Communicative Resilience: Civil Society's Response to Information Disorders
Edited by Dafne Calvo (University of Valencia) and Maria Iranzo-Cabrera (University of Valencia) This special issue focuses on the communicative resilience of social movements, movement organizations, and activists. We understand communicative resilience as the cultural practices performed in response to information disorders and the crisis of the mediatized public sphere. A crisis often brings new opportunities. Resilience entails the capacity to withstand crises and endure uncertain conditions and disruptive events (Olsson et al., 2015; Beck, 2016; Walsh, 2016). This constitutive process lets people “reintegrate and actively construct their new normal through language, interaction, networks, and attention to their identities and identifications” (Buzzanell, 2019, p. 68).
It therefore occurs both at the individual level and within the wider social environment (Van Breda, 2018). We contend that the current state of affairs is characterized by information disorders that present a crisis of civic coexistence on multiple levels: they erode trust in institutions, polarize social debates, and incite violence. Within the communication realm, resilience necessitates adapting digital technologies and practices to the prevailing circumstances in which people operate. This adjustment encompasses various facets, including modes of news consumption, communication networks, alternative logics and narratives, social mobilization, and even protest amplification.
We argue that social movements are currently experiencing invisibility concerning their role in contrasting information disorders, overshadowed by the investigation of insular and partisan communities that dominate public discourse (Freelon et al., 2020). However, we believe that a systematic study of social movement practices is essential to understand how civil society establishes strategies, shares cultural codes and identities, and reinforces social networks (Tarrow, 2011) to tackle information disorders. In an informatively disordered scenario, this special issue addresses the multifaceted relationship between activism, citizenship and media to study communication resilience practices and purposes. Contributions are encouraged to explore the role of the citizen in the context of a hybrid media ecosystem and the loss of citizens’ trust in institutions.
In this special issue, we call for papers broad multidisciplinary empirical and theoretical contributions on communication resilience in the framework of social movements addressing issues such as gender-based violence, migration, climate change, wars, and conflicts. and focusing on investigating diverse media practices that respond to information disorders.
We seek papers that investigate communication resilience considering different types of media practices that social movements and movement organization use to respond to information disorders in different countries across the globe and using quantitative, qualitative, computational or mixed-methods research design. Some of the topics that might be addressed by the papers are the following:
Submission procedure and deadlines Articles, written in English, should be submitted to the editors according to the following schedule: Submission of long abstracts (800 - 1,000 words): 15 December 2024 Acceptance and notification: 20 January 2025 Submission of articles: 02 May 2025 Provision of peer review feedback: 30 September 2025 Submission of revised drafts: 30 November 2025 Long abstracts should include the following information: (1) A description of the topic, (2) How the paper addresses one or more of the nodal points of the SI, (3) Empirical data and methodology, (4) Findings To send your paper proposal, please submit a long paper abstract (700-1,000 words) to dafne.calvo@uv.es and maria.iranzo-cabrera@uv.es by 15 December 2024. Selected contributors will be asked to submit their full paper (8,000-10,000 words) by 15 January 2025. Note that the word total includes references, notes, tables, figures and diagrams. All papers will be sent to two external referees for final assessment.
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e-ISSN: 2035-6609