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Challenging color-evasion in democratic dialogue: using critical race discourse analysis to generate practical theory for facilitators Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Danielle Hodge, Leah Sprain
Guided by Critical Race Discourse Analysis and Grounded Practical Theory this paper analyzes interaction during classroom dialogs to examine how democratic inclusion is undermined by color-evasion....
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Advancing a critical postmodern approach to stigma management communication (SMC) theory in the context of difficulty orgasming Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-03-07 Rachel V. Tucker, Elizabeth A. Hintz
Addressing calls for increased communication scholarship that interrogates power in stigma processes, we develop a critical postmodern approach to stigma management communication (SMC) theory and d...
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The Washington Climate Assembly: note-taking modalities as deliberative guidance in an online citizens’ assembly Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-02-23 John Rountree, Chul Hyun Park, Robert C. Richards
In this essay, we use applied rhetorical criticism to analyze how facilitators navigate online deliberation in the Washington Climate Assembly, a public deliberation process held virtually in Janua...
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Material precarity, performative imperative, and burnout from resilience: surfacing the dark side of resilience laboring in women’s entrepreneurial stories Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-02-20 Ziyu Long, Kira Marshall-McKelvey, Michelle M. Matter
Drawing from U.S. women entrepreneurs’ narratives of how they enacted resilience, the current study focuses on the dark side of resilience laboring – when individual resilience efforts and expectat...
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Contributing to the explanatory power of the stigma management communication theory: a study in handling colorist and racist comments Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Meghnaa Tallapragada, Kynaat A. Mirza, Dilara Eran, Mikayla J. Renwick, Rjaa Ahmed, Dipanshi Agarwal, Ana Vucetic
This study enhances the explanatory power of the stigma management communication theory [SMCT] while providing practical communication techniques for people who may want to respond to racist/colori...
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Understanding the perceptions of memorable messages about academic performance among students of color in the United States Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-02-08 Melissa F. Tindage, Daisy Lemus, Cynthia Stohl
This study addresses students of color (SOC) perceptions of memorable messages (MMs) related to their academic ability. A survey of 165 undergraduate students who identified as people of color vivi...
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Correction Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2024-01-15
Published in Journal of Applied Communication Research (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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Applied communication, witnessing, and decolonizing futures Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-12-19 Mohan J. Dutta
Published in Journal of Applied Communication Research (Vol. 51, No. 6, 2023)
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Far-right memespheres and platform affordances: the effects of environmental opacity on the spread of extremist memes on Twitter and WhatsApp Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-12-19 Viktor Chagas
Research on WhatsApp political memes is still scarce. Nevertheless, since the 2018 Brazilian elections, the platform has attracted the attention of the media in general, after complaints of its use...
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Applied communication research as a discipline of crisis and care: meeting the moment Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-11-27 Heather M. Zoller
Published in Journal of Applied Communication Research (Vol. 52, No. 1, 2024)
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Temporality tensions in the design of simulation-based training: the case of the Tall Grass local-to-state disaster response exercise Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-11-19 Elizabeth J. Carlson
In simulation-based training, learners apply skills in an environment that approximates the real conditions of work. Trainers who design a simulation also employ assumptions about the design of com...
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Irrational rationality in organizational decision-making: sustainability discourses and material constraints of U.S. urban desert farmers Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-07-06 Alaina C. Zanin, Cris J. Tietsort, Rebecca L. Muenich, Emma E. Bonham
This study documents how urban desert farmers make sense of their organizational decisions as sustainable. This study collected interviews with urban desert farmers located in one metropolitan area...
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A flow that comes when we’re talking: water metaphors for exploring intercultural communication during early childhood assessment interactions in a Yolŋu (First Nations Australian) community Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-06-19 Emily Armstrong, Ḻäwurrpa Maypilama, Yuŋgirrŋa Bukulatjpi, Dorothy Gapany, Lyn Fasoli, Sarah Ireland, Rachel Dikul Baker, Sally Hewat, Anne Lowell
Culture mediates how all people think and communicate and intercultural communication skills are required for effective collaboration. This study (2017–2021) explored intercultural communication wi...
