International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Media and Uncertainty

International Journal of Communication Publishes a Special Section on Media and Uncertainty

Within media environments, uncertainty builds from the rapid unfolding and often unforeseen ramifications of digital technology, the collapse of traditional business models, new degrees of irrelevance, the emergence of new players and platforms, the development of new reception practices, changing expectations of what media are for, and a shift in the very relationship of the media to the outside world. In an era marked by widespread dis- and mis-information, how and in what ways will the media—as institutions, as occupational and professional contexts, as a diverse set of practices—adapt to this age of uncertainty?

Guest-edited by Nelson Ribeiro and Barbie Zelizer, this Special Section on Media and Uncertainty aims to discuss the uncertainty faced by media practitioners and journalists, as well as the institutional settings in which they work.

Two of the papers in this Section focus on video production, discussing how the video influencer industry has been captured by the neoliberal agenda that is taking over several cultural industries. They also consider how states and governments use video footage to promote and legitimize their narratives in the digital ecosystem. Three additional articles deal with journalism and the challenges posed by the transformation of its business models and relations with the public. They call for the need to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate forms of market and state influence, shed light on how media professionals navigate the uncertainty brought about by local newspapers closing, and discuss how social media can function as ephemeral memory sites used to share memories about journalistic projects that have been shut down.

All of the articles in this Section exemplify how central the concept of uncertainty has become for understanding the new media ecology, and how the media both foster and complicate how citizens can navigate uncertain times. They raise questions about the viability of media institutions when uncertainty looms large.

We invite you to read these articles that published in the International Journal of Communication on August 11, 2022. Please log into ijoc.org to read the papers of interest. We look forward to your feedback! 

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Media and Uncertainty—Introduction
Nelson Ribeiro, Barbie Zelizer

“We’re All Told Not to Put Our Eggs in One Basket”: Uncertainty, Precarity and Cross-Platform Labor in the Online Video Influencer Industry
Zoë Glatt

In One Hand, a Camera, and in the Other, a Gun: State Adoption of Visual Activist Strategies for Narrative Legitimacy     
Anat Leshnick

Understanding the Institutional Precarity of Journalism: A Macro Approach to the Civil Diminishment of Journalism
Sara Torsner

Local Journalism in the Age of Uncertainty: The Case of Youngstown, Ohio’s The Vindicator      
Carla Randolph Everstijn 

Connective Memory Practices: Mourning the Restructuring of a War Desk       
Muira Mccammon 

____________________________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Arlene Luck, Founding Managing Editor  
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Nelson Ribeiro and Barbie Zelizer, Guest Editors

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.

International Journal of Communication announces the publication of 19 papers that published in JULY

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 19 papers that published in July

The International Journal of Communication is pleased to announce the publication of 19 papers in JULY 2022. To access these papers, Ctrl+Click on the titles below for direct hyperlinking.
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ARTICLES

Mind the Gap! Journalism on Social Media and News Consumption Among Young Audiences
Jorge Vázquez-Herrero, María-Cruz Negreira-Rey, José Sixto-García

Thematic Analysis and Use of Journalistic Sources in the COVID-19 Crisis: The New York Times, El Universal, and El País
Itziar Bernaola-Serrano, Guadalupe Aguado-Guadalupe

Making Money Public: The Journalistic Construction of the Paycheck Protection Program
Parker Bach, Lana Swartz

American Media, American Mind: Media Impact on Nigerians’ Perceptions
Omotayo O. Banjo, Dirichi Umunna

“She Shoots, He Scores!”: Transgender Disclosure and the Politics of Women’s Ice Hockey
Jackson McLaren

Fighting Disinformation in the 1930s: Clyde Miller and the Institute for Propaganda Analysis
Anya Schiffrin 

Does Exposure to Risk Communication About Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia (COVID-19) Predict Protective Behaviors? Testing the Moderating Role of Optimistic Bias
Hongliang Chen, David Atkin, Qike Jia

Media Consumption and Its Influence on Electoral Political Engagement: An Analysis From the Communication Mediation Model in the Context of the 2021 Mexican Federal Election
Carlos Muñiz 

What Happens in the Eye of the Storm? News Ideology During Media Storms
Doron Shultziner

Sharing Truths About the Self: Theorizing News Reposting on Social Media
Jueni Duyen Tran 

Disinformation as a Widespread Problem and Vulnerability Factors Toward it: Evidence From a Quasi-Experimental Survey in Spain
Roberto Gelado-Marcos, Plácido Moreno-Felices, Belén Puebla-Martínez

Purchasing Diversity: A Media Ecology Analysis on the Recruitment of Newspaper Op-ed Columnists
Nakho Kim, Ho Young Yoon

“Life and Death” on the Internet: Metaphors and Chinese Users’ Experiences of “Account Bombing”
Hui Fang, Shangwei Wu

