De mâine, 19 mai, până duminică, 22 mai, sunt la Roma pentru Conferinţa Internaţională „Leadership. Leaders and new trends in political communication” organizată de LUISS Guido Carli University (Libera Universita Internazioanle Degli Stude Sociali). Comunicarea mea ştiinţifică are titlul „The rising of Romanian President Traian Basescu and the role of digital guerilla.”
În linii mari, voi explica de ce modelul de acţiune inventat şi impus în 2004 de gherila digitală şi gherila sms a lui Felix Tătaru şi PD a fost preluat în campaniile din 2007, 2008 şi 2009 de către Opoziţia lui Traian Băsescu. Voi aminti şi despre lacrmile lui Băsescu: cele stoarse la renunţarea lui Stolojan la candidatura din 2004 (episodul „Dragă Stolo”) şi cele mimate în 2009 (episodul „Să-ţi fie ruşine Dinu Patriciu”).
La Conferinţa din Italia, cap de afiş sunt personalităţile lumii comunicării politice: Brian McNair, Michael Higgins, Nico Carpentier, Jo Silvester, Leonardo Morlino. Mai jos, programul detaliat al conferinţei, preluat de pe site-ul oficial:
► May 20th
09.15-09.30: Welcome greetings
09.30-09.40: Raffaele De Mucci
Leadership. Opening Speech
09.40-10.40: Plenary session
Leadership now
Chairperson: Emiliana De Blasio
09.40-10.05: Brian McNair
Media, communication and political leadership in the digital age
10.05-10.30: Sergio Fabbrini
Political leadership in a time of technological change
10.30-10.40: Debate
10.40-11.00: Coffee break
11.00-12.10: 3 Parallel sessions
12.10-13.10: Plenary session
Terms, debate, steps
Chairperson: Domenico Fracchiolla
12.10-12.35: Michael Higgins
Political leadership and populism: defining the terms of the debate
12.35-13.00: Edoardo Novelli
The three phases of Italian leadership: political, personal, post-political
13.00-13.10: Debate
13.10-14.30: Lunch
14.30-15.30: Plenary Session
Television between leadership and populism
Chairperson: Matthew Hibberd
14.30-14.55: Katrin Voltmer
Political leadership in new democracies: political change and institutional consolidation in the media age
14.55-15.20: Mick Temple
Media representations of leaders in the British general election of 2010: the decline and fall of press influence?
15.20-15.30: Debate
15.30-15.45: Special Session
Dario Edoardo Viganò
Film and Political Leadership
15.50-17.00: 3 Parallel sessions
17.00-17.15: Tea Break
17.20-18.35: Plenary Session
Social media and new technologies: tools for new leaders
Chairperson: Daniela Gentile
17.20-17.45: Ivor Gaber
Under the microscope: leaders, reporters and voters in the UK’s 2010 General Election
17.45-18.10: Sara Bentivegna
Italian politicians and new media: lost in technology?
18.10-18.35: Fausto Colombo
Will the social media save the democracy?
18.35-18.45; Debate
18.45-19.30: Public Event
► May 21st
09.15-10.15: Plenary session
Models, structures, philosophies
Chairperson: Michael Higgins
9.15-9.40: Matthew Hibberd
The politics of climate change: contested leaderships
09.40-10.05: Nico Carpentier
The participatory organization: Alternative models for organizational structure and leadership
10.05-10.15: Debate
10.15-10.30: Coffee and biscuits
10.30-11.40: 3 Parallel sessions
11.45-12.45: Plenary Session
Electoral success and beyond
Chairperson: Emiliana De Blasio
11.45-12.10: Jo Silvester
Predicting electoral success: A longitudinal study of candidate characteristics and performance in the 2005 and 2010 UK general elections
12.10-12.35: Leonardo Morlino
Leadership: Final Remarks
12.35-12.45: Debate
12.45: Conclusion
Michele Sorice
Plenary session will be located in ROOM 203
Parallel sessions in ROOMS 203, 205a, 205b
LUISS University
Viale Romania, 32
00197 Roma RM – Italy
May 20th 2011, 11.00-12.10
A1 – Leadership, campaigns and theoretical frames |
|
Kevin Rafter, Dublin City University, Ireland |
Leadership debates in Ireland |
Christian Schnee, University of Worcester, UK |
Presenting the Prime Minister. An exploration of strategic reputation management in British politics |
Iryna Sivertsava, University of Bologna, Italy |
European Parliament Election |
Gianluca Giansante, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy |
Empires of the Mind. Metaphors and strategic discourse in Italian politics |
C1 – TV, Press and beyond |
|
Ville Pitkänen, University of Turku, Finland |
The changing representations of political leadership. Political television debates in Finnish newspapers from 1960’s to the new millennia |
Denisa Kasl Kollmannovà, Charles University Prague, Czech Republic |
“Family Picture” – Interaction of Political PR and Media in Portraying Private Issues of Czech Politicians |
Nigar Degirmenci, Pamukkale University, Turkey |
Berlusconization Process of Politics in Turkey: Political Parties, Individual Politicians and Media |
D1 – Political Communication in the age of web 2.0 |
|
Andrea Burmester, University of Zurich, Switzerland |
What do our representatives want us to know about them. A comparison of content provided on politicians’ homepage |
Giorgia Pavia, LUISS University Rome, Italy |
