Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta práctica periodística. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta práctica periodística. Mostrar todas las entradas

28 de septiembre de 2021

*CFP* "MOB CENSORSHIP AND DIGITAL VIOLENCE AGAINST THE PRESS IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE", SPECIAL ISSUE, JOURNAL OF DIGITAL JOURNALISM

Online violence against journalists is a global phenomenon. Recent studies have documented patterns suggesting that specific groups of journalists defined by gender, ethnicity, race, sexuality, and religion, are likely targets of digital harassment, doxing and other forms of violence. Violence is perpetrated by ordinary citizens, states, and para-state actors. This special issue focuses on mob censorship in digital spaces against journalists and the press. Mob censorship is understood as violence exercised by ordinary citizens against journalists with the intention to intimidate and silence the press. The study of mob censorship sheds light into the patterns, the causes, and the effects of violence against journalism and the right of expression of citizens in the digital society. As expression has become more abundant through digital platforms, so has violence against journalists and other actors with visible, prominent positions in the public sphere.

The aim of the special issue is to contribute novel empirical findings and theoretical and conceptual innovations in the study of digital violence against the press, as well as to provide recommendations for addressing the problem. We invite theoretical and empirical contributions from around the world that address questions in the areas of mob censorship, digital hate and journalism, anti-press violence, freedom of expression, and journalistic safety. Studies grounded in various theoretical frameworks and that use different research designs and methodologies are welcome. Comparative, cross-national perspectives might be particularly useful to comprehend causes and manifestations of mob censorship in different political regimes and information contexts.

23 de septiembre de 2021

*CFP* "MEDIATING DIGITAL SOCIETY AND INDIVIDUALS: JOURNALISM AND COMMUNICATION IN THE TIMES OF UNCERTAINTY", MOSCOW READINGS CONFERENCE

On 18-19 November 2021, the Faculty of Journalism, Lomonosov Moscow State University will hold its annual Moscow Readings conference. The topic is 'Mediating Digital Society and Individuals: Journalism and Communication in the Times of Uncertainty'. The conference will be organized as a virtual event, with all sessions taking place online. Moscow Readings conferences is co-sposored by the International Association for Media and Communication Research - IAMCR, and organized in partnership with IAMCR Digital Divide Working Group, IAMCR Communication in Post- and Neo-Authoritarian Societies Working Group, IAMCR Journalism Research and Education Section, UNESCO chair in communication, European Journalism Training Association, the Global Risk Journalism Hub, and National Association of Mass Media Researchers.

Today, historical transformations affecting media industries and production such as digitalization, consolidation, deregulation and related trends identified by scholars long ago (Hamelink, 1998) amplify and accelerate due to new disruptive processes influencing media work on a global scale. This includes the rapid growth of platform power and platform convergence, the emergence of telecommunications giants as competitors in the content market, and growing concerns about sustainability of the news industry and journalism as a profession in this context (Deuze, & Prenger, 2019; Meese, 2021).

17 de septiembre de 2021

*CFP* "MEDIATING DIGITAL SOCIETY AND INDIVIDUALS: JOURNALISM AND COMMUNICATION IN THE TIMES OF UNCERTAINTY", MOSCOW READINGS CONFERENCE

On 18-19 November 2021, the Faculty of Journalism, Lomonosov Moscow State University will hold its annual Moscow Readings conference. The topic is 'Mediating Digital Society and Individuals: Journalism and Communication in the Times of Uncertainty'. The conference will be organized as a virtual event, with all sessions taking place online. Moscow Readings conferences is co-sposored by the International Association for Media and Communication Research - IAMCR, and organized in partnership with IAMCR Digital Divide Working Group, IAMCR Communication in Post- and Neo-Authoritarian Societies Working Group, IAMCR Journalism Research and Education Section, UNESCO chair in communication, European Journalism Training Association, the Global Risk Journalism Hub, and National Association of Mass Media Researchers.

Today, historical transformations affecting media industries and production such as digitalization, consolidation, deregulation and related trends identified by scholars long ago (Hamelink, 1998) amplify and accelerate due to new disruptive processes influencing media work on a global scale. This includes the rapid growth of platform power and platform convergence, the emergence of telecommunications giants as competitors in the content market, and growing concerns about sustainability of the news industry and journalism as a profession in this context (Deuze, & Prenger, 2019; Meese, 2021).

