadline for submitting articles: March 15, 2024
Review process: March-June 2024
Editors' decision: July 2024
Expected publication date: October 2024

Authors must indicate the special issue to which they are submitting the article.

Revista Media & Jornalismo (RMJ) is an open-access peer-reviewed scientific journal that operates in a double-blind review process and is indexed in Scopus. Each submitted work will be distributed to two reviewers previously invited to evaluate it, according to academic quality, originality, and relevance to the objectives and scope of the theme of this edition of the journal.

Articles can be submitted in English, Spanish, or Portuguese.

Manuscripts must be submitted through the journal's website (https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/mj <https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/mj>). When accessing RMJ for the first time, you must register to be able to submit your article and accompany it throughout the editorial process. Consult the Instructions for Authors and Conditions for Submission.

For more information, contact: (patriciacontreiras /at/ fcsh.unl.pt) <mailto:(patriciacontreiras /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)>


---------------
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/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------




[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]