The Moderating Role of Political Ideology: Need for Cognition, Media Locus of Control, Misinformation Efficacy, and Misperceptions About COVID-19
Porismita Borah

Attacking the Gatekeepers: A Survey Experiment on the Effects of Elite Criticism on the Media 
Patrick F. A. van Erkel, Karolin Soontjens 

Failure to Launch: International Broadcasters as Counter-Hegemonic News
Christopher M. Toula

BOOK REVIEWS

Vincent Miller, Understanding Digital Culture (2nd ed.)
Admilson Veloso da Silva

Stuart Price and Ben Harbisher (Eds.), Power, Media and the Covid-19 Pandemic:Framing Public Discourse 
Nath Aldalala’a 

Yi Guo, Freedom of the Press in China: A Conceptual History, 1831–1949
Liuchang Tan 

______________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Arlene Luck, Founding Managing Editor  
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 9th among all  Humanities journals and 9th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level. 

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 30 papers that published in June

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 30 papers that published in June

The International Journal of Communication is pleased to announce the publication of 30 papers in JUNE 2022. To access these papers, Ctrl+Click on the titles below for direct hyperlinking.
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ARTICLES

Flashbacks in Netflix Original TV Series (2013–2017): Predominant Categories, Formal Features, and Semantic Effects 
José Antonio Planes, Alberto N. García, Ernesto Pérez-Morán 

When Journalists Run for Office: The Effects of Journalist-Candidates on Citizens’ Populist Attitudes and Voting Intentions
Cristian Vaccari 

Trust in Religious Others: A Three-Way Interaction Model of Religious Bias, Informational Use of Digital Media, and Education
Muhammad Masood, Meng Xiang, Marko M. Skoric, Saifuddin Ahmed 

Seeing and Believing Pro-Trump Fake News: The Interacting Roles of Online News Sources, Partisanship, and Education
Patrick C. Meirick, Amanda E. Franklyn 

Strategic Temporality: Information Types and Their Rhetorical Usage in Digital Election Visualizations
Eedan R. Amit-Danhi

Digital Redlining and the Endless Divide: Philadelphia’s COVID-19 Digital Inclusion Efforts
Pawel Popiel, Victor Pickard 

Whither Transnationality? Some Theoretical Challenges in Korean Wave Studies 
Jaeho Kang

An Integrative Framework for Information Behaviors on Social Issues: In the Context of South–North Korean Relations
Hyo Jung Kim, Sungwook Hwang

Quantifying the Evidential Value of Celebrity Endorsement: A p-Curve Analysis
Shiyun Tian, Ruoyu Sun, Qian Huang, John Petit

Close Calls: Reclaiming the Nuclear Hotline as a Communication Technology
Bryan C. Taylor, Hamilton Bean

Women Under Authoritarianism: Precarious, Glamorous Women Politicians in Hong Kong Political News and Gossip
Natalie Ngai

Africa Rising? A Meta-Analysis of Published Communication Scholarship
Meghan Sobel Cohen

A Multilevel Model of Mobile Media Use and Public Support for Press Freedom in Africa
Jason A. Martin 

“We Usually Go Out Instead, So That He Forgets About His Tablet”: (Great-)Grandparental Mediation in the Generational Order 
Carolina Martínez 

Love NBA, Hate BLM: Racism in China’s Sports Fandom
Altman Yuzhu Peng, Xianwen Kuang, Jenny Zhengye Hou

Between the Liminal and the Normal: How the News Constructed the Social Change of Face Covering During the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United States
Xi Cui, Feifei Chen

Users’ Political Motivations in Comment Sections on News Sites
Patrick Zerrer, Ines Engelmann

Testing Mechanisms and Effects of Opposition-Targeted Inoculation and Visual Strategies to Promote Health Policy
Jiawei Liu, Andy J. King, Jeff Niederdeppe

Against the Current: Back to Public Diplomacy as Government Communication
Seong-Hun Yun

Rethinking De-Westernization in Communication Studies: The Ibero-American Movement in International Publishing
Marton Demeter, Manuel Goyanes, Federico Navarro, Judit Mihalik, Claudia Mellado 

Media Freedom in a Populist Regime: Evidence From Pakistan
Shabbir Hussain, Qamar Abbas, Mohammad Anas Sheikh

Spiral of Silence or Social Loafing? A Parallel Mechanism to Explain Why People Defend Their Stances on Controversial Sociopolitical Issues
Cheng Hong, Cong Li

Conflicts and Nigeria Media: A Look at National Newspapers’ Coverage of Herdsmen and Farmers’ Clashes
Sunday Uche Aja, Joseph Nwanja Chukwu, Ekwutosi Sanita Nwakpu,
Valentine Okwudilichukwu Ezema, Ijeoma Njideka Taiwo


