New MA Social Media and Political Communication at Loughborough University
Colleagues, We’ve recently developed a new MA Social Media and Political Communication here at Loughborough. It’s open for applications now. Teaching begins September 2019. Information and links below. Yours, Andy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Professor Andrew Chadwick, Professor of Political Communication, Director, Online Civic Culture Centre (O3C), Centre for Research in Communication and Culture, School of Social Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, Leicestershire, United Kingdom. (e) a.chadwick@lboro.ac.uk (w) www.lboro.ac.uk/research/crcc (w) www.andrewchadwick.com (t) www.twitter.com/andrew_chadwick ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ **MA Social Media and Political Communication Overview New for October 2019. On this exciting and unique master’s programme you will gain advanced knowledge of how social media shape how political power is exercised in today’s turbulent world. The curriculum blends world-leading scholarly research with case study analyses of how political communication works in the real world. The digital age has produced some of the most remarkable developments in modern history. The Arab Spring, Occupy, Brexit, the #MeToo movement, the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States, the growth of online misinformation and automated propaganda, fierce debates over online "filter bubbles" and fake news, the resurgence of the populist right and a new populist left, the growth of online hate speech, mass microtargeting of political messages via email and social media, and concerns about the growing power of social media platforms, algorithms and big data over the lives of citizens. These developments have sent shockwaves around the world. Amid the chaos there is now an urgent debate about whether the mass use of social media is leading to new types of politics. Do social media help concentrate power in the hands of a small elite? Or do they help decentralise power and engage ordinary citizens in democratic citizenship? Do social media enable individuals and organisations to express themselves, exchange opinions and coordinate with others? Do they encourage the diffusion of propaganda, false information, incivility and hatred? How do social media shape how political beliefs are formed among mass publics? On this innovative MA programme you will conduct advanced, in-depth analysis of the complex relationships between social media, political influence and power. You will weigh up the consequences for democracy by critically examining how social media shape citizens’ knowledge, participation and empowerment. **What You’ll Study Compulsory Modules: Social Media and Political Communication Data, Power, and Democracy Marketing Politics Key Debates in Social Media and Political Communication Researching Communication: Media Users and Cultural Institutions Researching Communication: Texts and Digital Platforms Dissertation Project Optional Modules: Political Psychology Digital Futures: Explorations in New Media Digital Economies Global Communication Media and Cultural Industries: Political Economy and Public Policy Digital Cultures The Politics of Representation Media and Cultural Work **More information here: http://www.lboro.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/masters-degrees/a-z/social-media-p...
participants (1)
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Andrew Chadwick