Japanese Strategic Communication: Its Significance as a Political Tool |
Author : Chiyuki Aoi |
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‘You Can Count On Us’: When Malian Diplomacy Stratcommed Uncle Sam |
Author : Pablo de Orellana |
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Overwriting the City: Graffiti, Communication, and Urban Contestation in Athens |
Author : Anna Marazuela Kim with Tara Flores |
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Putting the Strategy back into Strategic Communications |
Author : David Betz, Vaughan Phillips |
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Strategic Communications, Boko Haram, and Counter-Insurgency |
Author : Abdullahi Tasiu Abubakar |
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Fake News, Fake Wars, Fake Worlds |
Author : Charles Kriel |
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Living Post-Truth Lives … But What Comes After? |
Author : Kevin Marsh |
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Review essay: ‘We Have Met the Enemy and He is Us’ |
Author : David Loyn |
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Charles Kriel |
Author : Fake News, Fake Wars, Fake Worlds |
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Kevin Marsh |
Author : Living Post-Truth Lives … But What Comes After? Primary tabs View(active tab) Edit |
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‘We Have Met the Enemy and He is Us’. |
Author : David Loyn |
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Overwriting the City: Graffiti, Communication, and Urban Contestation in Athens. |
Author : Anna Marazuela Kim with Tara Flores |
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Abstract :To date, most discussions and analyses of strategic communications within the context of International Relations and Security Studies focus on the linguistic realm. Those that
do recognise the power and role of images in these domains, particularly as they reflect upon the contemporary image wars waged by IS and other insurgent groups, tend to focus on the virtual realm of social media and globalized news networks. This article aims instead to articulate a methodological framework for understanding the force and potential of a distinctively spatial and material form of communication: graffiti. Taking Athens as a case study, the article articulates graffiti’s role as a form of strategic communications in areas of social and political crisis, and further suggests its value as a non-violent means of negotiating conflict in areas with limited avenues for democratic expression. |
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Putting the Strategy back into Strategic Communications |
Author : David Betz, Vaughan Phillips |
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Abstract :Strategic communications has vaulted to the top of the agenda for governments in the West in the vain hope that it might solve a seemingly intractable conflict with jihadist groups, an adversary whose ideology seems to be an essential part of its life-force. However, these governments have failed to grasp why these groups are more adept at using stories to animate their adherents toward the achievement of strategic ends. Unlike Western governments, jihadists use communication to support their use of force. They treat strategic communications as an intrinsic element of war. Consequently, the internal coherence of their messages is greater and more persuasive. Moreover, their propaganda cadres are also nimbler; while they form a loose, decentralised network, they act in accordance with mission command principles, galvanised by a clear sense of the commander’s intent and a higher tolerance for risk. Indeed, the West’s failed use of strategic communications reveals a startling ignorance of several of Carl Von Clausewitz’s principles and arguments, not least the importance of understanding the kind of war upon which one embarks. |
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Japanese Strategic Communication: Its Significance as a Political Tool. |
Author : Chiyuki Aoi |
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Abstract :Despite rising tensions in East Asia, the Japanese government has not adopted a comprehensive policy, doctrine, or institution for strategic communication (StratCom) to date. The lack of a formal StratCom concept or framework, however, does not mean that Japan is not engaged in strategic communication. The review provided in this article reveals the heavy reliance of the government on the machineries of public diplomacy to communicate its policy and intent, through which it wishes to integrate its messages. Moreover, Japan is an avid practitioner of ‘messaging via deeds’, an aspect hitherto not understood as a Japanese StratCom practice. Japan’s de facto practice of strategic communication reflects the fundamentally political nature of strategic communication, building as it must upon the particular political and historical landscape of the nation, in which the rise of China is a central factor. The analysis outlines the key challenges for Japanese StratCom practice, namely, the danger of miscalculations occurring as a result of uncoordinated messaging, especially via deeds; the ‘say-do gap’ as the government struggles to fulfil some of its aspirations under the rubric of ‘proactive contribution to peace’, and the difficulty of sending coherent messages and avoiding unintended messaging. |
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‘You Can Count On Us’: When Malian Diplomacy Stratcommed Uncle Sam |
Author : Pablo de Orellana |
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Abstract :How did North African states depict their nomadic minorities to the US during the War on Terror in the 2000s? How did this shape American policy in the region? Focusing on Malian-American diplomacy and drawing on post-structuralist analytics of identity-formation, this paper first examines how Malian diplomacy represented nomadic minorities in communication with US diplomatic and military envoys during the period 2002–2010. It is found that Mali consistently branded Saharan nomads as lawless subjects that make territory ungovernable, compromise security, and facilitate terrorism. Second, this paper deploys intertextual analysis to measure the success of these strategic communications efforts. It is found that, despite the advice of some American diplomats on the ground, by the end of 2008 Mali’s depiction of Saharan nomadism had been absorbed into US diplomacy. This subsumed Northern Malian subjects into the categories of the War on Terror, which privileged military control of subjects and territory over development and reconciliation efforts. This policy shift granted Mali influence over US policy and diplomatic support to ignore nomadic grievances. Analysis reveals the key role of identity-making and name-calling in Mali-US relations and in diplomatic communication more broadly, showcasing the potential of textual analysis methods to evaluate strategic communications outcomes. |
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Strategic Communications, Boko Haram, and Counter-Insurgency |
Author : Abdullahi Tasiu Abubakar |
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Abstract :Strategic communications is gaining traction as a potent tool of countering insurgency. State and non-state actors—including insurgent groups—are increasingly turning to it in pursuit of their goals. This article offers a comparative study of the use of strategic communications by both the Nigerian Armed Forces and the jihadi group they seek to obliterate: Boko Haram. It also assesses their impact on the media coverage of their activities. The jihadists deployed both their communications skills and their infamies to put their insurgency onto the global scene. The Army employed a range of tools—some effective, some less so—to counter them. The media’s obsession with jihadi stories gave the insurgents an edge, but the Army managed to disrupt most of their strategies. Extraneous factors do influence strategic communications campaigns, but honesty—or the perception of it—is a necessary condition for their long-term efficacy. |
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