OVERVIEW
Caption
Gaining insight into the concepts of populism, Euroscepticism and hate speech as challenges to democracyApplication Deadline
2024-04-28CIVIS Hub
Society, culture, heritage
Field of studies related to the course
Social Science and Humanities
General description
The aim of the BIP project is to provide an informed and deep understanding of the concepts of populism, Euroscepticism and hate-speech and their impact on EU democracy. By the conclusion of this course, students will possess the capacity to identify global traits and local aspects of populism across Europe, discern between various types of Euroscepticism and to typologies hate-speech that is frequently associated with them and increase on their account.
Main topics addressed during the course
- Gain insight into the rules of political propaganda, regarding the proposed regulation on transparency of political advertising and to the role of digital intermediaries in combating the spread of illegal content, including disinformation and hate speech, according to the Digital Services Act.
- Develop critical thinking skills through the analysis of communication flows in 2024 European electoral campaign. This includes examining communication from leaders and candidates, as well as media coverage. Additionally, students will analyze the interconnection between anti-gender politics and radical right populism, focusing on country case studies. These studies will explore actors and narratives within political parties, media, civil society, and religious entities, as chosen by the students.
- Reflect on how to be a catalyst for change, of identify and understand the consequences of hate-speech and the discursive practices of extremism in social networks. The students will also explore on how politeness and impoliteness/antipoliteness strategies work together with the emotion of hate in relation to the construction of identity and sense of belonging to an in-group.
Learning outcomes
- Use content analysis and computational methods to understand electoral communication;
- Have the skills and knowledge necessary to critically analyze and evaluate electoral communication in order to identify populist patterns of communication, types of Euroscepticism and nationalism, and to detect hate-speech and techniques of manipulation.
- Will understand and critically analyze the psychological mechanisms behind the populist vote
- Gain knowledge on European politics
- Will comprehend the similarities between different countries in Europe
PRACTICAL DETAILS
Academic Year
2024/2025
Open to
Master's
Bachelor's
Hosting university
University of Bucharest
Partner universities
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
University of Bucharest
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Sapienza Università di Roma
Course language
English
Language level required
B2
Duration of the course (hours)
100 hoursECTS credits
4PHYSICAL MOBILITY
Physical Part starting date
2025-03-03Physical Part closing date
2025-03-07Course location
Bucharest, RomaniaPhysical Part Description
3 – 7 March 2025
Face-to-face courses which will consist of lectures and class discussions on the following topics:
- Grasping the field: definition of populism, Euroscepticism, nationalism, and hate-speech
- The rules of political propaganda: proposed regulation on transparency of political advertising and to the role of digital intermediaries in combating the spread of illegal content, including disinformation and hate speech, according to the Digital Services Act.
- The analysis of communication flows during European election campaigns, both from the point of view of the communication produced by leaders and candidates and from the point of view of media coverage.
- The discursive practices of right-wing extremism in social networks (Twitter and Instagram) within the general framework of Social Media-CDS
- Anti-gender politics and radical right populism: An analysis of the entanglement between anti-gender politics and radical right populism, comprising country case studies that explore both the actors and narratives within political parties, media, civil society, and religious entities (as chosen by the students)
- Manipulation techniques in the digital environment (cognitive hacking, social hacking, para-social hacking, symbolic actions, disinformation, and fake news, counterfeiting and information leakage, "Potemkin villages" type evidence, mistaken identities, bots, "puppets", botnets and cyborgs, trolling and flaming, humor and memes, malicious rhetoric, etc.)
VIRTUAL COMPONENT
Virtual Part starting date
2025-01-30Virtual Part closing date
2025-02-27Virtual Part Description
30 January - 27 February 2025
- 30 January - Introduction - Adriana Ștefănel
- 6 February - Populism, Euroscepticism and hate speech as challenges to democracy - Adriana Ștefănel
- 13 February - Analysis of communication flows during European election campaigns - Christian Ruggiero
- 20 February - Regulation on transparency of political advertising and to the role of digital intermediaries in combating the spread of illegal content - Maria Romana Allegri
- 27 February - Hate speech, honour right and liability in case of damages referred to fake news - Sebastian Lopez Maza and Gemma Minero Alejandre
ASSESSMENT
Course assessment
The programme’s second part will conclude with written exams at the end of the on-site part. The grade of the course will be calculated by the result of these exams (100%). 4 ECTS will be granted upon successful completion of the programme.
REQUIREMENTS
Academic pre-requisites for applicants
No prerequisites are necessary, only interest in the content of the course. The course is open to Bachelor's and Master's students at CIVIS member universities enrolled in social science or related.
Participants should have a B2 level of English.
SELECTION PROCESS
Application requirements
Motivation Letter
Evaluation Criteria
The program’s second part will conclude with a written exam at the end of the on-site BIP program. The grade of the course will be calculated by the result of these exams (100%). The total amount of ECTS granted upon successful completion of the program is 4.
ABOUT THE LECTURERS
About the lecturer(s)
- Adriana Ștefănel - Associate Professor in Communication Studies, Head of Department of Anthropology and Communication Studies, University of Bucharest
- Maria Romana Allegri - Associate professor in Public Law at the Department of Communication and Social Research, Sapienza Università di Roma
- Manuel Alcántara-Plá - Associate Professor at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
- Sofia Messini - PhD in Big Data in Politics (with an emphasis on Elections Data Visualization),MA in New Media and Journalism, Panteion University
- Christian Ruggiero - Associate Professor in Sociology of Cultural and Communicative Processes at the Department of Communication and Social Research (CoRiS), Sapienza Università di Roma
- Sebastián López Maza - Professor of Civil Law at the Universidad Autónoma of Madrid and Secretary of the Spanish Research Centre on Copyright
- Gemma Minero Alejandre - Lecturer in Civil and Intellectual Property Law at Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
- Antonio Momoc - Associate Professor, University of Bucharest
- Oana Băluță - Associate Professor, University of Bucharest
- Silvia Branea - Associate Professor, University of Bucharest
- Bogdan Oprea - Lecturer, Head of the Department of Journalism and Spokesperson of the University of Bucharest
- Alexandra Bardan - Lecturer, University of Bucharest
- Daniel Nica - Lecturer, University of Bucharest