FEATURE

Inoculation Theory and Affect
Josh Compton, Bobi Ivanov, Erin Hester 


BOOK REVIEWS

Seb Franklin, The Digitally Disposed: Racial Capitalism and the Informatics of Value
Rebecca Avalos 

Keri K. Stephens (Ed.), New Media in Times of Crisis: New Agendas in Communication
Christopher John Long 

Adriana Gordejuela, Flashbacks in Film: A Cognitive and Multimodal Analysis 
Matthew Sellers Johnson 

Elina R. Tachkova and W. Timothy Coombs, Communicating in Extreme Crises: Lessons From the Edge
Yanhong Hu

Wendy K. Z. Anderson, Rebirthing a Nation: White Women, Identity Politics, and the Internet
Aiden James Kosciesza

Jinhyun Cho, Intercultural Communication in Interpreting: Power and Choices
Cuiling Zhang

______________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Arlene Luck, Founding Managing Editor  
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 4th among all Humanities journals and 7th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level. 

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 19 papers that published in May

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 19 papers that published in May

The International Journal of Communication is pleased to announce the publication of 19 papers in MAY 2022. To access these papers, Ctrl+Click on the titles below for direct hyperlinking.
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ARTICLES

Picturing the “Hordes of Hated Barbarians”: Islamic State Propaganda, (Self)Orientalism, and Strategic Self-Othering
Jared Ahmad

In FYP We Trust: The Divine Force of Algorithmic Conspirituality 
Kelley Cotter, Julia R. DeCook, Shaheen Kanthawala, Kali Foyle 

From Hype Cynics to Extreme Believers: Typologizing the Swiss Population’s COVID-19-Related Conspiracy Beliefs, Their Corresponding Information Behavior, and Social Media Use 
Mike S. Schäfer, Daniela Mahl, Tobias Füchslin, Julia Metag, Jing Zeng 

Selection Bias of News on Social Media: The Role of Selective Sharing and Avoidance During the Lebanon Uprising
Claudia Kozman, Jad Melki 

Media Visibility of Femininity and Care: UK Women’s Magazines’ Representations of Female “Keyworkers” During COVID-19
Shani Orgad, Catherine Rottenberg 

Instagrammable Data: Using Visuals to Showcase More Than Numbers on AJ Labs Instagram Page
Mathias-Felipe de-Lima-Santos, Arwa Kooli

Trade-offs, New Norms, and Aspirations: Conceptualizing the Shadow WiFi Public of a Suburban Havana Park
Lorian Leong

Rethinking the Expertise of Data Journalists: A Case Study
Jingrong Tong 

Nation Branding as a Modern Expression of Colonialism in Latin America: A Focus on Chile, Colombia, and Peru
Pablo Miño

The Personal Is Political for Me(n)too: Online Discourse Surrounding Male Victims of Sexual Assault
Hila Lowenstein-Barkai 

On the Effects and Boundaries of Awe and Humor Appeals for Pro-Environmental Engagement
Chris Skurka, Nicholas Eng, Mary Beth Oliver

Binge-Watching Dependence: A Function of Sensation Seeking, Need for Cognition, and Flow
Hongjin Shim, Yoon Hi Sung

The Audacity of Clout (Chasing): Digital Strategies of Black Youth in Chicago DIY Hip-Hop                        
Jabari M. Evans, Nancy K. Baym

Editorial Journalism and Environmental Issues in the Majority World
Shafiq Ahmad Kamboh, Muhammad Ittefaq, Muhammad Yousaf

BOOK REVIEWS

Achille Mbembe, Necropolitics
Sebastian Yuxi Zhao

James Shanahan, Media Effects: A Narrative Perspective (Key Concepts in Media and Cultural Studies)
Marco Gui

Damian Tambini, Media Freedom
Andrei G. Richter

Monique Lewis, Eliza Govender, and Kate Holland (Eds.), Communicating COVID-19: Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Jim Macnamara

Teun A. van Dijk, Antiracist Discourse: Theory and History of a Macromovement
Xuelei Wang 

______________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Arlene Luck, Founding Managing Editor  
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 4th among all Humanities journals and 7th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 28 papers that published in April

International Journal of Communication invites you to read these 28 papers that published in April

The International Journal of Communication is pleased to announce the publication of 28 papers in APRIL 2022. To access these papers, Ctrl+Click on the titles below for direct hyperlinking.
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ARTICLES

Values and Media Literacy: Exploring the Relationship Between the Values People Prioritize in Their Life and Their Attitudes Toward Media Literacy 
Simon Chambers, Tanya Notley, Michael Dezuanni, Sora Park 

Twitter and Endorsed (Fake) News: The Influence of Endorsement by Strong Ties, Celebrities, and a User Majority on Credibility of Fake News During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Inyoung Shin, Luxuan Wang, Yi-Ta Lu

