Call for Articles

Call for Articles Issue 16.2

15 October 2023: deadline for abstract submission 

15 January 2024: deadline for full proposals (selected abstracts)

Guest Editors:

Dr Ruth Rodríguez-Martínez (Pompeu Fabra University)

Dr María-Ángeles Chaparro-Domínguez (Complutense University of Madrid)

Dr Fernando Oliveira Paulino (University of Brasilia)

Dr Marcel Mauri-Rios (Pompeu Fabra University)

Dr Xavier Ramon (Pompeu Fabra University)

DISINFORMATION, FACT-CHECKING AND CIVIC RESPONSIBILITY

WHY THIS ISSUE NOW?

Disinformation is a global problem affecting institutions, media and citizenry, which are all immersed in “fake news culture” (Magallón-Rosa, 2019, p. 23). According to the Edelman Trust Barometer, the countries most concerned by this phenomenon currently include Spain, Colombia, Mexico, Argentina and Brazil (Edelman, 2022). The loss of trust in and influence of the media and exposure to all types of messages on social networks in recent years have acted as a catalyst for disinformation, which has become a major journalistic challenge (Herrero and Herrera-Damas, 2021). The global crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic has also provided fertile ground for the spread of disinformation (Mauri-Rios, Ramon-Vegas and Rodríguez-Martínez, 2020). 

In order to combat this global phenomenon, fact-checking platforms have proliferated in the last decade outside the mass media, as the media itself has occasionally been a purveyor of hoaxes, albeit sometimes inadvertently (García-Galera et al., 2020; Cherubini and Graves, 2016). Two factors explain the rise of fact-checkers, according to Stencel and Luther (2020): the extraordinary surge in disinformation on social media and Google, both of which have been appealing for the help of fact-checking platforms to curb it; and the proliferation of partnerships between these platforms and traditional media, particularly during electoral processes. As with disinformation, fact-checking is a global phenomenon (Graves, 2018). 

However, it is not only verification platforms that are tackling disinformation; media and education institutions worldwide are also implementing actions to help citizens discern fake content from legitimate content and thus foment their critical thinking skills (Vizoso and Vázquez-Herrero, 2019). Various initiatives are also being developed in other fields, such as newsgames (García-Ortega and García-Avilés, 2021; Gómez-García and Carrillo-Vera, 2020). 

TOPICS

This monograph invites researchers from the international context to submit studies addressing this global phenomenon, formulas to prevent its spread and social impact from different thematic, geographical, theoretical and methodological approaches. We welcome, for example, comparative research between countries (with particular attention to the “Global South”), systematic reviews, case studies or new theoretical proposals aimed at some of the key aspects of this far-reaching issue. As this is a multidisciplinary topic, contributions will be accepted both from the communication field and from other related fields such as education, sociology, psychology, economics and other related disciplines. They are invited to submit full articles and viewpoints on topics that may include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Epistemology of verification and fact-checking.
  • Dynamics, methodologies, sources and supports for content verification.
  • Fact-checkers’ professional competences and challenges.
  • Ethics and best practices for content verification.
  • Fact-checking within the media.
  • Independent content verification platforms.
  • Newsgames as a tool for combating disinformation.
  • Disinformation platforms (junk news).
  • New business models related to fact-checking.
  • Socio-political implications of disinformation.
  • Journalistic and social challenges of fact-checking.
  • Fact-checking before global phenomena such as the climate crisis or COVID-19.
  • Journalistic perception of disinformation and fact-checking.
  • Citizen perception of disinformation and fact-checking.
  • Media literacy actions to counter disinformation.
  • Content verification, user-generated content and citizen journalism. 

Research articles should be 6,000 words in length, while Viewpoint articles should not exceed 3,000 words (including notes and references). The editors will carry out a preliminary selection of abstracts.

PUBLICATION SCHEDULE

15 October 2023: deadline for abstracts

Abstract (maximum 500 words), title and selected biography, along with a 150-200 word author’s short bio (including your affiliation and contact information) should be sent to Ruth Rodriguez (ruth.rodriguez@upf.edu) and Marian Chaparro (ma.chaparro@ucm.es)

1 November: Editors’ decision on selected abstracts

15 January 2024: deadline for full articles

Full articles, based on the selected abstracts, should be submitted on the Catalan Journal of Communication & Cultural Studies web platform by 15 January 2024, following the Author Guidelines.

30 May 2024: final decision letters

Fall 2024: issue published

All selected contributions will be subjected to double blind peer review, except for the Viewpoint articles, which will be evaluated by the Editors.

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Miscellaneous issues (open call): submit here

Yearly cut-off date for miscellaneous issues: October 1st

Submit your article

We welcome miscellaneous contributions at any time from scholars, researchers and professionals from around the world who wish to publish their works in a journal with a truly international scope and readership. Each year on October 1st the deadline for submissions for the next miscellaneous issue closes.

CJCS accepts original contributions under the following headings and conforming to these guidelines:

Articles

Articles should be between 6,000–7,500 words. They must be based on original research or offer well grounded theoretical contributions, they must be written in English in a clear and concise style and they must not be under consideration by any other publication.  Authors must avoid any information within the article that makes it possible to infer their identity (acknowledgements must be avoided at this stage and references to their own work must be in the third person). Articles that attain to minimum quality standards and fall within the aims and scope of the journal are submitted to a double-blind peer reviewing process.

Manuscripts are evaluated on the basis of their originality, the soundness of their theory and methodology, the coherence of their analysis and their ability to communicate to an international readership (including non-specialist readers).

All submissions and proposals must be uploaded on the platform: https://submission.pubkit.co/publisher/29/journal/379/login

Please read the Author Guidelines and  Notes for contributors suggested by CJCS before submitting.

Viewpoint

This section will include research notes, short commentaries, reflections on current affairs, cultural and media events, short interviews, etc.

Research notes are not full academic papers but are discussion notes, seeking to advance a new idea, theoretical perspective, research programme, or methodological approach in Communication & Cultural Studies. As opposed to full research papers, articles in this section may follow a less strict outline but still need to make a valuable contribution to the field. That is, polemical clarity and rhetoric are important qualities of a readable and intriguing research note or commentary. 

Experts, leading scholars, experienced professionals and senior researchers are invited to submit their proposals, which will be selected in accordance with academic criteria and depending on the availability of space. Viewpoints are submitted to a double-blind peer reviewing process.

Contributions for this section should not exceed 3,000 words in length.

Gateway
The Editors of CJCS will select an article from those previously published by Catalan academic journals for publication in this section. Gateway will give international coverage to the best articles written and published originally in Catalan. The Editors will select the work using the abovementioned criteria and the authors must seek permission for translation and publication in CJCS. We encourage researchers to suggest articles for this section along with an argument for their suitability.

Reviews
CJCS also publishes short book reviews, in English and commissioned by the Editors, about leading editorial projects in Catalan/Spanish or English in keeping with the aims and scope of the journal.