[Air-L] CfP: Transnational Dimensions in Digital Activism and Protest

Delia Dumitrica dumitrica at eshcc.eur.nl
Tue Jun 29 08:09:52 PDT 2021


Dear list members,


If you are working on digital activism and protest, please consider submitting an abstract to the themed issue on "Transnational Dimensions in Digital Activism and Protest" to be published in the journal Review of Communication. Please see the full CFP below.


Best,

Delia Dumitrica & Giuliana Sorce


REVIEW OF COMMUNICATION:


THEMED ISSUE CALL FOR PAPERS Transnational Dimensions in Digital Activism and Protest


GUEST EDITORS: Giuliana Sorce (U of Tübingen) and Delia D. Dumitrica (Erasmus U)


This themed issue aims to map international perspectives on transnational processes in digital activism and protest. Against wider claims that social movements and citizen activism are shifting from the logic of spatial organization to networked flows (Bennett & Segerberg, 2012; Mercea, 2020), this themed issue seeks to illuminate how the global and local come together in networked public spheres. Recent transnational movements such as #MeToo or Black Lives Matter yield the importance of interweaving digital communication, pre-existing activist collectives, and citizen activation on a seemingly global scale. The policing of physical protests during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic have intensified reliance on digital technologies among activists and grassroots collectives (Sorce & Dumitrica, 2021), further enhancing the appeal to create transnational ties and globalize movement appeals.


We ask how political causes circulate globally, what role digital technologies play, and ultimately, what “transnational” means for seemingly universal causes, global collective identity, and activist practice. In reflecting how activists across the globe employ digital media to construct a civic imaginary of a transnational polity, attention must be paid to the dialectical nature of transnational processes that simultaneously magnify the importance of locality while normalizing hybridity (Roudometof, 2016; Kraidy, 2005; Pieterse, 2015).


Where previous scholarship has drawn attention to the diffusion of political causes (della Porta & Mattoni, 2014) or cultural references (Dumitrica, in press) across national borders, this themed issue focuses on how digital technologies mediate and shape transnational processes in global organizing. This includes how transnational causes move across cultural contexts and how global appeals or activist vocabularies traverse (local) initiatives, considering the ways transnational organizers create collective identities among dispersed adherents, and what digital tactics of action work for global movements.


Possible contributions might examine, but are not limited to:

  *   transnational activism as shaped by digital action

  *   (re)direction of transnational flows in digital contention

  *   transnational circulation of protest causes, identities, symbols, and vocabularies

  *   formation of global dissent in networked contexts

  *   (digital) activism, campaigns, and protest on “global” issues

  *   global values and transnational appeals in border zone, migration, First Nation, diasporic,

environmental, queer, or gender rights protest communication

  *   roles and affordances of new media technologies in transnational organizing

  *   digital network(ing) practices in transnational activism

  *   narrative and rhetorical strategies in forging transnational activist alliances

SUBMISSION DEADLINES AND GUIDELINES

August 31, 2021 Submit extended abstract for Guest Editors’ review (max. 750 words)

October 15, 2021 Submit completed manuscript for peer review (invitation only*)


Extended abstracts should include the research problematic, theoretical angle, methodology, and key findings. The extended abstracts will be reviewed by the Guest Editors, who will subsequently invite a selection of authors to submit full papers.


Completed manuscripts should be prepared in Microsoft Word using a 12-point common font, double- spaced, no more than 7,000 words, inclusive of all matter (abstract, keywords, endnotes, etc.).

Review of Communication follows the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed., endnotes style. Abstracts and manuscripts must be submitted electronically through the Review of Communication

submission site: https://rp.tandfonline.com/submission/create?journalCode=RROC<https://eur03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Frp.tandfonline.com%2Fsubmission%2Fcreate%3FjournalCode%3DRROC&data=04%7C01%7Cdumitrica%40eshcc.eur.nl%7C82e41b4fcb8f481760c908d93ad86389%7C715902d6f63e4b8d929b4bb170bad492%7C0%7C0%7C637605523336462875%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=u8F6vJojcHdcr3GkGoSVCYsDmTTVxG6mIQV9jV%2FglNE%3D&reserved=0>


Authors should identify which themed call their paper is responding to by selecting the relevant drop-down option in ScholarOne.


REVIEW PROCESS

In keeping with the journal’s current practice, all invited manuscripts/submissions will undergo rigorous peer review, including screening by the Guest Editors and review by at least two anonymous referees. *Please note that an invitation to submit a full manuscript does not guarantee acceptance/publication.


Please direct questions about submissions to this themed issue to:


Giuliana Sorce, PhD
Institute of Media Studies
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen giuliana.sorce at uni-tuebingen.de<mailto:giuliana.sorce at uni-tuebingen.de>


Delia D. Dumitrica, PhD
Department of Media & Communication Erasmus University Rotterdam dumitrica at eshcc.eur.nl<mailto:dumitrica at eshcc.eur.nl>



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