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The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Cultural Geography

Jamie Winders
Combining coverage of key themes and debates from a variety of historical and theoretical perspectives, this authoritative reference volume offers the most up-to-date and substantive analysis of cultural geography currently available.
December 31, 2013

Community Engagement for Improving Livelihood of Youth in Ghana’s Cocoa Sector

Charles Schweik & Lucia N. Miller (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
June 1, 2013

Spoilers of Peace and the Dilemmas of Conflict Resolution

Miriam Elman, Nimrod Goren, editors
This publication sheds light on the phenomenon of spoilers as an inseparable part of the peacemaking process.
November 1, 2012

Conflict and Change

The latest edition of Lou Kriesberg’s classic text examines new evidence on how to wage conflicts less destructively.

August 21, 2012

The Sudan Handbook

Jok Madut Jok
December 31, 2011

See related: Africa (Sub-Saharan)

The Sources of Democratic Responsiveness in Mexico

Matthew R. Cleary
December 31, 2010

Ordinary Violence in Mussolini’s Italy

Michael R. Ebner
December 31, 2010

PARCC - EPARCC - Syllabus - Networks and Public Management

The audience for this course is the current or prospective public manager seeking a Master of Public Affairs or Public Policy degree or its equivalent.

November 19, 2010

Monument Negotiation

Linda Blessing and Bette F. DeGraw (Arizona State University)
November 1, 2010

Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding

Bruce Dayton, Louis Kriesberg, editors
December 31, 2009

Combating Terrorism

Renée de Nevers and William C. Banks
December 31, 2008

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Conversations in Conflict Studies with Sylvia Sierra

400 Eggers Hall, the PARCC Conference Room

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The Construction of Group Identity in the Facebook Discourse of a Mexican Autodefensa.”  Guest Speaker: Sylvia Sierra, Assistant Professor, Department of Communications and Rhetorical Studies, Syracuse University. 

Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) studies have primarily been restricted to analyzing mainstream political discourse and often right-wing or even fascist discourse. Meanwhile, Mautner (2005) notes that CDA has been reluctant to engage with computer-mediated communication (CMC) (Herring, 1996), while CMC scholars have not necessarily engaged with the socio-political contexts of data (Unger 2012).  CDA studies have only just begun to examine how social media networks can be an instrumental part of the discourse of resistance in political movements around the world (e.g., Chiluwa 2012). In this study, I combine a CDA framework with computer-mediated discourse analysis to investigate the emergent group identity of the Mexican autodefensa (self-defense) movement (2013 to present), a grassroots social and political movement formed by ordinary Mexican citizens to fight against drug cartel control. I analyze the discourse of one autodefensa’s Facebook page (autodefensa Sahuayo, Michoacán), showing how their group identity emerges online in opposition to the cartels via their performative construction of binarity, or positive self- and negative other-presentation, which relies on their increasingly explicit intensified nomination and predication of themselves and the cartels against which they are fighting as well as their topoi, or simplified arguments, regarding religion, family, and struggle which function to legitimize their actions offline. This CDA study shows how a Mexican autodefensa engages in discursive construction of group identity in a social media context. 

Conversations in Conflict Studies is a weekly educational speaker series for students, faculty, and the community. The series, sponsored by PARCC, draws its speakers from Syracuse University faculty, national and international scholars and activists, and PhD students. Pizza is served. Follow us on Twitter @PARCCatMaxwell, tweet #ConvoInConflict.

If you require accommodations, please contact Deborah Toole by email at datoole@syr.edu or by phone at 315.443.2367. 


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Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration
400 Eggers Hall