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In: Orbis: FPRI's journal of world affairs, Band 55, Heft 4, S. 613-630
ISSN: 0030-4387
World Affairs Online
In: Insight Turkey, S. 29-46
ISSN: 2564-7717
Since the establishment of the Republic, Türkiye has systematically conducted communication activities to proclaim its own theses to the national and international public. Until recently, those efforts were organized by different institutions and in the context of different regulations. Türkiye's evolving development and foreign policy agenda over the past 20 years have compelled it to undertake more ambitious endeavors in the area of communication and public diplomacy. As a result of this requirement, the Directorate of Communications was established on July 24, 2018. This study provides a broad overview of the evolution of the Turkish strategic communication viewpoint and conducts an indepth analysis of the development of the Türkiye communication model and current strategic communication initiatives undertaken by the Directorate of Communications.
In: Social development and security: journal of scientific papers, Band 9, Heft 5
ISSN: 2522-9842
This article aims at researching the implementation of strategic communications within the introduction of the martial law in Ukraine. It is underscored the consolidation, coordination, and cooperation of national crisis communication mechanisms in line with the outlined objectives and goals.
In: Political communication, Band 11, Heft 2, S. 107-164
ISSN: 1058-4609
In Editor's Foreword, Kathleen E. Kendall (State U of New York, Albany) provides an overview to this symposium addressing communication problems of presidential candidates, their handling, & theoretical explanations of these situations. In Presidential Concession Speeches: The Rhetoric of Defeat, Paul E. Corcoran (U of Adelaide, South Australia 5001) analyzes the elaborate rituals of defeated presidential candidates, 1952-1992. Consistent patterns of style, strategy, & content are found that utilize metaphors of game, sport, chivalry, & epic quest. Seen as a narrative of democratic action, it is symbolic of the public moral drama & thus involves complex spiritual concerns. In Managing Perceptions of Public Opinion: Candidates' and Journalists' Reactions to the 1992 Polls, Sandra Bauman (Northwestern U, Evanston, IL) & Susan Herbst report on an exploratory study of the discourse surrounding opinion polls. Based on an analysis of how presidential preference polls were reported in 5 major daily newspapers in the last 2 months of the 1992 campaign, it is argued that public actors including candidates & campaign professionals reify public opinion by using a variety of rhetorical techniques to shape the statistical discourse of the campaign. In Visible and Invisible Candidates: A Case Study in "Competing Logics" of Campaign Coverage, Joshua Meyrowitz (U of New Hampshire, Durham) presents an analysis of the patterns of coverage & noncoverage of Democratic candidate Larry Agran's 1992 presidential campaign. Three logics concerning how campaigns should be covered are identified. It is suggested that the largest gap between national journalistic logic & both local journalistic & public logics exists in the reporting of minor candidates at major events. It is concluded that Agran's exclusion from national press coverage was overdetermined, & that the gap between the logics needs to be addressed. Suggestions for additional research are provided. 116 References. D. Schwartz
In: Social development and security: journal of scientific papers, Band 9, Heft 5
ISSN: 2522-9842
In today's world, the combination of propaganda, disinformation, psychological pressure, and attacks on information and communication systems pose a danger no less than conventional armament. Productive scenarios for counteracting hybrid threats are based on the use of modern technologies of strategic communications, management of subjects of military conflicts, and information processing.
This article is aimed at analyzing the basic concepts of modern hybrid warfare and finding place, purpose, objectives, and features of strategic communications.
An integrated use of strategic communications and reflexive control technologies is proposed to develop hybrid warfare scenarios.
In: Humanities and Social Sciences: HSS, Band 30, Heft 4 - part 2, S. 189-195
ISSN: 2300-9918
In the era of modern threats, Strategic Communication (StratCom) has become a key capability in responding to hybrid threats, the vast majority of which are created in the Information Environment (IE), with particular emphasis on cyberspace. The transition from the information policies of individual armed forces to the comprehensive thought of strategic communication is the focus of the article below. For this purpose, an analysis of source documents was used, showing the development of the concept of strategic communication since 2001 in StratCom collections of documents, policies, doctrines, guidelines, manuals and framework concepts.
The AIDS epidemic, a staggering challenge by any measure, becomes more complex every year. The global response to this epidemic has taken many forms, with information and communication playing an important role in most initiatives. According to the authors of this important book, strategic communication is a promising response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic since it combines a series of important elements and is designed to stimulate positive and measurable behavior change. After describing the key principles of this strategy, the authors elaborate on a wide range of important issues including:. - T
In: International journal of cyber warfare and terrorism: IJCWT ; an official publication of the Information Resources Management Association, Band 3, Heft 3, S. 72-79
ISSN: 1947-3443
The purpose of this paper is to outline a methodology for figuring out what types of information shall be shared via strategic level communication to support cyber-security. With this methodology the key development issues required to create relevant strategic messages can be sorted out. The paper follows the system modeling approach and considers the cyber world as a complex adaptive system. First, the paper studies shortly the key concepts of the cyber world and strategic communication. A social system model of a society is applied as an approach for the identifying of emergent phenomena and characteristics of the cyber-security. The social system model is populated with a small set of empirical data about cyber-security exercises. The results of the analysis of the empirical data are examples of the emergent phenomena of cyber-security. They can be considered as one set of the focus areas of the strategic level communication.
About the authors -- Foreword -- Preface -- Publisher's acknowledgements -- The context of public relations -- Public relations origins: definitions and history -- Public relations and media -- Digital and social media -- Public relations and democracy -- Community and society: corporate social responsibility (csr) -- International and multicultural context of public relations -- Role of the public relations practitioner -- Public relations theories and concepts -- Public relations theories: an overview -- Strategic public relations planning and management -- Public relations programme research and evaluation -- Corporate image, reputation and identity -- Public relations, propaganda and the psychology of persuasion -- Public relations' professionalism and ethics -- Public relations specialisms -- Media relations -- Internal communication -- Managing community involvement programmes -- Issues management -- Crisis public relations management -- Public relations and the consumer -- Business-to-business public relations -- Public affairs -- Pr in the world of finance -- Integrated marketing communications -- Sponsorship and public relations -- Sectoral considerations -- Corporate communication -- Non-government organistions and pressure groups -- Celebrity public relations -- Strategic communication and social marketing in healthcare -- What next? future issues for public relations -- Glossary -- Index
In: The Rand journal of economics, Band 55, Heft 1, S. 33-54
ISSN: 1756-2171
AbstractThis article explores information aggregation and strategic communication in settings where committee members are held accountable, formally or informally, for their individual voting decisions. We show that if decisions are made via majority voting, expressive payoffs introduce a free‐rider problem that prevents the committee from communicating truthfully and taking optimal decisions. In contrast, if decisions are made by unanimity, free‐riding is mitigated because all agents are responsible for the committee's decision. In a controlled laboratory experiment, we find that under unanimity subjects are more truthful and are ultimately more likely to take the optimal decision.
In: Nonprofit communications report: monthly communications ideas for nonprofits, Band 18, Heft 12, S. 6-6
ISSN: 2325-8616
In: Nonprofit communications report: monthly communications ideas for nonprofits, Band 17, Heft 7, S. 5-5
ISSN: 2325-8616
The diversity represented in this book, not only in respect to author nationality, but also in theoretical and empirical approaches, reflects one of the most salient features of the European Communication Research and Education Association: Organisational and Strategic Communication Section's identity. The spectrum of themes analysed in this collection – crisis communication, government communication, organisational communication and social media, corporate social responsibility, health media relations – demonstrates the range and vitality of organisational and strategic communication research in Europe. ; info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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