Media and Terrorism 2019 - Media, Terrorism and Audience Reception
Date2019-03-01
Deadline2019-09-30
VenueOnline, India
KeywordsMedia and terrorism; Media and violence
Websitehttps://mediawatchjournal.in
Topics/Call fo Papers
Media, Terrorism and Audience Reception
Terrorist attacks are not just about body counts. In fact, no terrorist organization is in a position to kill all of the people who they have organized against. Rather, the goal of a terrorist attack is to control the communication process to enhance fear and to generate oppositional conflicts. Through March of 2019, according to Wikipedia, there have been terrorist attacks in Somalia, Afghanistan, Mali, Syria, India, Burkina Faso, Pakistan, Libya, Nigeria, Sudan, Germany, Iraq, Cameroon, Turkey, Myanmar, Chile, Yemen, Colombia, Egypt, Mozambique, Congo, United States, Thailand, Central African Republic, Israel, Philippines, West Bank, Kenya, Algeria, Norway, Indonesia, Northern Ireland, Niger, Iran, Mexico, Chad, Tunisia, Nepal, France, Spain, New Zealand. Total 74 terrorist attacks. Terrorism is weaponizing propaganda as a rhetoric tool across the world.
Accordingly, communication scholars can offer valuable perspectives on how political entities should respond to these attacks. We are calling for communication scholars to consider these issues and topics they believe are relevant to this discussion.
• Media Coverage of Extreme Violence and Terrorism Activities;
• Online and Offline audience reception of terrorist/extremists’ violent activities;
• Counter insurgency, media, civil society, and government;
• Case studies: Media is the mother’s milk of terrorist activities;
• Case studies of the use of media by violent extremists and/or terrorists in particular countries or regions;
• Violent political extremism and terrorism and/or countering activity;
• Media ethics and journalists response covering terrorism/violent extremism;
• Challenges before social media in spreading of terror information;
• Direction of conflict reporting in digital age.
Articles in no more than 7,000 words should be submitted by September 30, 2019. For submission guidelines and other details, please see: https://www.mediawatchjournal.in
Mark Goodman, Ph.D.
Professor of Communication
Mississippi State University, USA
E-mail: editor-AT-mediawatchjournal.in
mediawatchjournal-AT-gmail.com
Terrorist attacks are not just about body counts. In fact, no terrorist organization is in a position to kill all of the people who they have organized against. Rather, the goal of a terrorist attack is to control the communication process to enhance fear and to generate oppositional conflicts. Through March of 2019, according to Wikipedia, there have been terrorist attacks in Somalia, Afghanistan, Mali, Syria, India, Burkina Faso, Pakistan, Libya, Nigeria, Sudan, Germany, Iraq, Cameroon, Turkey, Myanmar, Chile, Yemen, Colombia, Egypt, Mozambique, Congo, United States, Thailand, Central African Republic, Israel, Philippines, West Bank, Kenya, Algeria, Norway, Indonesia, Northern Ireland, Niger, Iran, Mexico, Chad, Tunisia, Nepal, France, Spain, New Zealand. Total 74 terrorist attacks. Terrorism is weaponizing propaganda as a rhetoric tool across the world.
Accordingly, communication scholars can offer valuable perspectives on how political entities should respond to these attacks. We are calling for communication scholars to consider these issues and topics they believe are relevant to this discussion.
• Media Coverage of Extreme Violence and Terrorism Activities;
• Online and Offline audience reception of terrorist/extremists’ violent activities;
• Counter insurgency, media, civil society, and government;
• Case studies: Media is the mother’s milk of terrorist activities;
• Case studies of the use of media by violent extremists and/or terrorists in particular countries or regions;
• Violent political extremism and terrorism and/or countering activity;
• Media ethics and journalists response covering terrorism/violent extremism;
• Challenges before social media in spreading of terror information;
• Direction of conflict reporting in digital age.
Articles in no more than 7,000 words should be submitted by September 30, 2019. For submission guidelines and other details, please see: https://www.mediawatchjournal.in
Mark Goodman, Ph.D.
Professor of Communication
Mississippi State University, USA
E-mail: editor-AT-mediawatchjournal.in
mediawatchjournal-AT-gmail.com
Other CFPs
- Call for Papers: ADVED 2019- 5th International Conference on Advances in Education and Social Sciences
- Software Engineering An International Journal(SEIJ)
- International Journal of Software Engineering & Applications (IJSEEA)
- International Journal of Computer Science, Engineering and Applications(IJCSEA)
- International Journal Software Engineering Research and Development(IJSERD)
Last modified: 2019-05-12 12:36:28