From the Global to the Local and Back Again: MFAs’ Digital Communications During COVID-19

Authors

  • Ilan Manor Ben Gurion University of the Negev
  • Moran Yrachi Reichman University

Keywords:

digital diplomacy, public diplomacy, social media, COVID-19

Abstract

Recently, scholars have suggested that ministries of foreign affairs (MFAs) use social media to practice domestic digital diplomacy as they interact with national citizens, not foreign populations. In this study, we explore the practice of domestic digital diplomacy during the COVID-19 pandemic. An analysis of the Facebook activities of 8 MFAs suggests that once the pandemic erupted, diplomats’ Facebook posts were locally oriented and targeted the national citizenry. We postulate that MFAs saw the pandemic as an opportunity to develop a domestic constituency that would help safeguard their role within governments. Posts targeting citizens helped them make sense of an unprecedented crisis. A statistical analysis found that as the pandemic progressed and citizens became accustomed to a new reality, MFAs retargeted foreign populations, going from the local to the global. The statistical analysis also found high engagement rates with domestic Facebook posts suggesting that MFAs do attract a domestic, online following.

Author Biographies

Ilan Manor, Ben Gurion University of the Negev

Ilan Manor is a lecturer at the Department of Communications at Ben Gurion University of the Negev and a member of Oxford University’s Digital Diplomacy Research Group.

Moran Yrachi, Reichman University

Dr. Moran Yarchi is a Senior Lecturer at the Sammy Ofer School of Communications, the Head of the Public Diplomacy program, a Senior fellow at the Abba Eban Institute for International Diplomacy, and a Senior Researcher at the Institute for Counter-Terrorism (ICT) at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya, Israel. Her main area of research is political communication, especially the media’s coverage of conflicts and public diplomacy. Her main fields of research are political communication, public diplomacy, media coverage of conflicts and terrorism, and new media. Integrating theories from communication studies, political science and international relations, Moran’s studies investigate the ability of political actors to promote their messages through the media. Moran’s studies granted her with various awards and scholarships including the: Nina Wain's Prize for public and international communication in 2012, the Inbar fund scholarship in 2013, the Hecht Prize in 2012-3, the ICA’s annual conference Mass Communication Division's top paper award 2014, the NCA’s annual conference Mass Communication Division's top paper award 2015, and the ICA’s annual conference political Communication Division's top paper award 2019.

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Published

2023-01-13

Issue

Section

Articles