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[Commlist] Call for Papers- Mediating ‘ForeignConflicts’: The Role of News Media and Social Media in Shaping Perceptions of Extranational Conflicts
Fri Oct 04 10:42:58 GMT 2024
Call for Papers- Mediating ‘Foreign Conflicts’: The Role of News Media
and Social Media in Shaping Perceptions of Extranational Conflicts
Journal: Tripodos
Special Issue: Mediating ‘Foreign Conflicts’: The Role of News Media and
Social Media in Shaping Perceptions of Extranational Conflicts
Guest-Editors: Stephen Goulding, Amy McCroy, Zixiu Liu
Deadline for articles: March 31st, 2025
View the full call here:
https://tripodos.com/index.php/Facultat_Comunicacio_Blanquerna/announcement/view/79
In an era marked by a growing number of international and regional
conflicts –such as the Russo-Ukrainian War, the latest phase of the
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, numerous coups and civil wars in
post-colonial states in Africa, and regional conflicts like the Red Sea
crisis – it is increasingly important to understand how these conflicts
are mediated through (supra)national media systems and by nationally
determined networks of social media users in national contexts not
directly involved in conflict. In response to this, Tripodos 58 aims to
elucidate the nuanced ways in which news and social media in specific
nations represent, frame, and construct conflicts that occur in other
national or regional contexts outside their borders. In studying such
‘foreign conflicts’ – that is, conflicts that are extranational to those
mediating them—the central role of news and social media in informing
the national audience about the conflict is of crucial concern.
International conflicts stress-test geopolitical alliances and shape the
perceptions of other nation-states as political actors. Accordingly, the
nuances of how conflicts that occur outside the borders of a nation are
represented, framed, and understood by its news media and netizens have
significant consequences: conditioning, inter alia, geopolitical
allegiances, levels of public support for the provision of aid or care
to refugees, and future political outcomes. Therefore, it is becoming
increasingly important to highlight the impactful role of news media and
social media discourses in shaping national public opinion, influencing
national policy decisions, and impacting the interpretation of ‘foreign’
conflicts globally.
While research has paid attention to this dynamic in historical
conflicts, contemporary research focusing on more recent conflicts
remains sparse. This gap is particularly problematic as these conflicts
can be regarded as the first truly ‘digital’ conflicts, where converged
media and bottom-up affordances have disrupted the traditional
information flows through which conflicts were represented and
understood around the world. Furthermore, digitisation and media
convergence have ensured that sources of information and
mis-/dis-information have become more prevalent in shaping the
representation of global conflicts. For example, new media have enabled
the likes of drone footage and open-source intelligence to become more
salient features in social and news media discourses but have also
enabled a rise in disinformation campaigns designed to manipulate public
opinion on conflicts.
/Tripodos 58/ seeks to contribute to existing research by examining how
news and social media from different nations portray and represent
conflicts occurring outside of their own countries. We invite empirical
and theoretical contributions that focus on both mainstream national
news media and social media platforms to uncover how they condition
public perceptions and discourse surrounding international, national and
regional conflicts.
Topics that may be examined include, but are not limited to:
- Textual analyses of national news media reportage on foreign
conflicts, focusing on framing, discursive construction and
representation of combatant nations and their actions
- Analyses of narratives and frames used by the news media or social
media users to represent foreign conflicts, focusing on themes of
nationalism, victimisation, and demonisation of opposing national or
regional actors
- The construction, legitimation and normalisation of geopolitical
allegiances through the prism of foreign conflict discourses
- Analyses of social media platforms and affective publics,
highlighting how users construct discourses around various international
conflicts and how new media affordances have disrupted traditional
perceptions of foreign conflicts
- Sentiment analyses, emotional analyses or networked agenda-setting
analyses of large bodies of news or social media data related to foreign
conflicts
- Case studies of astroturfing, misinformation, and/or disinformation
campaigns designed to curtail public deliberation and perception of
conflicts between different nations or (para)militant groups
- Audience and media effects research that highlights the impact of
media representations of foreign conflicts on public opinion,
policy-making and political interventions
- Examinations of how advancements in technology and digital media have
transformed the reporting and reception of international conflicts
- Critical discussions on the ethical and normative challenges faced by
journalists and media outlets when reporting on foreign conflicts,
including issues of bias, propaganda, and journalistic responsibility,
as well as those focusing on the ethics of citizen journalism in this regard
Contributors are encouraged to employ a variety of methodological
approaches and theoretical frameworks. Given the special issue's remit,
interdisciplinary works that synthesise aspects of communication
studies, media studies, conflict studies, international relations, and
other cognate disciplines are particularly welcome.
*Informal enquiries about the special issue can be sent to the
corresponding guest editor, Dr Stephen Goulding at
(stephen.goulding /at/ nottingham.edu.cn)
Articles submissions
Papers should be sent by March 31st, 2025. Rules and instructions
regarding the submission of originals can be consulted at
https://tripodos.com/index.php/Facultat_Comunicacio_Blanquerna/about/submissions
For any queries, please contact the editorial team at
(redaccio_tripodos /at/ blanquerna.url.edu).
The issue will be entirely in English.
No fees/ APCs are required for publication.
Deadline for articles: March 31st, 2025
Expected publication: Autumn 2025
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