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[Commlist] CfP: Studies in Communication Sciences (SComS) - "Changes in communication in, from, and about higher education institutions"
Tue Jun 01 21:10:36 GMT 2021
Thematic Section on "Changes in communication in, from, and about higher
education institutions"
Studies in Communication Sciences (SComS)
Deadline: December 12, 2021
Edited by Silke Fürst, Daniel Vogler, Isabel Sörensen, Mike S. Schäfer
(University of Zurich, Department of Communication and Media Research
IKMZ, Switzerland)
We are seeking contributions for a thematic section of Studies in
Communication Sciences (SComS) exploring changes in communication of
higher education institutions. SComS is a peer-reviewed journal of
communication and media research with platinum open-access (no article
processing charges).
Higher education institutions (HEIs) are pivotal organizations in modern
societies (Schäfer & Fähnrich, 2020). In past decades, the higher
education sector has expanded considerably in many countries, with rapid
increases in research output, growing student enrollment, and newly
founded colleges and universities. New public management reforms and a
growing need for societal legitimation have led many HEIs to prioritize
communication, i.e., to establish communication offices, pursue
branding, marketing, and reputation management, and to professionalize
their communication efforts on traditional channels, websites, and
social media (Davies & Horst, 2016; Elken, Stensaker, & Dedze, 2018;
Marcinkowski, Kohring, Fürst, & Friedrichsmeier, 2014; Raupp &
Osterheider, 2019; Schwetje, Hauser, Böschen, & Leßmöllmann, 2020;
Vogler & Schäfer, 2020). This has resulted in competition for public
visibility, involving researchers, HEI leadership, and professional
communicators at central levels, research centers, and departments
(Crettaz von Roten & Entradas, 2018; Entradas et al., 2020;
Friedrichsmeier & Fürst, 2012; Koivumäki & Wilkinson, 2020; McKinnon,
Black, Bobillier, Hood, & Parker, 2019; Rödder, 2020; Watermeyer &
Lewis, 2018). This competition could fuel the mediatization of
scientific organizations (Peters, Heinrichs, Jung, Kallfass, & Petersen,
2008; Scheu, Volpers, Summ, & Blöbaum, 2014) and poses new risks and
challenges, from unintended and potentially dysfunctional effects to
scandals and crises (Fähnrich, Danyi, & Nothhaft, 2015; Schwarz & Büker,
2019). However, scant research has been conducted on how communication
in, from, and about HEIs has developed over time and changed as a result
of transformations in higher education and the media landscape. The
Covid-19 pandemic has also had an impact on higher education
communication that has yet to be explored. Moreover, several studies
have focused on practices and structures of communication offices,
whereas little attention has been paid to members of the administrative
board (rectorate) and their changing perceptions and strategies
regarding the public communication and representation of their
particular organizations.
While communication offices at HEIs have expanded, journalism has
suffered from reductions in staff and resources, resulting in an
increasing imbalance between science journalism and university public
relations (Göpfert, 2007; Guenther, 2019; Vogler & Schäfer, 2020).
Researchers argue that this development poses a risk that fact-based,
independent, and critical reporting on science could decline while the
dissemination of strategic, affirmative, and sometimes even misleading
information could increase (Bauer & Howard, 2009; Göpfert, 2007;
Weingart, 2017; Wormer, 2017), thereby jeopardizing trust in science and
HEIs in the mid-to-long term (Weingart & Joubert, 2019). However, we
know little about these interrelations, about the quality and ethics of
HEIs’ communication as well as about news coverage and public
perceptions of HEIs and their changes over the past years and decades.
Existing studies indicate a growing diversity of communication formats
and media channels addressing various stakeholders, including the
proliferation of events and media releases as well as the increasing use
of online channels (Lo, Huang, & Peters, 2019; Metag & Schäfer, 2017;
Raupp & Osterheider, 2019; Vogler, 2020). While communication on social
media allows for direct and visible interactions with stakeholders, more
research on its actual importance and influence is needed. First results
show that many universities use social media but fall short of utilizing
them fully and only tend to engage in minimal dialogue with stakeholders
(Entradas et al., 2020; McAllister, 2012; Metag & Schäfer, 2017; VanDyke
& Lee, 2020). However, the role of social media communication – and
online channels in general – may have undergone transformations in
recent years and in relation to the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
We invite the submission of empirical analyses and theoretical /
conceptual contributions from scholars of organizational communication,
communication management, strategic communication, science communication
and journalism, higher education studies, organizational sociology,
sociology of science, and other related fields and disciplines. We
welcome submissions related (but not limited) to the following areas and
topics:
* Changes in the resources, practices, strategies, and influences of
communication offices at HEIs
* The professionalization of HEI communication and communicators,
e.g., with respect to professional training, evaluations of
communication processes and practices or in terms of ethical
standards and reflections
* Changing representations of HEIs in media / public / online discourses
* The uses, perceptions, and effects of HEI communication and coverage
among various target groups / stakeholders
* The transformation of relationships between different actors
involved in HEI communication, e.g., communication professionals,
rectorates of HEIs, policy makers, scientists, journalists,
students, citizens
* Changes in HEI communication resulting from digitization
* The shifting importance of crisis communication and Covid-19-related
changes in HEIs’ communication
* Communication in, from, and about HEIs in light of the mediatization
of science
* The evolving role of public visibility for the legitimation of HEIs
Submission guidelines
The journal welcomes submissions in English, German, French, or Italian,
but the abstracts must be in English. All submissions should be uploaded
on the SComS platform: https://www.hope.uzh.ch/scoms/about/submissions
<https://www.hope.uzh.ch/scoms/about/submissions>.
Paper submissions will be due 12 December 2021. Final acceptance depends
on a double-blind peer review process. The expected publishing date of
this special issue is November 2022.However, early submissions that
successfully pass the review process will also be immediately published
online first. Contributions that receive positive reviews but are not
accepted for the Thematic Section may be considered for publication in a
subsequent SComS issue within the General Section.
For any further information please contact Silke Fürst
((s.fuerst /at/ ikmz.uzh.ch) <mailto:(s.fuerst /at/ ikmz.uzh.ch)>).
Timeline:
* Full papers are required no later than December 12, 2021
* 1st review will be provided by March 15, 2022
* 2nd submission should be submitted by May 15, 2022
* 2nd review and notification of acceptance will be provided by July
31, 2022
* Final papers should be submitted by September 15, 2022
* Publication of the Thematic Section is scheduled for November 2022
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