8 de septiembre de 2021

*CFP* "VIRTUAL, AUGMENTED AND MIXED REALITIES IN JOURNALISM: THEORY, PRACTICE, CRITIQUE", SPECIAL ISSUE, BRAZILIAN JOURNALISM RESEARCH JOURNAL

The magnitude of the changes that occurred during the last 25 years of digital journalism has given way to a new communication scenario full of opportunities but also of professional and ethical challenges (Salaverría, 2019). Technology is behind many of the transformations that have taken place during this time and that have had an impact on the models of production, distribution and even consumption of information. The metamorphosis experienced, as referred to by certain authors (López-García, 2010; Vázquez-Herrero et al., 2020), has led to the current scenario: convergent, mobile and now also ubiquitous (Pavlik, 2001; Salaverría, 2015).

News media organizations are currently witnessing the introduction of a set of high- technologies in our daily lives: 5G, the Internet of Things (IoT), blockchain, virtual reality, augmented reality, mixed reality, intelligent virtual assistants, among others (López- García, 2019; Mosco, 2017). Its introduction in journalism practices has given way to what has been named as Hi-tech Journalism (Larrondo and López-García, 2020; Murcia and Ufarte, 2019; Pérez-Seijo et al., 2020; Salaverría, 2015; Ufarte et al., 2020). This label encompasses different trends that shape the "journalism that will tell the future" (López- Hidalgo, 2016, p. 255): use of drones to cover news (Fischer, 2019); VR and 360-degree video Journalism (Mabrook and Singer, 2019), also referred to as Immersive Journalism (De la Peña et al., 2010); augmented reality for news (Aitamurto et al., 2020); Automated, Robot or Algorithmic Journalism (Caswell and Dörr, 2018); and, among others, use of conversational bots –chatbots– in news websites (Ford and Hutchinson, 2019; Jones and Jones, 2019).

20 de agosto de 2021

*CFP* "DISINFORMATION-FOR-HIRE AND CLICK FARMING AROUND THE WORLD: IDENTITIES, INCENTIVES, INFRAESTRUCTURES", SPECIAL ISSUE, SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY JOURNAL

From state-sponsored propagandists using paid troll armies, to commercially motivated data analytics firms selling their toolkits to politicians, and platform workers producing memes for overseas clients, the global industry of disinformation production has only professionalized and diversified. This special issue for Social Media + Society aims to deepen understanding about the social identities, work arrangements, and political and commercial motivations of an emerging class of digital disinformation workers. We are interested in critical and interdisciplinary research that examines the political economy, specifically the digital and creative industries that propel and produce disinformation. The special issue’s focus on business models and disinformation worker identities in global context aims to expand on disinformation studies’ analysis of “fake news” and hate speech as content that require better policing or fact-checking. It also aims to expand platform studies’ research agenda and consider the range of digital professionals and entrepreneurs who buy and sell engagement on social media–with pernicious political consequences especially in contexts where dissenting voices are suppressed.

Thus, we solicit submissions that discuss the diverse worker hierarchies and conditions, outsourced gig arrangements, money politics, and/or regulatory loopholes in the promotional industries that enable the strategic production of disinformation. We are interested in interdisciplinary and ethnographic research that engages with the deep stories of workers in “dark PR” firms (Silverman, Lytyvenko & Kung 2020; Verwey & Muir 2019), data analytics firms (Briant 2021), Latin American and Indonesian Instagram click farms (Lindquist 2021), and “propaganda secretary” offices (Hassan & Hitchen 2019). We are also interested in normative discussions about complicity and collusion in digital industries as well as scholarly self-reflection about the challenges of doing engaged research about disinformation (Ong 2020).

2 de agosto de 2021

*CFP* "JOURNALISTS AND MEDIA CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC PROBLEMS", SPECIAL ISSUE, SUR LE JOURNALISME

According to Gusfield (1981), a social fact only becomes an object of concern, of claim and of debate in public policies after a work of conversion has been performed by several operators (Best, 2008; Neveu, 2015). Included in these operators are journalists and, to a larger extent, the media, which contribute to the construction of public problems and present the interlocutors involved, the questions raised and any possible answers in terms of public action.

At a time when journalism is experiencing a double crisis; one of profitability and credibility (Poulet, 2011; Descôteaux, Brin, 2018; Benton, 2019), how can we understand its role in the construction of public problems? The theme of this dossier discusses the competitive exercise of fighting for the validation of problems and proposals and their “framework”. What place do journalists occupy in these processes? What changes does the new information ecology (intensive use of digital social networks and the multiplicity of information producers and sharing) (Rebillard, Smyrnaios, 2010) bring to the genesis of public problems?