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The enactment of relational maintenance when Guatemalan parents are forcibly separated from their families due to deportation Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-05-23 Carmen R. Valdez, Karen E. Schlag, Anita L. Vangelisti, Brian Padilla
This study examines how parents deported to Guatemala from the United States (U.S.) use relational maintenance strategies to preserve relationships with their family living in the U.S. In a context...
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“Damage control”: exploring communication sense-making within foster exit conversations from the U.S. foster parent perspective Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-05-16 Leslie R. Nelson, Maria Butauski, Summer Atwood
Guided by the communicated sense-making (CSM) theoretical model (Koenig Kellas, J., & Kranstuber Horstman, H. (2015). Communicated narrative sense-making: Understanding family narratives, storytell...
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All joking aside? Comparing the effects of a humorous vs. a non-humorous message strategy in building organization–public relationships and community resilience Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-05-14 Jiyoun Kim, Brooke F. Liu, Anita Atwell Seate, Saymin Lee, Daniel Hawblitzel
Communication scholars have studied the persuasive power of humor messages, but research provides mixed results. Also, the literature has been slow in demonstrating the practical effects of humorou...
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A comparative analysis of U.S. state government communication and resident compliance to CDC COVID-19 guidelines Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-03-26 Deborah D. Sellnow-Richmond, Amiso M. George, Marta N. Lukacovic, Sofia E. Salazar, Deanna D. Sellnow
ABSTRACT As COVID-19 raged through the United States, Americans were inundated with messages from multiple and competing sources, some based on political ideologies, fueled by misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation via cable and social media. This study uses the IDEA model for effective instructional risk and crisis communication to examine the role of state governors in encouraging compliance
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The labor of diversity in the 2020–2021 U.S. communication job market Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-03-18 Ryan A. D’Souza, Jessica Sage Rauchberg, Beatriz Nieto-Fernandez
Following George Floyd’s murder in 2020, academia pursued a policy of diversity, noticeable in the job advertisements for the following academic year. This article analyzes 77 tenure-track position...
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E-sisters and the case of the Essure coil: power, representation, and voice in women’s public docket accounts to the FDA of medical device adverse events Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 Elizabeth A. Hintz, Janelle Applequist
One in ten U.S. patients has an internally implanted medical device. Yet, lax regulation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has resulted in the approval of medical devices disproportion...
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Engaged learning: lessons learned by subject-matter experts from COVID-19 in the U.S. swine industry Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-03-15 America L. Edwards, Rebecca Freihaut, Timothy L. Sellnow, Deanna D. Sellnow, Morgan C. Getchell, Adam Parrish
When industries fail to address warnings adequately, risk situations may manifest into crises. Although the U.S. swine industry planned thoroughly for potential infectious disease outbreaks among t...
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‘I never even tried to get out of work’: low wage service work, work–life interrelationships, and women’s health in the United States Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Annis G. Golden, Caryn Medved, Elise Andaya
This study focuses on an under-investigated link between work–life interrelationships and health: how low-wage work impacts employees’ health by influencing their management of health-related conce...
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‘Chemical jail’: culture-centered theorizing of carcerality in methadone maintenance treatment and addiction recovery in the United States Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 B. Liahnna Stanley, Ambar Basu
This study draws from qualitative interviews with eight adults living in the United States using methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) to recover from opioid addiction and dependence. While MMT can...
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Communicating about social justice in participatory budgeting in the United States: ‘Coming together’ to benefit communities Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Vincent Russell
Participatory budgeting (PB) is a public deliberation process designed to advance social justice by engaging geographical community members, especially those from oppressed populations, in collecti...
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Emotion as a predictor of crisis communicative behaviors: examining information seeking and sharing during Hurricane Florence* Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Lucinda Austin, Seoyeon Kim, Adam J. Saffer
Those affected by catastrophic events like hurricanes are burdened with the task of preparing for and responding to the threats of harm in addition to dealing with the emotionally taxing process of...
