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[Commlist] CfP iCS Symposium: Social Movements and Parties in a Fractured Media Landscape
Wed Jan 09 12:35:59 GMT 2019
Social Movements and Parties in a Fractured Media Landscape
Cosmos (The Centre for Social Movement Studies), Scuola Normale
Superiore, Florence, Italy, 1-2 July 2019
Deadline for abstracts: 15 March 2019. Abstracts/biographies/contact
details should be sent to mailto:(dan.mercea.1 /at/ city.ac.uk).
A selection of papers presented at the symposium will be published in a
special issue of the journal Information, Communication & Society (iCS).
More info:
http://cosmos.sns.it/news/call-for-papers-social-movements-and-parties-in-a-fractured-media-landscape/.
This two-day symposium held under the auspices of the journal
'Information, Communication & Society' (iCS) considers the shifting
terrain of contemporary democratic politics. Over the course of this
decade, a wave of popular discontent swept across much of the world,
stoked by the financial crisis, the ensuing austerity and deep
disenchantment with political institutions in both liberal democracies
and autocracies. Social movements channelled and articulated aspirations
for greater democratic accountability and participation, more equitable
economic policies, greater concern for social welfare and climate
change. Against a secular decline in party membership, voter turnout and
institutional trust, movements have rekindled a participatory imaginary
challenging the status quo of many democratic countries.
Criticized for a supposed inability to enact the political and social
change they advocated, social movements were harbingers of a new
political vehicle, the movement party. The rise and electoral success of
party movements-from Podemos in Spain, to Cinque Stelle in Italy, Jobbik
in Hungary, Momentum in the UK or La Republique en Marche in
France-captured aspirations for progressive change as well as anger and
anxieties about globalisation, migration and the socio-economic and
cultural upheaval that such processes have wrought. Occupying the
breadth of the ideological spectrum-from the far right to the radical
left-these movements put forward a radical criticism of political or
media institutions, advocating participatory as well as populist
reformulations of notions of citizenship, civic practices and
organisational structures. Against the odds, they have scaled up,
endured and have the potential to become entrenched despite the
initially limited resources available to them. Notwithstanding their
ideological differences, digital media appear to have provided important
opportunities for the emergence of techno-populist 'connective'
movements and parties in media systems largely unfavourable to them,
thereby posing renewed challenges to incumbents.
Considering the above, the symposium will grapple with such questions
as: what does the rising prominence of social and/or party movements
mean for democracy? What are the consequences of their rise for
representative democracy? What explains their presence on both the left
and the right of the political spectrum? How does their digital media
use bear on their organisational structures and cultures or their
relationship with the media?
The symposium invites scholars and other informed observers to present
papers discussing how over the last decade, social movements, party
movements and other collective actors emerging in the fractured
contemporary media landscape have produced knowledge, learn and develop
new or overhaul existing participatory cultures and techno-populist
identities; congeal competitive political agendas that challenge
established political positions; rekindle trust and even faith in
political leadership and democratic governance; (re)shaped
(un)conventional citizenship norms, practices and action repertoires,
harnessing affordances of self-publication technologies, data analytics
and news media values to maximize their visibility, appeal and reach
while also at times critiquing the dominant commercial logics of media
and social media companies.
Building on these considerations, we encourage submissions that address
but are not limited to the following aims:
. Discuss media strategies and/or tactics of social and/or party
movements and individual activists, how they relate to ongoing
transformation of media systems, shifting media diets and practices that
are increasingly dominated by the use of digital and social media; . Map
the use of digital technologies in social and/or party movements, the
extent to which it inflects on organisational networks, structures and
cultures and whether these depart from late-modern and pre-crisis models
of political organisation; . Consider how support for social and/or
party movements is articulated publicly in squares, on social platforms,
through partisan outlets, in mainstream media or combinations thereof
and potential reasons for them;
. Investigate the language use of social and/or party movements-and
responses to it by institutions and various section of the
public-particularly as it challenges deliberative norms or if it is
associated with disruptive communication techniques such as
click-baiting, trolling, spoofing, making use of disinformation or
misinformation;
. Reflect on the conversion of some movements into parties, the tensions
emerging between the grassroots and the leadership once social and/or
party movements enter institutions and the extent to which digital media
may mitigate or exacerbate such conflicts;
. Investigate knowledge transfer and learning processes that transform
movements, their support base, organization or goals and the role of
digital media in such processes; . Propose ethical methodological
innovations especially through the deployment of trace data gathering
tools that can facilitate access to and rapport with hard-to-reach,
research-apprehensive movement actors like far-right movement parties;
. Develop innovative qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods
techniques to explore the use of digital media within social and/ or
party movements; . Reflect on the bearing of (digital) media and
communication strategies and tactics on the electoral success of social
and/or party movements in local, national or European elections;
. Explore contrasts in the popular mobilization and/or electoral
success of populist party movements on the right and the left while
contemplating the contribution that digital and social media made to it.
We invite 500-word abstracts outlining empirical, theoretical or
policy-oriented papers that address these or cognate topics. The
abstract should point to study conclusions. It should be accompanied by
a 100-word biography of the presenter(s) together with contact details.
Abstracts/biographies/contact details should be emailed to Dan Mercea
((dan.mercea.1 /at/ city.ac.uk)).
All papers presented at the symposium will receive comments from a
discussant. Following the symposium, paper authors will be invited to
submit their manuscripts for publication in a special issue of the
journal Information, Communication & Society.
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