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[Commlist] Call for papers – Comunicazione Politica n. 3/2021 – Covid crisis and political communication
Wed Jan 27 11:40:03 GMT 2021
Call for papers – Comunicazione Politica n. 3/2021 – Covid crisis and
political communication
Editors: Guido Legnante (Università degli Studi di Pavia) and Sergio
Splendore (Università degli Studi di Milano)
Since the first months of 2020, the COVID-19 crisis has developed
globally, generating consequences and reactions in various aspects of
social life. One of the most specific and characterizing features of
this crisis lies in the coexistence and interconnection of multiple
elements of change in (so far) seemingly distant fields. The crisis
immediately turned out to be “hyperconnected”, due to its genesis,
geography, dynamics, institutions, impact, perspectives, communication,
information, protagonists, as well as the centrality of the digital
infrastructure that innervates communication and activities in the
contemporary world.
In its most directly political aspects, the crisis has acquired great
media visibility and has brought to the fore the issue of the connection
between scientific and political communication. The stress to which
healthcare institutions have been subjected has led to unprecedented
responses from government institutions at different levels, in an
attempt to reconcile the tackling of pandemic emergencies, the
subsequent economic crisis and the reactions of public opinion. The
emergency has also highlighted the role of “fake news” in shaping the
public opinion and in affecting individual behavior and the progressive
choices of decision makers. As scholars of political communication well
know, the crowding of information and narratives in a hybrid and
high-choice communicative environment constitutes a challenge for the
functioning of democracies. This generates research questions about
topics such as information disorders, the possible segmentation of the
public into “echo chambers”, and the ways in which they impact the
quality and formation of
public opinion. These dynamics further intersect with the unprecedented
visibility of science and the urgency of policy making in light of the
political and economic repercussions of the pandemic on individual
well-being, sociality, and values.
This monographic issue of ComPol intends to highlight the political
communication mechanisms that have been contributing to shaping the
development and outcomes of this crisis. We therefore encourage the
submission of contributions that effectively combine a solid theoretical
approach to research questions, an appropriate methodological approach
to the collection of empirical materials, and an accurate data analysis.
In order to try to overcome the idiosyncratic explanations of
intrinsically complex phenomena, articles of a comparative nature and
more broadly a comparative perspective are also strongly encouraged.
We have identified four thematic areas of particular interest: due to
their interconnected nature, they could give rise to proposals that span
across multiple areas.
The first is the area of decision-making, primarily involving the
governments and institutions that have had to face the challenges of the
pandemic. This area may explore the role of political communication by
national governments, and the way in which they have interacted more or
less closely - and more or less controversially - with local governments
and supranational institutions. Further points of interest are the
different geographies and timing of the contagion, as well as government
responses and their consequences intersected with the characteristics of
their political systems. Consider for example the nature of the regime
(for instance, the Chinese dictatorship); the presence of populist
governments (such as, among the others, in Brazil, USA, Hungary);
political culture in terms of a country’s readiness to track and control
citizens’ behavior (e.g., in Asia, South Korea and Japan, or, in Europe,
Great Britain and Sweden); and the peculiar dynamics in the interactions
of majorities and oppositions. In short, a composite framework and a
field of comparative research on how various government institutions
have communicated the - and during the - crisis: states, regions,
executives, oppositions, parliaments, healthcare institutions, parties.
A second thematic area is related to science and its relationship with
debate and political decisions. The COVID-19 crisis highlighted several
science-related issues worth investigating: first, a crisis in the
credibility of science and the questioning of the role of expert
mediators, as already observed in
the debates on climate change and vaccines. Second, the emergence of old
and new conspiracy theories and the spread of fake news and
disinformation concerning the origins and management of the pandemic.
Third, partially as a consequence of the first two phenomena, the
problematic dynamics of science communication and its translation into
more widespread communication models.
A third thematic area concerns media and their crucial role as mediators
between political decisions and the formation of public opinion. Some of
the most interesting aspects of this area (and in clear relation to the
previous points as well as to the next one) are the question of
competition vs. consensus in the formation of dominant frames (e.g. in
connection with political competition) and the politicization and
popularization of influential scientist figures.
A fourth area of research concerns citizens and their relationship with
the aspects listed above. In order to understand the development of
their attitudes and behaviors, we can turn to the interaction between
citizens’ characteristics and the three elements mentioned above: from
trust in political actors and science, to the use of and trust in the
media, to the modality of formation and expression of opinions and the
consequent behavioral choices. It is also important to consider that
these dynamics unfolded in a somewhat new context of technological
“hyper-connection”. This issue is therefore open to contributions that
address one or more (as is more likely, given the “hyper-connected”
nature of the crisis and its implications) of these topics with a
theoretically wellgrounded analysis which ideally should be as
comparative and documented as possible.
Proposals (maximum 1,000 words excluding bibliography) are required to
illustrate the objectives of the paper, the research question and the
methodology adopted.
They have to be sent to (rivista /at/ compol.it), to (guido.legnante /at/ unipv.it)
and to (sergio.splendore /at/ unimi.it) by *March 25th 2021*.
The selection of proposals will take place by *April 10th*.
The deadline for submitting manuscripts is *June 15th*. Manuscripts will
undergo a double blind review system.
_No payment or fees are required_
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