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Articles

Strategic Communication as Discursive Institutional Work: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Mark Zuckerberg’s Legitimacy Talk at the European Parliament

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Pages 197-213 | Published online: 08 Jul 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Digital platforms are under public scrutiny and face a negotiation process regarding their social responsibility. In this institutional discourse about moral responsibilities, corporate actors aim at defending the legitimacy of digital platforms. This study conceptualizes strategic communication as a means for conveying conformity to legitimacy expectations, to shape legitimacy judgments, and to discursively conduct institutional work. A critical discourse analysis of Zuckerberg’s testimony before the European Parliament finds that pragmatic, moral, and cognitive legitimacy is signaled through corporate ability, responsibility, and conformity narratives, respectively. Moreover, Zuckerberg’s techno-libertarian talk advocates Silicon Valley ideology through utility narratives of artificial intelligence. Thus, Zuckerberg conducts institutional work as an institutional entrepreneur whose strategic communication seeks to manipulate views as well as institutions.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

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