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Why practitioners do (not) apply crisis communication theory in practice

Why practitioners do (not) apply crisis communication theory in practice Twenty-five in-depth interviews with Belgian crisis communication practitioners were conducted to examine the gap between theory and practice. Crisis communication has become an important research area within public relations. Several studies have resulted in theories and guidelines regarding the effective use of communication during organizational crises. Unfortunately, these findings are not always put into practice. This study examines to what extent public relations practitioners apply theory in practice during crises and why. The findings offer an opportunity to formulate potential ways in which we can bridge the scholar-practitioner divide in public relations, through guidelines for both scholars and practitioners. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Public Relations Research Taylor & Francis

Why practitioners do (not) apply crisis communication theory in practice

Why practitioners do (not) apply crisis communication theory in practice

Journal of Public Relations Research , Volume 28 (5-6): 16 – Nov 1, 2016

Abstract

Twenty-five in-depth interviews with Belgian crisis communication practitioners were conducted to examine the gap between theory and practice. Crisis communication has become an important research area within public relations. Several studies have resulted in theories and guidelines regarding the effective use of communication during organizational crises. Unfortunately, these findings are not always put into practice. This study examines to what extent public relations practitioners apply theory in practice during crises and why. The findings offer an opportunity to formulate potential ways in which we can bridge the scholar-practitioner divide in public relations, through guidelines for both scholars and practitioners.

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References (48)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2016 Taylor & Francis
ISSN
1532-754X
eISSN
1062-726X
DOI
10.1080/1062726X.2016.1261703
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Twenty-five in-depth interviews with Belgian crisis communication practitioners were conducted to examine the gap between theory and practice. Crisis communication has become an important research area within public relations. Several studies have resulted in theories and guidelines regarding the effective use of communication during organizational crises. Unfortunately, these findings are not always put into practice. This study examines to what extent public relations practitioners apply theory in practice during crises and why. The findings offer an opportunity to formulate potential ways in which we can bridge the scholar-practitioner divide in public relations, through guidelines for both scholars and practitioners.

Journal

Journal of Public Relations ResearchTaylor & Francis

Published: Nov 1, 2016

Keywords: Apologies; crisis communication; responsibility; scholar-practitioner divide; stealing thunder

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