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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Media Use and Political Engagement: Cross-Cultural Approaches
Tue Mar 03 04:36:32 GMT 2020
Call for papers:
Media Use and Political Engagement: Cross-Cultural Approaches
Special Section in the International Journal of Communication (IJOC)
Guest editors: Özen Odağ, Frank M. Schneider, Larisa Buhin, &
Jinhee Kim
We cordially invite empirical research articles on media use and
political engagement taking up a cross-culturally comparative design!!!
Democracies around the world are struggling with the global decline of
civic and political engagement, especially among younger generations
(Bessant, Farthing, & Watts, 2016; Smith & Thompson, 2015). Recent data
from World Value Surveys and the Eurobarometer have yielded alarming
results (Whiteley, 2012), showing that young people in most Western
countries are increasingly dissatisfied with and disinterested in
liberal democracy (Foa & Mounk, 2017; Sloam, 2016). At the same time,
this overall decline is paralleled by an increase of new forms of
engagement such as lifestyle politics, Internet activism, and political
consumerism (Dalton, 2004; 2006; Theocharis & van Deth, 2018).
These developments have contributed to a new understanding of
citizenship, one in which citizens are increasingly engaging through
informal, creative, participatory, and digitally networked activities,
thus moving political engagement into the domain of entertainment and
personalized communication (Park, Kee, & Valenzuela, 2009). Activities
that formerly took place offline (such as demonstrations, signing
petitions, political discussions) have now largely moved into the online
sphere and work in concert with offline civic engagement activity. They
include a wide range of phenomena such as using social networks to
access information, using digital platforms to exchange views, using
mobile applications to access government services, and organizing
protests on social networks (Bala, 2014). Many of these emergent
behaviors are not yet fully understood. Their global rise across the
world as expressed in countless examples of collective action in the
Middle East, Asia, Europe, and the USA, however, render them a timely
topic to study from a cross-cultural perspective.
Current scholarship focuses especially on the social and psychological
factors that connect media use and political engagement (Hsiao, 2018;
Hsiao & Yang, 2018; Valenzuela, Correa, & Gil de Zúñiga, 2018). Social
identity, efficacy, injustice perceptions, emotions, values, and system
justification beliefs have been identified as crucial psychosocial
predictors of digitally enabled political engagement (Hsiao, 2018; Jost
et al., 2018; Valenzuela, Correa, & Gil de Zúñiga, 2018; Van Zomeren,
Postmes, & Spears, 2008). At the same time, our understanding of these
effects has remained insufficient and largely confined to Western
democratic contexts (such as Europe and the USA; see Hsiao, 2018, for
an overview of this extensive research). Although a few authors have
taken up a non-Western perspective and investigated such mechanisms of
political engagement in the non-Western world (e.g. Hsiao, 2018;
Valenzuela, Correa, & Gil de Zúñiga, 2018; Wibisono, Louis, & Jetten,
2019), current scholarship is impressively void of cross-culturally
comparative approaches to the role of media in political engagement.
This Special Section aims to highlight the influence of cultural factors
(societies, cultures, cultural identities, political regimes etc.) on
the relationship between media use and political engagement. We are
particularly looking for cross-culturally comparative empirical studies,
both qualitative and quantitative, that deal with the role of media use
in political engagement. A central aim of the studies should be to
understand cultural variance in the theories that have been produced on
the topic. Studies should thus focus on a minimum of two cultural
contexts that are compared.
The Special Section is open for a variety of topics. Examples include,
but are not limited to:
- Cross-cultural studies on the role of satirical new media formats,
such as political talk-shows and political Internet memes, for political
engagement;
- Cross-cultural studies on the role of specific social media platforms,
such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, and other non-Western
variants, for political engagement;
- Cross-cultural studies on the role of entertainment media, such as
political movies and video games, for political engagement;
- Cross-cultural studies on the role of political, religious, cultural
identity in the relationship between media use and political engagement;
- Cross-cultural studies on the role of ‘cultured’ emotions and values
in the relationship between media use and political engagement;
- Cross-cultural studies on social-psychological mechanisms in the
context of echo chambers, fake news, and propaganda
The review process is two-tiered and comprises the submission of an
extended abstract and a full paper. Full papers will be invited only if
they are accepted in the prior review of extended abstracts. Extended
abstracts are due April 20, 2020; full papers are due September 20,
2020 (see time line below).
The extended abstract (1,000 words max. excluding tables and references)
should present previously unpublished work on a topic of clear interest
to the Special Section. The extended abstract would typically include
information about the cross-cultural purpose, novelty, significance, or
knowledge gap being addressed, the cross-cultural methodological design
of the study, and present cross-cultural results, conclusions and
implications of the work conducted. The extended abstract must provide a
title, a short 150-word abstract (not counted towards the 1,000 words),
and up to five keywords that identify the thematic focus of the work.
If accepted, the final full paper (8,900 words) must be turned in by
September 20, 2020. For further details on formatting, author
guidelines, and submission process, please visit https://ijoc.org/
index.php/ijoc/about/submissions#authorGuidelines.
Time line:
Submission Extended Abstracts: April 20, 2020
Submission Full Papers: September 20, 2020
Review Process: September 2020 - January 2021
Revision Process: January - April 2021
Resubmission: May 2021
Final Proofs: June/July 2021
Publication: September/October 2021
All papers in the IJOC are published as open access articles without
publication fees for the authors. Submissions engaging in open science
practices will be given particular consideration in the review process.
We also especially welcome preregistered studies.
We very much look forward to your extended abstracts!
For submission of extended abstracts, please contact
(oezen.odag /at/ touroberlin.de). Please use this email also for further
inquiry on the topic and procedure of our Special Section.
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