1. Finding the path beyond reputation repair: A structural topic modeling analysis of the crisis communication paradigm in public relations.
- Author
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Page, Tyler G., Zhou, Alvin, and Capizzo, Luke W.
- Subjects
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CRISIS communication , *PUBLIC relations , *SCHOLARLY communication , *REPUTATION , *PUBLIC communication , *STRUCTURAL models - Abstract
This research utilizes computational methods to examine crisis communication scholarship from 2010 to 2020 in two studies with a census of all articles in Public Relations Review and the Journal of Public Relations Research (n = 1293 articles, 7400,685 words). Results indicate crisis scholarship has expanded beyond its prior focus on reputation repair. Situational crisis communication theory and image repair are compared in volume of scholarship and methodological affinity. Social media, SCCT, and media relations are identified as central topics within crisis communication scholarship. • Two studies examine the crisis paradigm in public relations using all text in two SSCI journals from 2010 to 2020. • Crisis scholarship has broadened to include non-reputation topics following the path set forth by Liu and Fraustino (2014). • Reputation research using situational crisis communication theory has grown significantly and remains largely quantitative. • Research using image repair theory is declining as a percentage of crisis scholarship and remains predominantly rhetorical. • Social media, SCCT, and media relations are identified as central topics within crisis communication scholarship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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