Mediated public diplomacy and peace journalism: International public news agencies on the Syrian crisis
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Date
2024
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE Publications Ltd
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
As the liberal international order has been falling the heteropolar order coupled with politics of uncertainty has been rising. In this context illiberal regimes of status-seeking powers have realized the value of public diplomacy to promulgate their versions of the “reality.” Those illiberal regimes’ adoption of public diplomacy tools (incl. international public news agencies) has generated discussions on theoretical and practical approaches to the field at the intersection of political science/international relations media and communication studies. Against this backdrop this paper aims to contribute to the emerging literature on public diplomacy of non-Western illiberal democracies. With the assumption that those regimes' illiberal democratic characteristics will be reflected in their public agencies' coverage styles (e.g. monologic conflictive and unbalanced) the article raises the following question: How do illiberal democracies utilize international public agencies as public diplomacy channels? To answer this question it compares framing strategies (peace/war journalism) of the Russian TASS and the Turkish Anatolian Agency public agencies during the Syrian crisis. The findings reveal that those illiberal regimes’ public agencies have reported the crisis as a state-centric monolog in conflict with the West by distrupting the global public good (i.e. peace). © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Media, Public Diplomacy, Public News Agencies, Russia, Syrian Crisis, Turkey, Syrian Crisis, MEDIA, Public News Agencies, Russia, Public Diplomacy, Turkey, Turkey, media, Syrian crisis, public news agencies, public diplomacy, Russia
Fields of Science
0508 media and communications, 05 social sciences, 0506 political science
Citation
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OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
International Communication Gazette
Volume
86
Issue
3
Start Page
210
End Page
234
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Scopus : 5
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Mendeley Readers : 23
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