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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies (Special Issue: 'Media, Poverty & Inequality')
Wed Mar 01 16:51:44 GMT 2023
Call for Papers: Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies
Special Issue: ‘Media, Poverty and Inequality’
View the full CFP here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-applied-journalism-media-studies#call-for-papers
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-applied-journalism-media-studies#call-for-papers>
The Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies(AJMS) invites
submissions to a Special Issue on Media, Poverty and Inequality.
Media framing of poverty has been shown by many scholars to be highly
problematic (see Golding and Middleton 1982; Devereux 1998; Breen and
Devereux 2003; Devereux 2007; Devereux and Power 2019; Clawson and Trice
2000). Those experiencing poverty and inequality have, variously, been
ignored, demonized and sensationalized, and poverty is more likely to be
explained in terms of individual failings/weaknesses (Lyndon 2019;
Morrisson 2019). Discourses circulate which divide the poor into the
‘deserving’ and ‘undeserving’, with Moral Underclass Discourses ensuring
that the ‘genuineness’ of particular groups experiencing poverty (the
homeless; welfare-recipients; lone-parents; immigrants; Roma, for
example) is called into question (Lens 2002). In this discursive space,
classed, gendered and racialized discourses often intersect when poverty
is alluded to (Edelman 1998; Lens 2002).
In a media setting, the conspicuous silence about the underlying
structural causes of poverty and how it might be reduced or eliminated
through redistributive means is notable (Harkins and Lugo-Ocando 2018;
Lens 2002). 35 years ago, Devereux (1988) for example, noted how
reporting on poverty suffered from source bias in that it relied heavily
on the perspectives and actions of elite figures rather than the poor
themselves. Equally, charitable as opposed to structural responses were
favoured, thus permitting existing unequal power structures to go
unchallenged. The long-standing deficit in terms of how media report on
poverty has, if anything, been exacerbated in recent years, with media
conglomeration resulting in even more infotainment and even less
critical media coverage of issues such as poverty and inequality
(Shildrick 2018).
This Special Edition seeks to examine such continuities and changes in
media coverage of poverty and inequality and consider the ideological
underpinnings of how poverty and inequality are explained to the public
by both legacy and new news media organisations. Academics,
practitioners, and researchers with an active interest in the following
themes are especially invited to submit a research paper:
*
Media coverage of class and poverty,
*
‘Deservedness’ versus ‘Undeservedness’,
*
Welfare and immigration,
*
Media coverage of food poverty/food banks,
*
Homelessness and housing crisis,
*
The capacity or not of citizen journalism to provide alternative
counterpoints to hegemonic media discourses concerning poverty,
*
Media stigmatization of poor neighbourhoods,
*
Media discourses concerning poverty in ‘new’ media settings,
*
Media constructions of ‘the new poor’,
*
Source bias and media explanations of poverty,
*
Ethnographies of news production concerning social welfare, poverty.
TIMELINE
Abstract (300 to 500 words) – 7 April 2023
Accepted abstracts notification – 14 April 2023
Full paper submission – 30 September 2023
Accepted papers notification – 15 November 2023
Revisions and Publishing Contract – 30 December 2023
Final submissions – 29 March 2024
Date of print –June 2024
The acceptance of submission will be based on the quality of research,
study or discussion, the originality of the paper, and the relevance of
the contribution to the subject focus of the Special Issue. All
submissions will be subjected to a double-blind peer review process.
Final papers should be 6,000-8,000 words in length.
CORRESPONDENCE
Please direct enquiries and abstract submissions to (martin.j.power /at/ ul.ie)
<mailto:(martin.j.power /at/ ul.ie)>.
Visit the journal website here:
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-appliedjournalism-media-studies
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-appliedjournalism-media-studies>
Guest Editors: Martin J. Power ((Martin.j.power /at/ ul.ie)
<mailto:(Martin.j.power /at/ ul.ie)>) and Eoin Devereux ((Eoin.devereux /at/ ul.ie)
<mailto:(Eoin.devereux /at/ ul.ie)>)
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