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Resilience processes buffer the negative associations between marginalizing communication and career outcomes for women in male-dominated workplaces Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Elizabeth Dorrance-Hall, Patricia Gettings
Women in male-dominated workplaces may experience marginalization at work (communication of difference, disapproval, and/or exclusion), which can have deleterious effects on career outcomes. Engagi...
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Enacting resilience at multiple levels during the COVID-19 pandemic: exploring communication theory of resilience for U.S. undocumented college students Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Jesse King, Jennifer A. Kam, Monica Cornejo, Roselia Mendez Murillo
During the COVID-19 pandemic, college students faced a number of stressors that threatened their health and well-being. Undocumented college students faced similar stressors and additional ones tha...
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Decolonizing internationalization initiatives in Brazilian universities Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Sarah Jane Blithe, Renato Pereira Lima de Carvalho
Universities across the globe are implementing internationalization programs. These programs often focus on language development, study abroad programs, and developing the international reputations...
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Racialized scripts of silence: how whiteness organizes silence as a response to social protest about racism in the United States Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-19 Anna Valiavska, Rebecca Meisenbach
Communication research often sidelines and ignores racial dynamics in organizational practices and processes, even when considering social movements and protests over racism. The current interview-...
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Intervention orientations in communication research Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-05 J. Kevin Barge
ABSTRACT The importance of intervention in communication research has continued to expand in a variety of research traditions including applied communication, engaged scholarship, and communication activism. The growing importance of intervention requires closely examining our research practices regarding knowledge production and the role of nonacademic research partners. The present study articulates
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Disclosure of intimate partner violence experiences during COVID-19: patient-provider communication in a Southern United States emergency department Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-05 Jennifer A. Scarduzio, Joshua Santiago, Yolanda L. Jackson
ABSTRACT Using the lens of Communication Privacy Management (CPM) theory, this article examines communication between health care providers in the southern United States emergency department (ED) and patients who have experienced IPV. We qualitatively examine communicative challenges that COVID-19 protocols have created, as well as routine difficulties that occur when communicating with survivors of
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I can still be their mom from a distance: understanding the experiences of incarcerated mothers in a faith-based parenting program in a United States prison Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2023-02-03 Monica Gallegos, Jacqueline Emerine
ABSTRACT This study examines the experiences of incarcerated mothers who participate in a faith-based parenting program at a women’s prison in the United States. Thirty-three women participated in four focus groups. Using a grounded theory framework, four major themes emerged from the analysis, including building foundations, guilty mom, on the mend, and opening the lines of communication. Overall
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Building capacity for citizen science communication of water quality risks: exploring the enhancement of the communication infrastructure in Letcher County, Kentucky Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-12-30 Laura M. Fischer, Dan O’Hair, Madison Wallace, Xianlin Jin, Jason Unrine
ABSTRACT In regions of Eastern Kentucky, access to potable water has been diminished due to pollution and ageing infrastructure. Current communications regarding contaminated water are often inaccessible and infrequent to appropriately address the issues in target communities. To explore possible improvements to the community’s communication infrastructure, the researchers explored what types of stories
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Pandemic communication as transformation Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-12-22 Mohan J. Dutta
Published in Journal of Applied Communication Research (Vol. 50, No. 6, 2022)
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I’m just trying to fill my kids up: parents’ pre-emptive (re)construction of identities amidst rising anti-Muslim rhetoric in the United States Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-12-16 Marwa Abdalla, Yea-Wen Chen
ABSTRACT This qualitative study examines 16 Muslim parents’ communication with their children after Donald Trump’s electoral victory and amidst increasing Islamophobic and anti-Muslim rhetoric in the United States. Our analysis highlights communication interactions, informed by participants’ perceived demonization of Muslims in media and political discourses, intended to counter negative stereotypes
