Abstrakt: |
This document contains abstracts and presenter information for a conference on various topics related to populism, polarization, media literacy, and politics. The abstracts cover a range of subjects, including the concept of post-truth, the connection between meritocracy and authoritarian populism, the intersection of populism and propaganda, the role of media literacy in reducing beliefs in conspiracy theories, and the meanings of populism in Finnish and Swedish daily newspapers. Other abstracts discuss the role of media regulators in shaping media policy in Poland, populist discourse about journalism in Lithuania, and the portrayal of enemies and heroes in Soviet Lithuanian television. The document also includes abstracts on the use of generative AI in social science research, the spread of conspiracy theories about climate change on Instagram, and the influence of populism in contemporary Hungarian cinema. Additionally, there are articles on the use of populist communication during times of crisis, the discourse of far-right populist parties on immigration, the use of populist communication during the COVID-19 pandemic, media populism during the Russian aggression against Ukraine, the framing of populist leadership in the Czech Republic, and the enactment of populism on Facebook in Hungary. The abstracts provide a comprehensive overview of the research topics and methodologies used by the presenters. [Extracted from the article] |