From clicktivism to web-storytelling: the relationship between politics and TV as audience sees and concretizes it through the web |
Francesco Pira, University of Udine, Italy |
Communicate to the voters in the Facebook era. Political communication and the online identity that still lacking in Italy Politicians |
May 20th 2011, 15.50-17.00
A2 – Leadership, campaigns and theoretical frames |
|
Alejandro de Marzo, University of Bari, Italy |
International mediatic fluxes and political State governance |
Ali Fuat Borovali, Dogus University Istanbul, Turkey |
Deciphering the Codes of (recent ) Turkish Foreign Policy: The 2011 Libyan Episode as Case-study |
Hale Oner, Dogus University, Turkey |
Servant leadership within the context of Prime Minister Erdogan’s political communication discourse in 2002 elections in Turkey: Serving the society as customer consumers or citizen consumers |
Sunthai Constantini, University of Kent, UK |
From Alo Presidente to Participatory Democracy: notions of political communication in the case of Hugo Chavez |
D2 – Political Communication in the age of web 2.0 |
|
Lorenza Parisi, Rossella Rega, Sapienza University Rome, Italy |
Disintermediation on political communication: chance or missed opportunity? |
Antonio Momoc, University of Bucharest, Romania |
The rising of Romanian President Traian Basescu and the role of digital guerilla |
Maria Cristina Sciannamblo, LUISS University Rome, Italy |
Internet goes to politics. From pirates to political leaders: the Swedish Pirate Party |
Donatella Selva, LUISS University Rome, Italy |
Net-based participation |
E1 – Intersections |
|
Mari K. Niemi, University of Turku, Finland |
Changing Political Leadership. Party Leader Selection in Finnish Media Publicity |
Bianca Marina Mitu, University of Bucharest, Romania |
Social Movements, Leaders and the Public Sphere |
Enrico Gandolfi, LUISS University Rome, Italy |
The virtual nodes as erosion of the national view; the destruction of the inside/outside in Egypt (Twitter), Japan (Mixi) and Brazil (Orkut) |
May 21st 2011, 10.30-11.40
E2 – Intersections |
|
Norman Melchor R. Peña Jr., Pontifical Salesian University, Vatican City |
Animating Leadership: Symbio-political Communication Paradigms from the Japanese Manga Dragon Ball Z |
Mesut Hakki Casin, Yeditepe University Istanbul, Turkey |
Can Turkish diplomacy become a model following the revolutions in the Middle East? |
Ruben Arnoldo Gonzalez Macias, University of Leeds, UK |
Partisan Realms. Political news produced by a journalist-politician relationship shaped by the local media system: The case of Morelia, Mexico |
D3 – Political Communication in the age of web 2.0 |
|
Agnese Vardanega, University of Teramo, Italy |
The role of Web 2.0 in Italian local campaigns: the case of 2011 regional elections |
Karolina Koc-Michalska, Science-Po Paris, France Darren G. Lilleker, Bournemouth University, UK |
“Hello!? Any leaders here?” Community leading, knowledge sharing and representation: MEPs use of online environments for e-representation |
Todd Graham, University of Groningen, The Netherlands |
User generated content, journalism and the public sphere: The case of comment fields at the Guardian |
Meria Almonkari, Pekka Isotalus, University of Tampere, Finland |
Current Trends in Political Communication and Criteria for Political Leaders. Perspectives of the Finnish Press and Party Leaders |
D3 – Political Communication in the age of web 2.0 |
|
Agnese Vardanega, University of Teramo, Italy |
The role of Web 2.0 in Italian local campaigns: the case of 2011 regional elections |
Karolina Koc-Michalska, Science-Po Paris, France Darren G. Lilleker, Bournemouth University, UK |
“Hello!? Any leaders here?” Community leading, knowledge sharing and representation: MEPs use of online environments for e-representation |
Todd Graham, University of Groningen, The Netherlands |
User generated content, journalism and the public sphere: The case of comment fields at the Guardian |
Meria Almonkari, Pekka Isotalus, University of Tampere, Finland |
Current Trends in Political Communication and Criteria for Political Leaders. Perspectives of the Finnish Press and Party Leaders |
D3 – Political Communication in the age of web 2.0 |
|
Agnese Vardanega, University of Teramo, Italy |
The role of Web 2.0 in Italian local campaigns: the case of 2011 regional elections |
Karolina Koc-Michalska, Science-Po Paris, France Darren G. Lilleker, Bournemouth University, UK |
“Hello!? Any leaders here?” Community leading, knowledge sharing and representation: MEPs use of online environments for e-representation |
Todd Graham, University of Groningen, The Netherlands |
User generated content, journalism and the public sphere: The case of comment fields at the Guardian |
Meria Almonkari, Pekka Isotalus, University of Tampere, Finland |
Current Trends in Political Communication and Criteria for Political Leaders. Perspectives of the Finnish Press and Party Leaders |