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[Commlist] Call for Chapter Abstracts: Toward Flourishing: The Ethical Nexus of Journalism and Politics
Sat Oct 05 21:02:04 GMT 2024
Toward Flourishing: The Ethical Nexus of Journalism and Politics
Call for Chapter Abstracts
https://files.wmich.edu/s3fs-public/2024-10/call_for_abstracts_toward_flourishing__0.pdf
We invite abstracts for chapters in an edited volume entitled “Toward
Flourishing: The Ethical Nexus of Journalism and Politics.” The proposal
will be submitted to high-caliber academic presses.
The volume will focus on philosophical approaches to theory at the nexus
of journalism, ethics and politics. The aim is to make a space for
seeing things differently so theory can better inform the practice of
journalism -- particularly its political function -- in the context of
systematic disinformation, news avoidance, and political polarization in
contemporary democracies.
Partly motivated by growing interest in new approaches to virtue ethics,
this project is grounded in a broadly Aristotelian philosophical
framework understood in contemporary terms and authors. From this
perspective, we understand journalism to be a practice whose moral
excellence consists of helping individuals and communities to know well
in their roles as citizens and polities. Politics, in this framework,
goes beyond political parties and procedural fairness.
Rather, it is conceived as a kind of practical knowledge that we can act
on jointly to achieve the common goods we all need to flourish in our
families, practices, organizations, communities, schools and other
institutions.
We seek to reframe and reinterpret journalism ethics theory as it
relates to a politics of common goods. This perspective focuses on
concrete, existing roles, relationships and activities, rather than on
ideal types. Therefore, we welcome normative analyses of journalism as
it is, or has been practiced, in a variety of places, times and cultures
in respect to politics and common goods.
In an Aristotelian framework, concepts in journalism ethics are “thick
concepts” that are intelligible within specific social, political and
historical contexts. This means that we need to recover the meaning of
some concepts in relation to their referents, or – where referents have
changed or emerged – we may need to create new concepts. The standard
for rethinking moral concepts, in neo-Aristotelian thought, is
flourishing. Therefore, we are interested in proposals for historicizing
and interrogating basic concepts in journalism ethics -- for example,
“truth,” “freedom” and “public” – with an eye on flourishing in the
context of today’s socio-political ethos for journalism. Alternative
theoretical approaches are welcome as long as they engage with broader
themes in neo-Aristotelian thought (see examples below).
We are also interested in proposals addressing adjacent topics, such as:
communication technologies, media systems, political cultures, sociology
of knowledge, political philosophy, philosophy of language, and
democratic processes. However, to be accepted, proposals must
make strong theoretical contributions that are relevant to improving and
strengthening journalistic practice as it relates to a politics of
common goods.
We seek proposals from scholars from diverse geographic, political,
cultural and disciplinary orientations. Comparative works are encouraged.
Possible topics for proposals include, but are not limited, to:
Socio-political ethos of journalism
● Analyses of specific socio-political contexts that support or hinder
the flourishing of journalism as a practice in respect to its political
function (with a proposal for either strengthening or repairing the
ethos as applicable). Contextual factors include political cultures,
media systems, professionalism, economic arrangements, newsroom
socialization, and media consumption patterns. In other words, does
journalism have the contexts it needs to flourish as a practice? If it
does not, how can the context be improved to promote flourishing?
The practice of journalism
● Works that look at the variety of ways in which journalism itself
promotes or hinders flourishing in different historical eras, cultures
and media systems (with a proposal for either strengthening or repairing
the practice as applicable). In other words, do we have the journalism
we need to jointly pursue a politics of common goods?
Conceptual reset
● Systematic works to interrogate, clarify, and critique existing
concepts in journalism ethics using flourishing as the standard.
● Systematic works to repair, expand, recover, appropriate or invent
journalism ethics concepts using flourishing as the standard.
● Critiques and refinements of neo-Aristotelian approaches to ethics and
politics as they apply to journalism.
● Non-Aristotelian theoretical works that engage with key Aristotelian
themes, such as flourishing, virtue, traditions, exemplars, common
goods, practical reasoning, public deliberation, and human or social
development.
This volume builds on a recent workshop on the same topic, hosted by The
Public Communication Department of the Universidad de Navarra and the
Western Michigan University Center for the Study of Ethics in Society in
Pamplona, Spain. Participation in the workshop is not required for
submission to the volume.
To be considered, email submissions to both (sandra.borden /at/ wmich.edu) and
(mcodina /at/ unav.es) consisting of:
● An extended abstract of 750-1,200 words summarizing a theoretical
argument related to the concerns of this volume. Abstracts should
include a clear and concise title; specify a theoretical framework in
alignment with, or in conversation with, a neo-Aristotelian
framework; state the framework’s relevance to a politics of common
goods; offer specific proposals for strengthening or repairing
journalistic practice and/or its ethos; and provide references (not
included in the word count).
● A shorter abstract of approximately 250 words for the book proposal
(no references).
● A biosketch of approximately 100 words for the book proposal.
● A CV (as a link or attachment).
Submission deadline: November 15, 2024
Notification date: December 16, 2024
For more information, contact (sandra.borden /at/ wmich.edu)
Sandra L. Borden, director of the Center for the Study of Ethics in
Society, Western Michigan University
Mónica Codina, director of the Department of Public Communication,
Universidad de Navarra
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