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[Commlist] CFP: Soft Power and Public Diplomacy in the Age of AI
Fri Jun 07 02:11:16 GMT 2024
*CALL FOR PROPOSALS*
*Soft Power and Public Diplomacy in the Age of AI*
*Anthem Studies in Soft Power and Public Diplomacy* is a comprehensive
multidisciplinary corpus of work, incorporating titles addressing actors
and issues; political, economic, social and cultural aspects;
technological and normative aspects; evaluation, training and policy
development. The series promotes innovative and consequential work in
the conjoined areas of soft power and public diplomacy, by scholars in
fields or disciplines including anthropology, cultural studies,
economics, geography, law, history, international communication,
linguistics, media, museum studies, philosophy, security studies and
sociology.
/Anthem Studies in Soft Power and Public Diplomacy/ series editor, Naren
Chitty, is developing an *Anthem Handbook of Soft Power and Public
Diplomacy in the Age of AI *with Craig Hayden, Hendrik Ohnesorge, and
Chenjun Wang._[i] <#_edn1>_ We are presently seeking chapter proposals
from potential contributors. Thoughts about the Handbook are laid out
under the textbox (below) that outlines the Anthem Studies series. We
are seeking proposals (500-word max with ten keywords) and biodata (250
words max) by the _end of September 2024_. The intention is to
commission chapters by the end of the year or earlier. Book chapters
will be limited to 6000 words all inclusive. While not essential, it
would be of value if chapters could lead to proposals of expansions as
books for the /Anthem Studies in Soft Power and Public Diplomacy./
/
/
Critical perspectives that examine dangers and benefits to society and
individuals are welcome as well as administrative ones that go beyond
celebrating performative excellence or prescribing ways of implementing
successful public diplomacy and/or soft power generation programs,
through critical commentary. Critical perspectives may relate to
discussion of theories, methods, technology deployment, state policies
and strategies, campaigns, human rights, and influencer suppression to
name a few possibilities. On occasion chapters on public diplomacy feel
as if they serve the public diplomacy of states, something we would like
to discourage in the edited volume. Our preference is critical inquiry
that goes beyond observing what actors do, to consequences and
recommendations.
_Questioning the relationship between soft power and public
diplomacy._ The series’ aims (in the textbox above) speak of ‘the
conjoined areas of soft power and public diplomacy’. A theoretical
question that will benefit from discussion is whether these areas
continue to be enjoined or if not, what is their relationship. Recent
theorisation within soft power publications, of influence through
attraction (such as in experiential theory that has a philosophic base)
have themselves critiqued aspects of soft power conceptualisation._[ii]
<#_edn2>_ Additionally the emergence of a rapidly growing digital space
for communication action has led to inquiry and theorisation on digital
diplomacy. There would be merit in exploring whether recent research on
public diplomacy in the digital sphere, such as digital diplomacy, and
recent scholarship on influence through attraction are of relevance to
each other._[iii] <#_edn3>_ Research on concepts that overlap with soft
power such as charisma also need further exploration. _[iv] <#_edn4>_
_How elastic is the term public diplomacy?_ Public diplomacy has
atomised, branched, metastasized, or segmented, as the case maybe. It
can be subsumed by diplomacy, implemented in parts through international
public relations, strategic communication, and place-branding._[v]
<#_edn5>_emphasize cultural diplomacy and intercultural relations as
significant parts or things apart, focus on digital diplomacy – to
mention areas that come to mind. The term also figures in discussions of
propaganda that include Ellulian notions of technique, and digital
rhetoric in analysis of content._[vi] <#_edn6>_What are the
relationships among these and between them and attraction-based
influence? In what ways are content fabrication (the innuendo is
intended) affected by digital technology for the various subsets or
parallel sets of public diplomacy?
_Actors and factors:_ Contributors may consider several types of actors,
domains of digital diplomacy, and stances of communication, and
audiences. Prominent among actors are states and interstate
organizations. States and organizations tend to be strategic with a
preference for measuring outcomes. Soft Power ranking tables have become
a fixture and have attracted serious inquiry._[vii] <#_edn7>_Some state
agencies advocate a ‘hands off approach’ that resonates with Joseph
Nye’s observation that ‘public diplomacy is done more /by/ publics,
government find themselves caught in a dilemma about control’._[viii]
<#_edn8>_This statement is also open to debate. However, there are
various non-state actors including diasporic communities, intentional
influencers, and publics whose responses to content entangle with
algorithms in ways that impact the calculus of states. Potential domains
of digital diplomacy increase by the day on the Internet-of-Everything.
