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[Commlist] cfp: Journalism Practice special issue on disinformation
Sat Jun 12 06:23:13 GMT 2021
“Disinformation studies as an emerging research field”
Abstract deadline: September 1, 2021
Full paper deadline: March 2, 2022
INTRO
This special issue of Journalism Practice looks at the complexities of
disinformation and its implications on society. The number of studies
that were already growing increased exponentially with Covid-19. The
main goal of this special issue is to develop a set of studies and
policies that allow us to identify and contribute to combat and
effectively minimize the phenomena of disinformation, misinformation and
manipulation in the journalistic field.
In addition to fake news, the study of disinformation in the
journalistic field includes theoretical paradigms and empirical
approaches that go beyond those: bias, concealment of facts, agenda
building, strategic use of sources, mobilization of emotion, empathic
media and omission of data are studied in other contexts of journalism
studies helping to clarify this new phenomenon.
There is a vast experience in the media effects theory, whose
researchers studied, in due course, a set of phenomena of information
and manipulation that today, with the necessary adaptations, constitute
a corpus of examples and inspiration for new researches in different
contexts.
Finally, new research trends began to emerge which constitute a valuable
theoretical and experimental corpus for the contemporary and present
times: empathic media, recognition of patterns of reading,
identification of behavior and consumption patterns with far-reaching
consequences around on social, cultural and political life and
considerable impact on democratic, electoral and civic participation
practices.
This special issue is spurred by an October 2020 COVID-19
#DisInforStudies Seminar (http://labcom.ubi.pt/disinforstudies/
<http://labcom.ubi.pt/disinforstudies/>), held by LabCom at University
of Beira Interior, Portugal, and with the participation of some
important scholars like Edson Tandoc Jr., Karin Wahl-Jorgensen or J.
Scott Brennen. Also, by a September 2021 ECREA post-conference
“Disinformation studies: perspectives to an emerging research field”
(www.ecrea2021.eu <http://www.ecrea2021.eu>).
The contributions to this special issue, from different national and
international contexts, can focus (among others) on the following topics:
- Identifying through case studies, examples of media whether revealing
weaknesses or, instead, using strategies particularly directed to fight
the phenomenon;
- Discussing new manipulation and disinformation strategies, considering
in those the study of the audience from the perspective of their
manipulation through the mobilization of emotions;
- Discussing a theoretical and systematic framework for the analysis of
disinformation and manipulation phenomena;
- Identifying the use of devices and tools that help to combat the
phenomenon of disinformation;
- Identifying professional practices and professional routines that help
to combat the disinformation phenomena;
- Identifying new and/or different journalistic practices that rise with
disinformation growth (independent fact checkers and fact checking
sections in newsrooms, etc);
- Identifying what strategies are local media adopting, considering the
growth of digital audiences and smaller newsrooms;
- Identifying and proposing public policies to decision-makers that
helps to minimize and fighting disinformation phenomena;
- Discussing the relevance of a subfield called disinformation studies.
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
If you are interested in participating in this special issue, please
submit an extended abstract (500-750 words), accompanied by a
100-150-word bio introducing your relevant expertise. Abstracts should
be sent no later than September 1st 2021, to
(disinfo.specialissue /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(disinfo.specialissue /at/ gmail.com)>.
Upon selection, scholars will be invited to submit full papers. Article
submissions should be about 8,000 words in length, including references,
and are subject to full blind peer-review, following the peer-review
procedure of Journalism Practice. Manuscripts will be submitted through
the journal’s ScholarOne website (select “Disinformation studies as an
emerging research field”).
No payment from the authors will be required.
TIMELINE
Deadline for submission of extended abstracts: September 1, 2021
Decision on abstracts: October 15, 2021
Deadline for full-papers submission: March 1, 2022
Publication: Online first after acceptance, and later in a forthcoming
issue of Journalism Practice
GUEST-EDITORS
João Carlos Correia, University of Beira Interior, Portugal
(jcorreia /at/ ubi.pt) <mailto:(jcorreia /at/ ubi.pt)>
Pedro Jerónimo, University of Beira Interior, Portugal
(pj /at/ ubi.pt) <mailto:(pj /at/ ubi.pt)>
Inês Amaral, University of Coimbra, Portugal
(ines.amaral /at/ uc.pt) <mailto:(ines.amaral /at/ uc.pt)>
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