Abstract

The world has faced a major increase in forced displacement and the theme has also become the subject of many public, media and political debates. The public communication of refugee organizations thereby increasingly impacts their operations, the public perception on forcibly displaced people and societal and policy beliefs and actions. However, little research has been conducted on the topic. Therefore, this conceptual article aims to (1) define refugee organizations’ public communication, (2) situate it within broader research fields, and (3) motivate the latter’s relevance as research perspectives. In order to be able to achieve these research objectives, the article first discusses the social and scientific relevance of the research subject and identifies important gaps within literature which both form an essential scientific base for developing the main arguments. Adopting a historical perspective, the article demonstrates that in recent decades the social and scientific relevance of research on strategic and non-profit communication in general and on refugee organizations’ public communication in particular have increased. Nevertheless, these fields remain underdeveloped and are mostly text-focused, while the production and reception dimensions are barely explored. Remarkably, however, little or no research has been conducted from an organizational communication perspective, although this article demonstrates that the subject can be adequately embedded in and examined from the fields of strategic, non-profit and public communication. Finally, the article highlights the relevance of the holistic Communicative Constitution of Organizations perspective and argues that future research can benefit by adopting multi-perspective, practice-oriented, multi-methodological, comparative and/or interdisciplinary approaches.

Highlights

  • -called ‘refugee crises’ have always occurred throughout history, forced migration has increased significantly recently: from 42.7 million forcibly displaced people (FDPs) worldwide in 2007 to 68.5 million in 2017

  • Based on and responding to the identified tendencies, and gaps within literature, the third section defines and situates the barely theorized notion of refugee organizations’ public communication within various fields of organizational communication research, and motivates their relevance to examine the research subject. This is illustrated by a discussion of the highly relevant Communicative Constitution of Organizations (CCO) perspective

  • (international) non-governmental organizations review their own communication less than organizations from other sectors. This is largely due to the cost and the complexity of campaigns and evaluations (O’Neil, 2013), and forms an additional reason for academics to investigate refugee organizations’ public communication strategies

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Summary

Introduction

-called ‘refugee crises’ have always occurred throughout history, forced migration has increased significantly recently: from 42.7 million forcibly displaced people (FDPs) worldwide in 2007 to 68.5 million in 2017. They provide aid, assistance and/or protection to FDPs (Betts, Loescher, & Milner, 2012), and try to inform, raise awareness and set the agenda through public communication (e.g., press releases, news stories, photos, videos, interviews, Media and Communication, 2019, Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 195–206 etc.). Based on the broad statute of key organization UNHCR (2010) and practical knowledge, we consider refugee organizations as a type of humanitarian organization whose main aim is to provide protection, assistance and/or aid to refugees, asylum-seekers, internally displaced people, stateless people and/or other people in similar situations We opt for this rather broad definition in order not to exclude, nor ignore the diversity within the working field of refugee organizations (Walker & Maxwell, 2009). This article uses—if appropriate and feasible, and instead of the commonly used but rather narrow, essentializing and legal term ‘refugee’ (Harrell-Bond & Voutira, 1992), the more comprehensive, humane and correct umbrella term ‘FDP’

Social and Scientific Relevance
Challenging Social Trends
Evolving Relationship with Journalism
State of the Art
Situating Refugee Organizations’ Public Communication
Defining Strategic Communication
Relevance of Strategic Communication
The CCO Perspective as a New Avenue
Non-Profit Communication
Public Communication
Refugee Organizations’ Public Communication
Discussion and Conclusion
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