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Intercultural/International Communication

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Intercultural/International Communication

Intercultural Communication

This area of study focuses on the communication processes that occur when individuals of differing cultural backgrounds (including ethnic and racial) come into direct contact with one another. Research in this area addresses communication-related issues pertaining to a variety of social contexts, from interpersonal and small group contexts to those of multicultural organizations and local communities. Also integral to this area are "cultural communication" studies examining unique communication practices within a specific culture, as well as "cross-cultural communication" studies comparing communication patterns in two or more cultures.

International Communication

This area focuses on the critical examination of media and culture in international contexts. Using different methodological approaches that include ethnography, phenomenology and hermeneutics, textual/discourse/critical analysis, and quantitative methods, it explores how cultural understandings intersect with media processes, products, and audiences. This research sheds light on how media and cultures shape social fabrics, from local specificities to globalized networks. It explores culture and media processes as contested zones traversed by ethnic, class, and gender struggles for social change.

Courses in Intercultural and International Communication

Comm 5243 Cross-Cultural Communication
Comm 6323 International Communication
Comm 6413 Interethnic Communication
Comm 6433 Seminar in Intercultural Communication
Comm 6023 Communication Research Task Groups
Comm 6960 Directed Readings

Current Faculty with Research and/or Teaching Interest

Recent Dissertations in Intercultural and International Communication

Acheme, D. E. (2022). Hearing race: The effects of race and accent on language attitudes and intergroup communication outcomes. [Honored with the Outstanding Dissertation Award, Intercultural Communication Division, International Communication Association, May 2022]. 

Biwa, V. (2022). Sojourners’ identity transformation as a function of cross-cultural adaptation: A communication model of multicultural identity development.  

Wyant, M. H. (2022). Perceptions of trust, trust building, and maintenance between Japanese expatriates and U.S. host nationals in a multinational corporation. 

 

Recent Representative Faculty and Graduate Students Publications in Intercultural and International Communication

BOOK CHAPTERS

Johnson, A. J., Lee, S. K., Cionea, I. A., & Massey, Z. B. (2018). The benefits and challenges of new media for intercultural conflict. In N. Bilge & M. I. Marino (Eds.), Reconceptualizing new media and intercultural communication in a networked society (pp. 171-197). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

Olufowote, J. O., Adebayo, C. T., Livingston, D. J., & Wilson, K. K. (in press). An alternative entry point into health communication research: Introspections on learning, applying, and future uses of PEN-3. In C. O. Airhihenbuwa & J. Iwelunmor (Eds.), Health, culture, and place: From the tree to the forest.

Olufowote, J. O. & *Aranda, J. (2018). The PEN-3 cultural model: A critical review of health communication for Africans and African immigrants. In R. Ahmed & Y. Mao (Eds.), Culture, migration, and health communication in a global context (pp. 176-190). Routledge.

JOURNAL ARTICLES

Acheme, D., & Cionea, I. A. (2022). “Oh, I like your accent!”: Perceptions and evaluations of standard and non-standard accented English speakers. Communication Reports, 35(2), 92-105. https://doi.org/10.1080/08934215.2022.2037679

Acheme, D. E., & Cionea, I. A. (2022). Protest structures: Responses from Nigerians in the United States to police brutality and #BlackLivesMatter protests. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 41(1), 29-48. https://doi.org/10.1177/0261927X211049473

Liu, M., Zhu, L., & Cionea, I. A. (2019). What makes some intercultural negotiations more difficult than others? Power distance and culture-role combinations. Communication Research, 46, 555-574. doi: https://doi.org/10.1177/0093650216631096

Machette, A. T., & Cionea, I. A. (2023). In-laws, communication, and other frustrations: The challenges of intercultural marriages. Interpersona: An International Journal on Personal Relationships, 17(1), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.5964/ijpr.8047

Machette, A. T., & Cionea, I. A. (2022). What predicts relational satisfaction in intercultural relationships? A culture and relational models perspective. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research, 51(4), 400-416. https://doi.org/10.1080/17475759.2021.2020880

Massey, Z. B., & Cionea, I. A. (2023). A new scale for measuring identity insecurity. Communication Methods and Measures, 17(1), 40-58.   https://doi.org/10.1080/19312458.2022.2144631

Montgomery, G., & Zhang, Y. B. (2018). Intergroup anxiety and willingness to accommodate: Exploring the effects of accent stereotyping and social attraction. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 37, 330-349. doi:https://doi.org/10.1177/0261927X17728361

Olufowote, J. O. (2021). Taking culture and context seriously: Advancing health communication research on HIV/AIDS prevention in Tanzania with the PEN-3 cultural model. Howard Journal of Communications, 32(4), 394-412.

Olufowote, J. O., & Livingston, D. J. (2021). The excluded voices from Africa’s Sahel: Alternative meanings of health in narratives of resistance to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in northern Nigeria. Health Communication. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2021.1895416

Olufowote, J. O. (in press). Barriers and enablers of health in the socio-cultural context: A PEN-3 assessment of HIV/AIDS prevention in Tanzania. Global Health Communication.

Olufowote, J. O. (2017). An institutional field of people living with HIV/AIDS organizations in Tanzania: Agency, culture, dialogue, and structure. Frontiers in Communication [Health Communication section]2, doi:10.3389/fcomm.2017.00001

Velasquez, A., & Montgomery, G. (2020). Social media expression as a collective strategy: How perceptions of discrimination and groups status shape US Latinos’ online discussions of immigration. Social Media + Society.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120914009

Velasquez, A., Montgomery, G., & Hall, J. A. (2019). Ethnic minorities’ social media political use: How ingroup identification, selective exposure, and collective efficacy shape social media political expression. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 24, 147-164. doi:10.1093/jcmc/zmz007

Wang, Y., & Cionea, I. A. (forthcoming). Am I incompetent or just afraid? Competence and apprehension as predictors of intercultural willingness to communicate. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research.

 

Recent Funding in Intercultural and International Communication

Elena Bessarabova: Research Collaboration Partner, Jyväskylä University School of Business and Economics, research consortium at Jyväskylä University; interdisciplinary project “#Agents-Young People’s Agency in Social Media” funded by Academy of Finland (Vilma Luoma-aho, JSBE PI, 2019-2022) – €1,000,000 -- cross-cultural comparison of young people's media use.