Articles submitted for this edition shall focus on the following theme: the relationship between generalist information media and journalists and the construction of public problems. We recommend the articles be based on one of the three topics listed below; however, we shall not exclude other proposals that may not necessarily be based on these three topics.

22 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "QUESTIONING ETHICS IN DIGITAL CONTEXTS FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION SCIENCES", Nº 25, REVUE FRANÇAISE DES SCIENCES DE L'INFORMATION ET DE LA COMMUNICATION

Created two years ago, the Group on Ethics and the Digital in Information-Communication research (GENIC) is now an accredited working group of the French national scientific association for information and communication science (Société Française des Sciences de l’Information et de la Communication - SFSIC). The group promotes work on questions of ethics affecting all information-communication processes, in a context marked by the growing presence of digital technologies, through the analysis of phenomena, practices, social interactions. Indeed, all fields of research are touched by ethical questions (we refer the reader to the volume Dynamics of Information-Communication Research edited by the Conference of French Research Centers in Information-communication Sciences), take for instance the research fields related to the media, to legal, communicational, or organizational issues, or the role and the place of technologies in methods of research and scientific publication, in particular through the design of algorithms and data processing.

Beyond analyzing research practice, work in information-communication ethics should also take into account the logics of actors and their productions embedded in discursive, socio-economic, cultural, political and regulatory realities of digital and communication practices. Faced with a generalization of social controversies, whether related to the health crisis, the environmental crisis, public health issues, etc. it appears essential today that information-communication researchers participate in public debates around ethics and prepare those on the questions to come.

14 de julio de 2021

*CFP* CALL FOR PARTICIPATION, THE 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON METHODOLOGIES IN COMMUNICATION RESEARCH (COIME 2021)

 The 8th International Conference on Methodologies in Communication Research (COIME 2021)

Facultad de Ciencias de la Información

Universidad Complutense de Madrid

2,3 & 4 November, 2021

 

We are accepting proposals for papers for COIME 2021, the 8th International Conference on Methodologies in Communication Research. November 2 to 4 at the Faculty of Information Sciences of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (in person and online).

Send an abstract here until September 19, 2021.
  • Papers must necessarily deal with methodological aspects of communication research.

13 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "CINCUENTA AÑOS EN LA FORMACIÓN DE COMUNICADORES EN IBEROAMÉRICA", NÚMERO 37 (2022-1), REVISTA CONTRATEXTO

Después de cincuenta años de experiencia universitaria en la formación de comunicadores en Iberoamérica, podemos esbozar ideas y reflexiones críticas para entender los cambios por los que hemos pasado, hacer un balance de logros y limitaciones, así como proyectarnos en un tiempo de profunda incertidumbre a causa de la crisis sanitaria que enfrentamos desde el 2020. En el 2022, además, la Facultad de Comunicación de la Universidad de Lima cumplirá cincuenta años y tenemos ante nosotros la posibilidad de mirarnos y extender nuestro balance sobre lo ocurrido entre las instituciones universitarias con las cuales hemos crecido y cooperado a lo largo de estas décadas. Pero, además, podemos examinar el ejercicio de los profesionales formados en las aulas universitarias en Iberoamérica.

La vida académica en nuestras facultades y programas de comunicación aporta ofreciendo profesionales, así como conocimiento y creatividad que le permite intervenir en el destino colectivo de nuestras sociedades, de forma autónoma, con un espíritu vivo y una ética que resguarde las múltiples miradas y el aporte en la formación de ciudadanos para el ejercicio de la vida pública. No se trata solamente de realizar un examen histórico de los estudios universitarios, necesario para contextualizar el tema, sino de profundizar y evaluar las diferentes dimensiones referidas a los docentes y los alumnos, los modelos de enseñanza, la investigación y la transferencia, así como los vínculos con la comunidad científica, el mercado laboral y los aportes a la sociedad.

9 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "30 YEARS SINCE THE ATTACK ON DUBROVNIK: POLITICAL, COMMUNICATIONAL AND CULTURAL ASPECTS OF THE CITY UNDER SIEGE", SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE

Scientific conference titled “30 years since the attack on Dubrovnik: Political, communicational and cultural aspects of the city under siege” will be held on October 1-2, 2021 at the University of Dubrovnik.