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Racism and resilience of pandemic proportions: online harassment of Asian Americans during COVID-19 Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-12-15 Stephanie Tom Tong, Elizabeth Stoycheff, Rahul Mitra
ABSTRACT This study explores perceptions of online racial hate speech directed at Asian Americans in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic. We examined how individuals’ enactment of resilience communication in response to that threat affected their self-reported estimates of personal health. Using a nationally representative survey (n = 1767) that oversampled Asian Americans (n = 455), we
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Fake news by any other name: phrases for false content and effects on public perceptions of U.S. news media Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Jessica R. Collier, Emily Van Duyn
ABSTRACT The term ‘fake news’ aims to delegitimize news and is weaponized by political leaders and partisan media. Research has noted the negative impact of the phrase ‘fake news’ yet little work has investigated alternative discourse. We explore whether the phrase ‘fake news’ is distinct from alternative phrases such as ‘misinformation’ and ‘false news.’ Using two experiments, we compare effects of
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The role of interpersonal communication in instilling a sense of social justice: Beirut August 4, 2020, explosion Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-22 Christy Mady, Jessica R. El-Khoury
ABSTRACT The August 4, 2020, Beirut Port explosion killed over 200 people and left countless Lebanese injured and traumatized. To this date, the reasons behind the explosion remain unknown and the burden of this unjust act weighs heavily upon all Lebanese. Countless journalistic reports attest to the failure of official communication channels and the lack of meaningful action. None, however, delve
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Social processes of participatory engagement effects: a longitudinal examination with a sample of young women in the United States Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-22 HyunYi Cho, Chi Song, Wenbo Li, Dinah Adams
ABSTRACT Participatory interventions enable active user engagement, but research is needed to examine the longitudinal mechanisms through which engagement may generate outcomes. This study investigated the social processes following a web-based participatory media literacy intervention. In this program, young women were asked to create a digital counter message against the media content that promotes
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‘Had I gone into the office, they would have caught it a little bit sooner’: narrative problematics in U.S. pandemic birth stories Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-18 Susanna Foxworthy Scott, Nicole L. Johnson, Maria Brann, Jennifer J. Bute
ABSTRACT Individuals who gave birth during the COVID-19 pandemic experienced an increased risk for premature births, stillbirths, depression, and lower access to care. Their stories provide valuable information that can inform clinical care, particularly due to loss of in-person support resulting from visitor restrictions in hospitals. Grounded in a theory of narrative problematics, we explored how
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The impact of source credibility and risk perception attitudes on Americans’ willingness to participate in contact tracing applications Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-13 Ryan Weber, William I. MacKenzie, Candice Lanius
ABSTRACT Contact tracing has emerged as one tool to communicate infection risks with the public during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study uses source credibility and the risk perception attitude framework to interpret how Americans responded to contact tracing messages from a technology company, employer, physician, or state government. Survey participants (n = 245) were generally positive towards a
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High reliability organizing through an extended crisis: a case study of a U.S. university during COVID-19 Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-09 Elizabeth A. Williams, Jody Donovan, Laura Giles, David McKelfresh
ABSTRACT During the COVID-19 pandemic, organizations that had previously operated in low-risk conditions found themselves in environments where failure could be catastrophic. Using the framework of high reliability organizations (HRO), we analyze a specific case of a U.S. university taskforce charged with responding to the pandemic. We argue that the practices employed by the taskforce align with HRO
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Making and breaking boundaries Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Mohan J. Dutta
Published in Journal of Applied Communication Research (Vol. 50, No. sup1, 2022)
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Quarantined across borders: theorizing embodied transnationalism, precarious citizenship, and resilience for collective healing Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Srividya Ramasubramanian, Aisha Durham, Joëlle Cruz
Abstract Embodied transnationalism is characterized by intimate experiences of human-made political borders that define, limit, and restrict flows of the “Other.” In the Quarantined Across Borders collection, contributors from immigrant and diasporic backgrounds address the material and discursive differences in how they experience the pandemic in terms of a public health crisis and public policy response