Narratives to Increase Prosociality Toward Refugees
Elaine Paravati, Kaitlin Fitzgerald, Melanie C. Green, Cass McAllister, Melissa M. Moore

Discussion Networks and Resilience of College Students: Explicating Tie Strength in Communicative Interaction
Seungyoon Lee, Bailey C. Benedict, Tamara C. Guest 

Geographic Disparities in Knowledge Production: A Big Data Analysis of Peer-Reviewed Communication Publications from 1990 to 2019
Brian Ekdale, Abby Rinaldi, Mir Ashfaquzzaman, Mehrnaz Khanjani, Frankline Matanji, Ryan Stoldt, Melissa Tully

Different Effects on Different Immigrant Groups: Testing the Media’s Role in Triggering Perceptions of Economic, Cultural, and Security Threats From Immigration
Nora Theorin

The Influence of Social Media Discussion on Son Preference in Azerbaijan: Reinforcing Norms, Bargaining With Patriarchy, Space for Dissent
Katy E. Pearce, Dana Donohoe, Kristen Barta, Jessica Vitak

WhatsApp and Digital Astroturfing: A Social Network Analysis of Brazilian Political Discussion Groups of Bolsonaro’s Supporters
Viktor Chagas

(Un)Veiling Our Biases: Activating Religious, Emotional, and Contextual Cues in News Media Representations of Syrian Refugees
Laura P. B. Partain, Andrew J. Weaver

Media Use and Perceived Pollution: Does a Reinforcing Spiral Exist in China?
Yimin Mao

Aadhaar and the Social Credit System: Personal Data Governance in India and China
Ralph Schroeder

When Vaccine Uncertainty Prevails: Association Between Online Social Influence and COVID-19 Vaccine Intentions
Hue Trong Duong, Tham Thi Nguyen, Le Thanh Trieu

Live and Kicking: Digital Live Broadcasting Technologies, Participating Strangers and News Mobility
Jonathan Ilan

Facing Falsehoods: Strategies for Polite Misinformation Correction
Pranav Malhotra, Katy Pearce

A Trade War With or Without Trump: Actual Topical Knowledge as a Moderator of Question Wording Effect on Survey Responses
Gabriel Miao Li, Jack Lipei Tang

Motivated Responsibility Attribution in a Pandemic: Roles of Political Orientation, Perceived Severity, and Construal Level
Xinyan Zhao, Stephanie J. Tsang, Sifan Xu

Concentration of Media Ownership in Indonesia: A Setback for Viewpoint Diversity
Masduki, Leen d’Haenens


Online Dating Beyond Dating Apps: An Exploration of Self-Presentation of Chinese Gay Men Dating on Zhihu
Longxuan Zhao, Jiacheng Liu, Zhanghao Li

“Thou Shalt Not Take the Lord’s Name in Vain”: A Methodological Proposal to Identify Religious Hate Content on Digital Social Networks
Luiz Rogério Lopes-Silva, Rodrigo Eduardo Botelho-Francisco, Paulo Sergio da Conceição Moreira, André José Ribeiro Guimarães

Risk Propensity, News Frames and Immigration Attitudes
Anita Gottlob, Hajo Boomgaarden

Discursive Participation and Group Polarization on Facebook: The Curious Case of Pakistan’s Nationalism and Identity
Fatima Zahid Ali, Sergio Sparviero, Jo Pierson

FEATURE

Political Identity and the Therapeutic Work of U.S. Conservative Media
Anthony Nadler


BOOK REVIEWS

Melissa Aronczyk and Maria I. Espinoza, A Strategic Nature: Public Relations and the Politics of American Environmentalism
Stephanie Hill

Matthew Powers and Adrienne Russell (Eds.), Rethinking Media Research for Changing Societies
Yangge Zhang

Jen Hoyer and Nora Almeida, The Social Movement Archive
Benjamin Heim Shepard

Sun-ha Hong, Technologies of Speculation: The Limits of Knowledge in a Data-Driven Society 
Paige Anne Von Feldt

Marta Pérez-Escolar and José Manuel Noguera-Vivo (Eds.), Hate Speech and Polarization in Participatory Society
Raymie E. McKerrow

Tarleton Gillespie, Custodians of the Internet: Platforms, Content Moderation, and the Hidden Decisions That Shape Social Media
Krysten Stein
______________________________________________________________________
Larry Gross, Editor
Arlene Luck, Founding Managing Editor  
Kady Bell-Garcia, Managing Editor
Kasia Anderson, Managing Editor, Special Sections

Please note that according to the latest Google Scholar statistics, IJoC ranks 4th among all Humanities journals and 7th among all Communications journals in the world — demonstrating the viability of open access scholarly publication at the highest level.