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15 - New Opportunities for Transnational Solidarity Mobilisation

The Role of the Media

from Part IV - Creating New Forms of Transnational Solidarity in Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2020

Helle Krunke
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen
Hanne Petersen
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen
Ian Manners
Affiliation:
University of Copenhagen
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Summary

Mass media are commonly held responsible for strengthening bonds of national solidarity and supporting relationships of mutual support among citizens as members of a political community. At the same time, mass media increasingly raise questions of global justice and through their coverage of distant suffering confront audiences with their moral responsibility to provide assistance to strangers. The notion of solidarity as grounded in global justice is therefore not only an abstract normative and legalistic principle but, sociologically speaking, is also linked to an expansive logic of building solidarity relationships of modern society as a community of strangers. To investigate this relationship between the media and (trans)national solidarity, the chapter discusses the role played by old and new (digital and social) media in establishing solidarity relationships among individuals across established borders of political community. It gives examples of mediated solidarity discourses in which mutual obligations between states and equal rights of citizens across borders are discussed controversially. It is argued that the Janus-faced nature of the media as a transmission mechanism for universal notions of justice (representing the world) and as the filter for the consolidation of thickened and contextualised relationships of solidarity within a community of equals (representing the nation) offers an opportunity for transnational solidarity mobilisation.

Type
Chapter
Information
Transnational Solidarity
Concept, Challenges and Opportunities
, pp. 350 - 373
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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