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Documenting the mundane in quarantine Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Ryan Arron D’Souza
ABSTRACT This autoethnography uses narrative inquiry to make sense of practices normalized during quarantine. It centers my identity as a classed and racialized immigrant in relation to the socioeconomics of quarantine to question seemingly innocent mandates, policies, and practices. The narrative form of the article is influenced by Nathan Hodges’ ‘The Chemical Life.' I use the self-reflexive ‘I'
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Masks across borders: etiquette, threat and prevention Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Emi Kanemoto, Sasha Allgayer
ABSTRACT This collaborative autoethnography addresses the cultural, social, and political issues of (un)masking during the COVID-19 pandemic. Though it may seem a simple act of wearing face masks in order to protect oneself and others from the virus, it has turned into a rather intricate phenomena for multiple reasons, including cultural attitudes, political rhetoric, and misinformation from leading
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Being an alien in times of coronavirus: three narrative snapshots Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Valentina Aduen
ABSTRACT This article explores my personal journey as a migrant from Colombia to the United States, the experiences of my friend, and the experiences of other migrants as we navigate our identity as citizens and ‘aliens’ during COVID-19. As I dig deep into what being a citizen represents when we migrate from our country of origin, I explore the different layers of meaning that this journey takes when
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Body as disease Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 David C. Oh
ABSTRACT The essay is a reflection on my experience of isolation on campus as my body was marked as a carrier of disease. Locating the essay in the literature about fears of Asian Americans as an alien presence and a yellow peril threat and on the work on microaggressions in academia, I understand my colleagues’ avoidance as rooted in racialized fears of COVID-19. This demonstrates the problems of
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Race-making of the COVID-19 outbreak in early mainstream frames: the production of the epidemic(ed) transnational citizen Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Satveer Kaur-Gill
ABSTRACT In this essay, I use discourse tracing to analyse critical movements and shifts in media discourse during the early phases of the COVID-19 outbreak in Singapore. The study follows mainstream media discourses featured in The Straits Times to unearth the tensions, ruptures, and dialectics as the public health crisis developed. Specifically, I traced how media frames were constructed and reconstructed
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Solitary reflections on being in-between Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Marilia Kaisar
ABSTRACT During the COVID-19 pandemic, as shelter-in-place orders were issued in the United States, most people were confined to their homes and adjusted to new domestic routines. This essay traces my routine of walking through different landscapes in Santa Cruz and reflects on being in-between languages and continents. I entangle personal reflections with theory in an attempt to portray the experience
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Politics of the plate: How an Indian food blog explored issues of identity, community, and food politics during the pandemic Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Newly Paul
ABSTRACT Immigrants use food blogs to construct and maintain their ethnic identities. During the pandemic in spring of 2020, the Indian food blog Bongmom’s Cookbook, which showcases food from the Kolkata region of India, was my go-to for coping with the sense of uncertainty in the world. The blog and Facebook posts used humor to document meals and family life during the pandemic, while avoiding more
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Resilient communication using art in applied contexts Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Diana Kasem
ABSTRACT Narrating my reflections on the quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and my experience of the crisis in Syria, this paper studies the ways fear can transform into resilience by examining the self-reflexive works Path Out (Causa Creations, 2016) and Another Kind of Girl (You Must know, 2016). Using digital media, the creators of these works of art construct autobiographical, educational
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The role of organizational and supervisor support in young adult workers’ resilience, efficacy and burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Heewon Kim, L. D. Mattson, Dacheng Zhang, Hee Jung Cho
ABSTRACT As workers continue to grapple with the ongoing changes and uncertainties of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is critical to examine how to foster young adult workers’ resilience and efficacy, which may prevent their burnout in a sustained crisis. This study investigates the effects of the perceived qualities of change communication, organizational support, and supervisor support on young adult workers’