Thirty years after the attacks on Dubrovnik, the University of Dubrovnik in cooperation with the Croatian Academy of Science and Arts and Linnaeus University, Sweden, are organizing an interdisciplinary conference on political, communicational and cultural aspects of the city under siege. A special focus of the conference will be given to analysis and comparisons with other cities that were under siege (Vukovar, Sarajevo, Srebrenica...) during the wars in the former Yugoslavia (1991-1999), but comparisons with other conflicts are also welcome.

Proposals may include, but are not limited to, the following topics:

  • Understanding the context: the dissolution of Yugoslavia 
  • War reporting practices from the Dubrovnik area; 
  • Media analysis on the subject of war in Dubrovnik, Croatia and the ex-Yugoslav area from 1988 to 1995; 

7 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "ENTREPRENEURIAL JOURNALISM: EMERGING MODELS AND LIVED EXPERIENCES. LOOKING BACK AND LOOKING FORWARD", VOL. 8 Nº 2 (2022), BRAZILIAN JOURNALISM RESEARCH

This special edition of Brazilian Journalism Research interrogates and collates the links between entrepreneurialism and journalism, in emergent journalistic practices and socioeconomic models. The growing recognition of entrepreneurial values and practices in the journalism domain has occurred against a backdrop of interlinked changes in journalism and media in the economic, technological, social, ideological and regulatory terrains. These are most prominent not only in the emergence of new digital actors and new configurations of national and international media landscapes but also in the reframing of normative journalistic practices, organisational structures, modes of production, distribution and financial sustainability. In this vein then, entrepreneurial journalism delineates new relations between actors, publics and domains of activity (Hang and Van Weezel, 2005; Mitchelstein and Boczkowski, 2009; Lee-Wright et al., 2012; Mercier and Pignard-Cheynel, 2014; Carbasse, 2015; Grohmann et al., 2019).

Taking shape in a movement which moves beyond traditional journalism boundaries (Neff et al., 2005) these transformations have created favourable conditions for new editorial projects to grow outside of traditional legacy, corporate or mainstream media. They exist as heterogeneous independent structures where journalists are confronted with operational challenges and financial obstacles that question any hard divide between editorial and business operations, which are little understood. New journalistic techniques and products are developed and iterated through a process of experimentation outside of normative practices. Whether they openly embrace the ‘entrepreneurial journalism’ label (Briggs, 2011) as distinguished at least in part from the other non-salaried forms of employment such as freelance (De Cock and De Smaele, 2016) or whether they adhere to certain entrepreneurial competences and general qualities without wanting to be overtly labelled, these journalistic projects are united by a certain level in their journalistic practices of deindustrialization and decentralisation. They necessitate new definitions and understandings hinged on flexible structures and new manners of doing and financing journalism.

6 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "DISIDENCIA Y COMUNICACIÓN: VOCES Y DISCURSOS EN LA ERA DE LOS HECHOS ALTERNATIVOS", CONGRESO MEDIAFLOWS 2021

Congreso Mediaflows 2021

Disidencia y Comunicación: Voces y discursos en la era de los hechos alternativos

27, 28 y 29 de octubre 2021. UIMP Valencia

 

La vocación de este congreso es acoger un debate académico en torno al rol que la comunicación está jugando actualmente en las sociedades modernas como herramienta con la que desafiar los discursos oficiales y plantear lecturas alternativas a las voces del poder, pero también como instrumento con el que construir versiones de la realidad que poco o nada tienen que ver con las verdades fácticas, dando resultado a un sinfín de bulos y teorías conspiratorias. La relación entre comunicación y disidencia se revela, por tanto, como un objeto de discusión y reflexión académica de máxima importancia dado que, como han demostrado estos últimos meses, constituye un fenómeno que impacta sobre todo tipo de áreas, desde la política a la ciencia, pasando por la religión y la cultura.

5 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "JOURNALISTS AND MEDIA CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC PROBLEMS", NEXT ISSUE, ABOUT JOURNALISM JOURNAL

According to Gusfield (1981), a social fact only becomes an object of concern, of claim and of debate in public policies after a work of conversion has been performed by several operators (Best, 2008; Neveu, 2015). Included in these operators are journalists and, to a larger extent, the media, which contribute to the construction of public problems and present the interlocutors involved, the questions raised and any possible answers in terms of public action.

At a time when journalism is experiencing a double crisis; one of profitability and credibility (Poulet, 2011; Descôteaux, Brin, 2018; Benton, 2019), how can we understand its role in the construction of public problems? The theme of this dossier discusses the competitive exercise of fighting for the validation of problems and proposals and their “framework”.

