Digital Religious Communication and the Facilitation of Social Resilience: Part 1: Theoretical Model and Proposal

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Digital Religious Communication and the Facilitation of Social Resilience: Part 1: Theoretical Model and Proposal. / Fröh, Johannes; Robinson, Matthew Ryan.
In: Journal of Religious and Theological Information, Vol. 23, No. 1-2, 2024, p. 1-27.

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@article{f81133467cfa4526994878bed15b0c49,
title = "Digital Religious Communication and the Facilitation of Social Resilience: Part 1: Theoretical Model and Proposal",
abstract = "This article looks at the relationship of digital religious communication to “social resilience” or “community resilience.” The importance of, in particular, narratival communication of meaning for group resilience has been highlighted by Houston et al. (2015b). Religious narratives as reflected communication of meaning are recognized to have quantified themselves in communities{\textquoteright} digital communications, thereby rendering themselves accessible to empirical assessment. From this perspective, we present a model for measuring community resilience quantitatively. Existing resilience models from research on ecological, mechanical, and community resilience were combined via their shared resilience trajectories to design the model. To further facilitate the empirical application of the model, we provide a conceptualization of digital religious communication and its viability as an effective indicator of community resilience. One significant advancement of this focus on digital communications and community resilience assessment consists in the qualities characterizing such communications as both communicators{\textquoteright} own self-prompted communications while also being quantifiable. This enables reconstruction and analysis of a more organic communication environment than that made accessible in survey-based approaches while also capable of achieving a higher level of representativity than ethnographic or case study approaches.",
keywords = "communication framework, community narratives, community resilience, crisis, digital religion, Social media, social resilience, Theology",
author = "Johannes Fr{\"o}h and Robinson, {Matthew Ryan}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1080/10477845.2023.2232622",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "1--27",
journal = "Journal of Religious and Theological Information",
issn = "1047-7845",
publisher = "Routledge Taylor & Francis Group",
number = "1-2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Digital Religious Communication and the Facilitation of Social Resilience

T2 - Part 1: Theoretical Model and Proposal

AU - Fröh, Johannes

AU - Robinson, Matthew Ryan

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - This article looks at the relationship of digital religious communication to “social resilience” or “community resilience.” The importance of, in particular, narratival communication of meaning for group resilience has been highlighted by Houston et al. (2015b). Religious narratives as reflected communication of meaning are recognized to have quantified themselves in communities’ digital communications, thereby rendering themselves accessible to empirical assessment. From this perspective, we present a model for measuring community resilience quantitatively. Existing resilience models from research on ecological, mechanical, and community resilience were combined via their shared resilience trajectories to design the model. To further facilitate the empirical application of the model, we provide a conceptualization of digital religious communication and its viability as an effective indicator of community resilience. One significant advancement of this focus on digital communications and community resilience assessment consists in the qualities characterizing such communications as both communicators’ own self-prompted communications while also being quantifiable. This enables reconstruction and analysis of a more organic communication environment than that made accessible in survey-based approaches while also capable of achieving a higher level of representativity than ethnographic or case study approaches.

AB - This article looks at the relationship of digital religious communication to “social resilience” or “community resilience.” The importance of, in particular, narratival communication of meaning for group resilience has been highlighted by Houston et al. (2015b). Religious narratives as reflected communication of meaning are recognized to have quantified themselves in communities’ digital communications, thereby rendering themselves accessible to empirical assessment. From this perspective, we present a model for measuring community resilience quantitatively. Existing resilience models from research on ecological, mechanical, and community resilience were combined via their shared resilience trajectories to design the model. To further facilitate the empirical application of the model, we provide a conceptualization of digital religious communication and its viability as an effective indicator of community resilience. One significant advancement of this focus on digital communications and community resilience assessment consists in the qualities characterizing such communications as both communicators’ own self-prompted communications while also being quantifiable. This enables reconstruction and analysis of a more organic communication environment than that made accessible in survey-based approaches while also capable of achieving a higher level of representativity than ethnographic or case study approaches.

KW - communication framework

KW - community narratives

KW - community resilience

KW - crisis

KW - digital religion

KW - Social media

KW - social resilience

KW - Theology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85165689063&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1080/10477845.2023.2232622

DO - 10.1080/10477845.2023.2232622

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85165689063

VL - 23

SP - 1

EP - 27

JO - Journal of Religious and Theological Information

JF - Journal of Religious and Theological Information

SN - 1047-7845

IS - 1-2

ER -