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[Commlist] CFP: Special Issue: Theorizing in Intercultural Communication: Past, Present, and Future
Tue May 14 08:45:08 GMT 2024
Call for Papers: Special Issue: Theorizing in Intercultural
Communication: Past, Present, and Future
Journal of Intercultural Communication Research
Over the last few decades, the field of intercultural communication has
been committed to promoting knowledge and understanding of
intercultural, international, and cross-cultural communication research
across many contexts, including interpersonal, organizational, health,
and many more. Scholars across disciplines, including communication,
psychology, and education, have developed theories and models to
describe, explain, and predict how individuals, groups, and cultures
communicate within and between one another. Recent socio-cultural,
technological, and environmental developments have brought new changes
and challenges regarding the use and application of such theories as
guiding frameworks. As communication scholars have been adapting and
embracing these new dimensions, we found it fitting to dedicate a
special issue to current theorizing in the field of intercultural
communication. Given the rich yet fragmented nature of intercultural
communication research, we seek to go beyond the legacy of foundational
theories and explore new opportunities for theorizing and applying such
knowledge in the field of intercultural communication research.
This special issue offers a platform to discuss theories that have
shaped the field of intercultural communication and consider how they
may need to be adapted to reflect major contemporary issues. Authors are
invited to submit original manuscripts that focus on the development of
intercultural communication theorizing that contribute to our
understanding of individual-level and societal-level phenomena at the
international, intercultural, or cross-cultural level. We encourage
manuscripts from a wide range of scholarly areas and welcome all
methodological approaches. Both empirical research reports and
theoretical or conceptual essays are welcomed. In addition to our
emphasis on methodological pluralism, we encourage submissions that
reflect global, underrepresented, and/or marginalized experiences.
Goals and Scope of the Issue:
We leave it up to contributors to identify what they see as key
theories, in order to gather a wide range of perspectives on what is
perceived as central theoretical developments in intercultural
communication. Topics could include (but are not limited to) empirical
inquiries or theoretical essays on (a) the development of intercultural
communication as a flourishing area of inquiry; (b) the evolution and/or
refinement of foundational theories in light of recent social,
technological, and environmental changes; (c) the role of intercultural
communication theorizing in applied settings (e.g., academic,
organizational, health contexts); (d) the replication (and comparison)
of previous studies in contemporary settings; or (e) the intersection of
intercultural communication theorizing, power, and ideology as agents
and catalysts for change. Specifically, we invite articles engaging with
the following questions and areas of inquiry:
-How have theories in intercultural communication contributed to
delineating the conceptual and methodological scope of the discipline
and positioned it within the global academic community?
-How do key theories in intercultural communication resonate in today's
world and what revisions might be necessary to move these theories and
the field forward?
-How have key theories in intercultural communication been applied to
empirical contexts and how can these findings contribute to current
theorizing in the field?
-What theories in intercultural communication have remained at the
periphery and at what costs? How can these marginalized forms of
knowledge be reclaimed today and applied to clarify contemporary challenges?
-What gaps can still be identified and addressed to reflect major
contemporary technological, cultural, and social issues?
Instructions:
Both empirical research reports and theoretical or conceptual essays are
welcome. For the proposal, authors should submit an extended abstract no
later June 30, 2024. Extended abstracts should consist of no more than
1,000 words (not including references). For empirical research, the
extended abstract should highlight the theoretical rationale and how the
findings will contribute to the focus of the special issue. For
theoretical or conceptual essays, the extended abstract should clearly
elaborate on the conceptual, theoretical, and applied contribution of
the proposed essay. After a review of the extended abstracts, selected
authors will be invited to complete a final manuscript. Final
manuscripts will undergo peer review. Page limits and other requirements
for the final manuscripts will be provided at the time of invitation.
No (APC) payment from the authors is required to publish in this special
issue.
For questions, please contact the editors, Dr. Alice Fanari
((a.fanari /at/ northeastern.edu)), Dr. Diyako Rahmani
((D.Rahmani /at/ massey.ac.nz)), and Dr. Mélodine Sommier
((melodine.c.m.sommier /at/ jyu.fi)).
Extended abstracts should be submitted to the guest editors by June 30,
2024 using the following link: https://forms.gle/J4E5r5seq4z7zn7j9
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