What place do journalists occupy in these processes? What changes does the new information ecology (intensive use of digital social networks and the multiplicity of information producers and sharing) (Rebillard, Smyrnaios, 2010) bring to the genesis of public problems? Articles submitted for this edition shall focus on the following theme: the relationship between generalist information media and journalists and the construction of public problems. We recommend the articles be based on one of the three topics listed below; however, we shall not exclude other proposals that may not necessarily be based on these three topics.

2 de julio de 2021

*CFP* "ENTERPRENEURIAL JOURNALISM: EMERGING MODELS AND LIVED EXPERIENCES", VOL.18 Nº2, 2022, BRAZILIAN JOURNALISM RESEARCH JOURNAL


This special edition of Brazilian Journalism Research interrogates and collates the links between entrepreneurialism and journalism, in emergent journalistic practices and socioeconomic models. 
 
The growing recognition of entrepreneurial values and practices in the journalism domain has occurred against a backdrop of interlinked changes in journalism and media in the economic, technological, social, ideological and regulatory terrains. 
 
These are most prominent not only in the emergence of new digital actors and new configurations of national and international media landscapes but also in the reframing of normative journalistic practices, organisational structures, modes of production, distribution and financial sustainability. 
 
In this vein then, entrepreneurial journalism delineates new relations between actors, publics and domains of activit.

28 de junio de 2021

*CFP* "EVOLUCIÓN DE LAS NARRATIVAS DIGITALES PARA LA COMUNICACIÓN Y EL PERIODISMO", NÚMERO 39, REVISTA CONTRATEXTO

El número 39 de Contratexto abordará la temática referida a la evolución de las narrativas digitales para la comunicación y el periodismo en los últimos años. Se propone crear un marco de reflexión a partir de propuestas de investigación en torno al desarrollo de la innovación narrativa que usan particulares, medios, empresas e instituciones sobre temas de actualidad, publicidad, periodismo, comunicación audiovisual o comunicación corporativa, entre otros.

Todo esto, a partir de las intersecciones entre la teoría y la práctica que siempre resulta fundamental para el estudio de la narrativa transmedia; y en un contexto donde las audiencias se segmentan cada vez más, llegando a condicionar los canales y la estructura de los mensajes. Por lo tanto, es necesario precisar si las nuevas narrativas tienen un enfoque específico de cara a nuevas audiencias o simplemente, en muchos casos, solo obedecen a tendencias impuestas por la industria tecnológica, constituyendo así “burbujas” temporales.

Hoy se considera que las audiencias, lejos de mantener la pasividad plateada por iniciales modelos de comunicación unidireccionales, desean participar cada vez más en el mensaje de medios, empresas, instituciones y particulares; y apropiarse y construir otros tipos de espacios de comunicación (Marzal & Casero, 2017), al tiempo que se construyen nuevos espacios de diálogo y nuevas oportunidades laborales (Salaverría, 2016).

25 de mayo de 2021

*CFP* "PERIODISMO Y ALGORITMOS", PRÓXIMO NÚMERO, REVISTA DOCUMENTACIÓN DE LAS CIENCIAS DE LA INFORMACIÓN

La revista Documentación de las Ciencias de la Información profundizando en su interés por analizar los temas relacionados con la Documentación y los medios de comunicación dedica este próximo número a Periodismo y algoritmos.

Además, como es habitual en la revista, hay una sección miscelánea donde se incluyen otros artículos relacionados con la documentación en los medios.

Preguntas de investigación que busca responder el monográfico

  • ¿Cuáles son las relaciones entre los algoritmos y la producción de noticias (“robot periodista”) y cuál es el panorama actual y las perspectivas de futuro en este sentido?
  • ¿Qué influencias tienen los algoritmos en las recomendaciones de información de actualidad o información de interés social y político en las redes sociales y otras plataformas digitales y qué consecuencias tienen para el periodismo?
  • ¿Cómo influyen los algoritmos en la difusión de las noticias falsas, bulos, etc., y en general en la desinformación y qué medidas podrían tomarse para frenar este fenómeno?
  • ¿Cuáles son sus dimensiones y de qué manera se pueden analizar, entender o concebir los efectos del SEO cuando es aplicado al periodismo?

