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1.
Routledge Handbook of Sport and COVID-19 ; : 274-282, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2294330

ABSTRACT

Chapter 26 examines the impact of COVID-19 on sport-for-development (SFD) in Kenya. The chapter argues that, like many sport organisations around the world, community sport-for-development agencies and organisations halted most in-person activities in the early part of 2020. This resulted in many programs, such as the Highway of Hope (HOH) program in Kenya, being paused. Whilst this national shutdown had a negative impact on those involved in the SFD program, it provided the HOH organisation with the opportunity to review its operations and take time to place extra focus on the program's longer-term sustainability. © 2023 selection and editorial matter, Stephen Frawley and Nico Schulenkorf;individual chapters, the contributors.

2.
Frontiers in Communication ; 7, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2065457

ABSTRACT

In this study, we assess the applicability and usefulness of a particular theoretical framework for qualitative analysis of communicative strategies in discourses from beyond the English language. The theory in question is Cialdini's model of persuasion (and the related concept of pre-suasion). We present an operationalisation of this framework in terms of concrete linguistic features, which is implemented using the computer-assisted methods of corpus linguistics. As a case study, we explore a particular type of Arabic-language online public discourse surrounding an issue of pressing contemporary concern, namely the COVID-19 Pandemic. Specifically, we use a large collection of texts produced by the Ministry of Health of Saudi Arabia via the medium of the Ministry's official Twitter account. The tweets in question were produced in the context of a campaign to persuade the public to modify their behavior to comply with policies on protective measures. While the use of corpus-assisted linguistic approaches to examine public discourses around socially or culturally prominent issues is well-developed in the Anglosphere, it remains much more rarely utilized in the Arab World context, and especially in application to discourses in the Arabic language itself. In addition to the contribution arising from the improvements generated in our understanding of the particular issue at hand, this paper aims to contribute to the broader field of Arabic linguistics by modeling a suitable approach—albeit one whose use we show to be subject to some complicating factors—to address other questions in the study of persuasive language in Arabic. Copyright © 2022 Ibrahim, Abaalalaa and Hardie.

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