Browsing by Author "Ekman, Julia"
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Item BLÅTT BLOD – DÅ SÅG MENSAKTIVISTERNA RÖTT - En multimodal kritisk diskursanalys av mensaktivism på Instagram(2018-09-12) Nordbring, Erika; Ekman, Julia; Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för journalistik, medier och kommunikation; Göteborg University/Department of Journalism Media and CommunicationSyfte: Syftet med studien är att undersöka hur svenska mensaktivistiska inlägg på Instagram i både text och bild utmanar rådande samhällsstrukturer och normer kring mens. Teori: Den tidigare forskningen består främst av forskning om feministisk och digital aktivism samt menstruationsforskning i samhällelig kontext. Teorin består huvudsakligen av diskursteori som har kompletterats med teorier om medborgerligt deltagande och alternativa offentligheter. Metod: För att besvara studiens syfte utformades en multimodal kritisk diskursanalys inspirerad av Berglez analysmodell. Analysen bestod av fyra steg som analyserade det explicita, aktörer och perspektiv, det implicita samt det kontextualiserade. Material: Empirin bestod av 32 inlägg från åtta mensaktivistiska Instagramkonton ur fyra kategorier: allmänna aktivister, konstnärer, ideella organisationer samt offentliga personer. Resultat: En stor bredd av innehåll publicerades av aktivisterna med en mängd skilda strategier som abjektifieringsstrategi, hyper-personalisation och humor. Ett gemensamt drag bland aktivisterna var utmana den befintliga diskursen genom att placera mensen i arenor där den konventionellt inte hör hemma; konsten, litteraturen, stora nyhetsmedier samt politiken. Slutligen sågs ett mönster i att antingen föra en städad eller en ostädad kamp.Item Bridging the gap - Analysing the vaccination guide project in Gothenburg during the Covid-19 pandemic: A case of interpersonal risk and crisis communication targeted towards ethnic minority communities(2022-09-01) Ekman, Julia; Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för journalistik och masskommunikation; Göteborg University/Department of Journalism and Mass CommunicationThis study analyses the vaccination guide project performed in Gothenburg during the Covid-19 pandemic. The project was launched as a collaboration between the local and regional governing units, city of Gothenburg and region Västra Götaland, in the summer of 2021. The aim of the project was increase Covid-19 vaccination rates in areas of the city where the population experienced vaccine hesitancy and the vaccination rates were particularly low. These low rates have been argued to be a result of e.g. having a low language proficiency as well as experiencing cultural barriers and a low level of trust towards the Swedish society and its institutions. The vaccination guide project to a large extent relied on interpersonal communication efforts, employing and consulting key individuals from the civil society that were to be called vaccination guides. The vaccination guides share the target groups’ ethnic and cultural background as well as their native language. In addition, the vaccination guides in general have a significant trust capital among the target group due to their belonging to the same community. This study is limited to analyse the area of Northeast in Gothenburg and its smaller districts, some of which during autumn of 2021 constituted the least vaccinated areas in Sweden. The analytical purpose of the study is to learn more about interpersonal risk and crisis communication efforts targeted towards ethnic minority communities. Therefore, the overarching research question to guide this study is: How can the vaccination guides reach hard-to-vaccinate immigrant individuals with information about Covid-19 vaccination? This broad question is narrowed down to two more specific research questions that are the following: 1. How does the vaccination guide project and its implementation align with the model procedure established in previous research? 2. How do the vaccination guides perceive the possibilities of reaching hard-tovaccinate immigrant individuals with information about Covid-19 vaccination, and the conditions of success of this communication The central framework of this study is CERC (Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication), that relates to risk, crisis, and health communication. Anchored in research, a model procedure on how to reach hard-to-vaccinate immigrant individuals through interpersonal risk and crisis communication efforts is presented. The empirical material consists of interviews with three employees from the city of Gothenburg and region Västra Götaland as well as four vaccination guides. The interviews were analysed through a qualitative thematic analysis, identifying relevant and interesting themes to answer the research questions. The results of the study show that the vaccination guide project and its implementation to a significant extent has been performed in alignment with the model procedure established in research. The vaccination guides emphasise the importance of their role in terms of reaching hardto- vaccinate immigrant individuals with information about Covid-19 vaccination. They argue that the conditions of success of this communication lies in employing trusted key individuals, such as vaccination guides, thus making linguistic and cultural adaptions. However, the target group’s significant level of distrust towards the Swedish society, and the spreading of misinformation, is considered aggravating conditions for the vaccination guides’ work and the project itself. Nonetheless, it may be concluded that local interpersonal communication efforts, such as the vaccination guide project, can arguably be seen as a crucial step towards bridging the figurative gap between normative Swedish society and ethnic minority communities.