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[ecrea] CfP: Media & Journalism journal devoted to Journalism and Corruption
Wed Jan 28 09:08:44 GMT 2015
CfP: Media & Journalism journal devoted to Journalism and Corruption |
Deadline: January, 30, 2015.
Media & Journalism journal opens a call for papers to be featured in the
issue dedicated to Journalism and Corruption under the Project
"Political Corruption in the Media: A Comparative Perspective" (FCT PTDC
/ CVI-COM / 5244/2012). This call will be open until January 30, 2015,
and accepts articles written in Portuguese, Spanish and English. The
publishing guidelines are available here and articles must be sent to
(cimjmedia /at/ gmail.com).
This call for papers is launched within the project "Political
corruption in the media: a comparative perspective" and is led by Isabel
Ferin Cunha (researcher in media analysis and Political Communication,
Main Researcher in project Journalism and democracy acts (ERDF/FCT,
POCTI/COM/2002/443. The team includes several researchs with experience
in the coordination of previous projects backed by FCT and other
investigation institutions. The head researcher has supervised the
master’s deree thesis of the author of the book Political Scandal in
Portugal. Maia produced a master on Preceptions of Corruption. Serrano,
Gonçalves and Cabrera have extensive experience on media analysis and
Political Communication.
Knowledge of political corruption in the media and social networks from
a comparative perspective has great social and scientific relevance both
in Portugal and in the other countries included in the project.
According to the 2011 Eurobarometer, 97% of the Portuguese believes that
corruption is the major problem in the country. Inquired for national
surveys, the Portuguese claim that their impressions are based on the
media. Studies conducted by [SoTr08] on perceived corruption have
concluded that the Portuguese form their opinion based on the media.
Official figures evidence that the number of corruption trials is low
when compared to the perception of corruption obtained through the
media. Those works do not include the study of corruption in
mediacoverage.The project Political corruption in the media: a
comparative perspective aims to fill in this gap. It is a pioneering
study whose innovative approach consists of: 1. the study of political
corruption in traditional media and in its electronic editions; 2.
studies on social networks, particularly political blogs; 3. its
comparative perspective regarding four countries from the
Iberian-American-African sphere (Brazil, Mozambique, Spain, Portugal).
In those countries, we shall analyse a set of political corruption cases
that have received nation-wide coverage. The corpus will be identified
by each partner and the methodology to be used shall be similar to that
of the Portuguese project. It shall focus on the coverage of political
corruption cases with major impact and international partnership, which
occurred during the period from 2005 to 2010. During this period, the
country has had two elections: for Parliament and for President of the
Republic. Among the candidates to both elections there were politicians
mentioned in political corruption cases. Portugal has been, since March
2011, under a program of international financial assistance, whose
guidelines provide for reforms that can open opportunities for
corruption, especially given the strong promiscuity between public and
private interests.Thefinancial and economic crisis has also resulted in
very negative consequences to the media,generating dependence on
official or semi-official sources and sensationalism. Political
corruption is understood as the abuse of power for one’s own benefit
perpetrated by democratically elected officials, during or after the
exercise of public functions. It involves a diverse range of crimes
committed by current and former political agents, which occur mainly
along the lines of four typical situations: while competing for
political duties, during the exercise of public duties, while
legislating and ruling, as well as after stepping down from office,
while maintaining certain functions in the party and political fields.
Political corruption tends to articulate the domains of politics,
economy, justice and media (BlE02). The methodological strategy of our
research covers both a structural dimension and an operational
dimension. The former addresses the outline of media and political
systems of each individual country included in the project, in light of
the work by [HaMa04]. The analytical instruments are, in this dimension,
documental and statistical research and semi-structured interviews with
media, politics and justice professionals. The operational dimension
consists of an analysis of the apparent content of selected media,
through quantitative and qualitative content analysis, completed with
interviews to journalists who have done work on corruption cases. In
order to pursue an analysis of blogs, we shall resort to new tools and
methodologies provided by Web 2.0.
The project shall produce data on the national contexts of the countries
involved. It shall also contribute to the development of new methods of
linking social sciences and humanities, including comparative studies on
media and journalism in the Iberian region and the Portuguese-speaking
world, for the first time covering the social networks, including blogs,
in order to produce conclusions on their influence in the traditional
media. The results of this research will enable us to design training
and awareness-raising programs in accordance with a scientific basis,
aimed at journalists, local officials, judiciary agents and political
players from the participating countries.
Please see the site:
www.https://politicalcorruptioncimj.wordpress.com/literature-review/
http://www.cimj.org/http://www.cimj.org/
Patrícia Contreiras
Investigadora no Centro de Investigação Media e Jornalismo (www.cimj.org)
Researcher at Center for Media and Journalism
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