Applying Care to Political Public Relations: Crisis Communications Following the Terrorist Attack in New Zealand: Crisis Communications Following the Terrorist Attack in New Zealand

Witness the effectiveness of care-based political communication in uniting a nation after a terrorist attack, as demonstrated by New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

Applying Care to Political Public Relations: Crisis Communications Following the Terrorist Attack in New Zealand: Crisis Communications Following the Terrorist Attack in New Zealand

Abstract

Care is not a word generally associated with political crises. However, following the mosques massacre in New Zealand, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was found to have used care and a feminist approach to political communication that served to unite rather than divide her country following this racially motivated terrorist attack. There is much literature on corporate crises, but this paper adds to the dearth of literature on political crises in a public interest context. Grounded in a consideration of care and agenda building theories, it reveals that a caring approach to political communication (both verbal and nonverbal) following an act of terrorism can influence the media agenda and by extension public opinion.

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