_State strategy and demotic disruption._ The proposed volume will
present contributions capturing disruptive transformations in how
international actors engage publics in pursuance of foreign policy
objectives, at home and abroad, in the context of an increasingly
overlapping and contested information environment. Both case studies and
analytical approaches are welcome. Contributors may present findings
from studies of state strategies to leverage the potential of platforms
to enable new forms of outreach and influence, as well as counter the
malign efforts of competing actors using similar technologies. While the
volume does not envision a deterministic approach to how technology
changes state influence campaigns, it invites consideration of how
technologies such as social media and AI open-up new opportunities for
statecraft – and demotic influences. Studies of international
communication and technology have centred on these questions for some
time. Long before soft power became popular in policy parlance, new
communication technologies were prompting prognostications on the
affordance of these technologies to be technologies of freedom._[ix]
<#_edn9>_
_AI governance, soft power, and public diplomacy._ The ways in which
states have turned to different applications of artificial intelligence
signal new lines of effort seen as necessary to ministries of foreign
affairs, and, herald new challenges for any form of public diplomacy in
a contested information space._[x] <#_edn10>_ The ‘coming out’ by
generative artificial intelligence (AI) of the developer’s closet has
prompted debates on benefits and threat posed by AI – while also
revealing crucial assumptions about the requirements of influence, not
just for advancing policy objectives, but for a broader conception of
national security and attraction-based influence. As scholars move to
capture developments in digital influence practices, the broader
theoretical and analytical implications of technological affordances
remain open to further contributions beyond previous attempts to link
affordances to practice._[xi] <#_edn11>_ The bearing of AI governance
initiatives in influential jurisdictions, national and international, on
soft power and public diplomacy in the networked AI era would also be of
interest.
Theoretical discussions as well as case studies are invited in the
following and any other area pertinent to the Handbook title:
* Relationship between soft power and public diplomacy
* Content fabrication (the innuendo is intended) and subsets of public
diplomacy
* Elasticity of the term public diplomacy
* Actors and factors in public diplomacy
* States’ strategic public diplomacy and demotic disruption
* AI governance, soft power, and public diplomacy.
Interested parties are invited to consult with Naren Chitty
<(_naren.chitty /at/ mq.edu.au) <mailto:(naren.chitty /at/ mq.edu.au)>_> regarding a
topic before preparing an abstract.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
_[i] <#_ednref1>_ Naren Chitty AM is Professor Emeritus and Foundation
Chair in International Communication at Macquarie University, Sydney;
Craig Hayden is Associate Professor of Strategic Studies at the Marine
Corps University Command and Staff College, Quantico; Hendrik Ohnesorge
is Managing Director of the Center for Global Studies (CGS) at the
University of Bonn; Chenjun Wang is a Researcher at the Soft Power
Analysis and Resource Centre (SPARC) at Macquarie University, Sydney.
_[ii] <#_ednref2>_ Chitty, Naren (2023) “An Experiential Theory of
Attraction-Based Influence (Unintended and Intended).” In /The Routledge
Handbook of Soft Power/, 2nd ed., 6–34. Routledge.
_[iii] <#_ednref3>_ Bjola, C. & Manor, I. (2024) /Oxford Handbook of
Digital Diplomacy/. Oxford University Press.
_[iv] <#_ednref4>_ Ohnesorge, Hendrik (2023) “The gift of grace: soft
power, charisma, and transatlantic relations.” In /The Routledge
Handbook of Soft Power/, 2nd ed., 35–46. Routledge.
Ohnesorge, HW 2020, /Soft Power: The Forces of Attraction in
International Relation/, Springer Nature, Cham.
_[v] <#_ednref5>_ Golan, Guy, Sung-Un Yang, and Dennis Kinsey, eds
/International Public Relations and Public Diplomacy: Communication and
Engagement./ New York, NY: Peter Lang. 2015. 458 pages.
Pamment, James (2014) Articulating influence: Toward a research agenda
for interpreting the evaluation of soft power, public diplomacy and
nation brands, /Public Relations Review,/ 4,1., pp. 50-59.
Pamment, James (2013) /New Public Diplomacy in the 21st Century: A
Comparative Study of Policy and Practice/, Routledge.
_[vi] <#_ednref6>_ Chitty, Naren (2021) World propaganda and personal
insecurity: intent, content, and contentment, In /Edward Elgar Handbook
of Political Propaganda /(Eds. Gary Rawnsley et al) Edward Elgar, p. 7-27.;
Crowley, S. (2003). Composition is not rhetoric/. Enculturation/,
[online] 5(1). Available at:
http://www.enculturation.net/5_1/crowley.html [Accessed 18 Nov. 2020];
Ellul, Jacques. (1973). /Propaganda: the formation of men’s
attitudes/. New York: Vintage Books.
_[vii] <#_ednref7>_Wang, Chenjun (2023) A study of soft power rankings:
concepts, method(ology), and evaluation In /The Routledge Handbook of
Soft Power/, 2nd ed., 190–212. London & New York: Routledge.
_[viii] <#_ednref8>_ Nye, Joseph (2011)/ The Future of Power. /Public
Affairs, New York, p. 109/./
_[ix] <#_ednref9>_ Sola Pool, Ithiel de. (1983) /Technologies of
Freedom/. Harvard University Press.
_[x] <#_ednref10>_ Huang, Z.A. (2024) “Terminology, AI bias, and the
risks of current digital public diplomacy practices.” /Place Branding
and Public Diplomacy/. _https://doi.org/10.1057/s41254-024-00324-x
<https://doi.org/10.1057/s41254-024-00324-x>_
_[xi] <#_ednref11>_ Hayden, Craig (2018). “Technologies of influence:
The materiality of soft power in public diplomacy.” In /The Routledge
Handbook of Soft Power 1st edition/, (eds) Naren Chitty, Lilian Ji, Gary
Rawnsley & Crag Hayden. Oxon: Routledge.
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