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Factors affecting rumor believability in the context of COVID-19: the moderating roles of government trust and health literacy Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Hyegyu Lee, Jarim Kim
ABSTRACT This study explores the mediating role of prior exposure to a rumor in the relationship between anxiety and rumor believability, and the moderated mediation thereof by government trust and health literacy. A total of 534 participants aged 19–59 were recruited from a research survey panel in an early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic in Korea. Using two negative COVID-19 rumors, prior exposure
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Overcoming disaster linguicism: using autoethnography during the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark to explore how community translators can provide multilingual disaster communication Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-06 Shinya Uekusa
ABSTRACT This article presents an autoethnography (AE) of my experience of improvising disaster communication with community translators in Denmark through the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Like the author, who is a novice in Danish, those who are not competent in the dominant language(s) of communication are deemed to be more vulnerable in disaster situations, such as the current pandemic
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Stand down: a journal of applied communication research forum on extremism and White nationalism in the United States military Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-02 Victoria McDermott, Amy May, Leandra H. Hernández, Max Erdemandi, Nick Mararac, Hamilton Bean, William T. Howe, Kurt Braddock, Stevie Munz, Precious Yamaguchi, Alexa DiCamillo
ABSTRACT The spread and acceptance of extremism and White nationalism throughout United States institutions poses some of today’s most difficult challenges to national (in)security. This forum brings together scholars from a variety of backgrounds and perspectives to center communication in an effort to investigate, disrupt, and mitigate extremism and White nationalism within the United States military
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Dialogues for equity: precarious parent-scholars in times of crisis Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-11-02 Anis Rahman, Nicole K. Stewart, Betty Ackah, Byron Hauck
ABSTRACT The COVID-19 pandemic amplified inequities around parent-scholars in the neoliberal gig academy. This paper documents the stories and intersectional struggles of four precarious parent-scholars as they navigated doctoral work, dissertation defenses, research, remote teaching, and family life during the pandemic. We illustrate how we navigated our neoliberal subjectivities and the extending
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Developing a grounded practical theory of engaged communication scholarship: theorizing communities of practice in NCA journals Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-10-10 Anna Wiederhold Wolfe, Tyler Champine
ABSTRACT This study analyzes use of the terms ‘engaged scholarship’ and ‘engaged research’ in all 11 NCA journals to develop a grounded practical theory (GPT) of engaged communication research. We find that the practice of engaged scholarship is defined by tensions between role identity goals of scholar and practitioner; relational goals of expertise and partnership; and outcome goals of theory and
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Indigenous communication in Latin America for social re-existence: communicative experiences in the Colombian Cauca Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-10-04 Malely Linares Sánchez, Inmaculada Postigo Gómez
ABSTRACT This paper contributes to the study of communication in Latin America through a theoretical proposal called communication for social re-existence. This concept emerges from the analysis of the community practices of the Nasa indigenous people in the Cauca region of Colombia in which communication and territorial defense are interrelated. Using the metaphor of weaving, this communicative approach
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The long walk home: India’s migrant labor, livelihood, and lockdown amid COVID-19 Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-09-23 Yagnya Valkya Misra
ABSTRACT Covid-19-induced curbs on movement and social distancing, imposed by governments around the world brought transportation and the economy to a standstill in many nations. In India, with its billion-plus population, it severely exposed the problems of the poor, especially millions of internal migrant workers working primarily in unorganised sectors as daily wagers (Umanath, 2020) with little
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The tragedy of the open society and COVID-19 pandemic: local community resistance to neoliberal hegemony (A multispecies ethnography) Journal of Applied Communication Research (IF 2.462) Pub Date : 2022-09-19 Prihandoko Sanjatmiko, Sofiatul Hardiah
ABSTRACT As COVID-19 has spread globally, so too has public knowledge about the virus, through social media. In multispecies ethnography and health communication, this open and free flow of information has led to a phenomenon called the Tragedy of the Open Society. Located in the Kampung Laut community, this study collected data through in-depth online interviews to explore this interaction between