11 de mayo de 2021

*CFP* "THE HANDBOOK OF APPLIED JOURNALISM AND MEDIA STUDIES: INVESTIGATING JOURNALISM PRACTICE ACROSS REGIONS AND CULTURES", BOOK CHAPTER

Leon Barkho (Jönköping University, Sweden) and Jairo Lugo-Ocando (Northwestern University, Qatar) welcome chapter submission to their forthcoming companion on journalism studies titled: “The Handbook of Applied Journalism and Media Studies - Investigating Journalism Practice Across Regions and Cultures”.

Following the submission of a detailed proposal, they have obtained the greenlight from Intellect Books, to compile the handbook, a monumental work of about 50 chapters. At this stage, we are seeking an abstract of about 250 to 300 words to be submitted to us by the end of May. The handbook focuses on the question of how we can render our collective knowledge of journalism as a discipline and the mass of scholarly literature on the subject useful, practical, and relevant to those practicing journalism across regions and cultures. 

The edited handbook also welcomes contributions on any of the following key topics with emphasis preferably placed on own country, region, or culture:

1. Interlink between journalism as scholarship and Journalism as practice:

17 de marzo de 2021

*CFP* "TRANSFORMATION OF NEWSROOMS WITH THE ADVENT OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE JOURNALISM", CYBER CONFERENCE

Cyber conference organized by Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University, Prague

“Transformation of Newsrooms with the Advent of Artificial Intelligence Journalism”

May 13, 2021

 

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has entered newsrooms around the globe during the last decade. The era of sophisticated algorithms, machine learning tools, and full automation from early simple solutions began. AI tools play an important role on many levels of the process of making and distributing news. AI assists journalists in their work, whether it is the fully automated production of news stories or the partial use of machine learning. The integration of AI-based tools into the journalism process also places huge demands for journalists, technical staff and lead editors. 

9 de marzo de 2021

*CFP* "THE LANGUAGES AND ANTI-LANGUAGES OF HEALTH COMMUNICATION IN THE AGE OF CONSPIRACY THEORIES", SPECIAL ISSUE, LINGUE E LINGUAGGI JOURNAL

We are calling for abstracts for a special issue of Lingue e Linguaggi focusing on the languages of health communication in both institutional and non-institutional media settings. The special issue will address aspects related to genre and discourse as well as morphosyntactic characteristics of health communication in the current age, an age increasingly characterised by (dis-/mis-)information, conspiracy theories and hate speech as occurring in the context of both mass media and social media.

Dis- and misinformation, conspiracy theories and hostile communication are reportedly on the rise and are beginning to receive significant attention among linguists and discourse scholars because of the alternative discourses which are generated through them (Demata et al, forthcoming; Knoblock 2020; Zummo 2018, 2017; Lazaridis et al., 2016). In particular, health communication has been subjected to mis-and disinformation as well as to contributing to conspiracy theories which have become very influential in many countries. With the growing influence of social media in the public sphere (KhosraviNik & Unger 2015; KhosraviNik 2017; Zummo 2017; Demata, Heaney & Herring 2018), the communication of alternative health discourse, often in opposition to that of “official” media and science, has become very difficult to challenge. Furthermore, the narratives supporting alternative health discourses have increasingly become part of the growing consensus for populist parties and leaders in many parts of the world, as distrust in the official science feeds into the typically populist drive against establishment politics (Bergmann 2018).

4 de marzo de 2021

*CFP* "THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON COMMUNICATION. ANALYSIS AND RETROSPECTIVE OF THE EFFECTS OF THE PANDEMIC ON THE MEDIA ECOSYSTEM", FIRST ISSUE 2022, PALABRA CLAVE JOURNAL

Palabra Clave Journal is opening a Call for Papers (CFP) for a special issue "The Impact of COVID-19 on Communication. Analysis and Retrospective of the Effects of the Pandemic on the Media Ecosystem", to be published in the first issue of 2022. For this issue, we seek a renge of work of manuscripts that consider or provide empirical studies on topics that:
  • Delve into the concept of infodemic and retrospectively discuss its effects during the COVID-19 health crisis.
  • Go over the dynamics of information consumption during the health crisis.
  • Compare the media’s approach in the affected countries to determine which have been the most effective in raising awareness among citizens and providing them with information.
  • Study the influence of the editorial line in the crisis management and the type of news spread.
  • Explore the influence of social media on public opinion about crisis management by the affected governments.
  • Look into the dissemination of fake news and hoaxes, and their impact on society during the health crisis.
  • Examine the role of traditional mass media in the fight against fake news and misinformation on social media.