Last month, All Azimuth published an article by Bean and Comor titled "Data-Driven Public Diplomacy: A Critical and Reflexive Assessment." The article focuses on a report published by the U.S. Advisory Commission on...
KEEP READINGEvaluating Data-Driven Public Diplomacy
A new study published in the journal All Azimuth examines the 2014 report by the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, "Data-Driven Public Diplomacy: Progress Towards Measuring the Impact of Public Diplomacy and International Broadcasting Activities," to see why there is so much emphasis placed on measuring public diplomacy outcomes. The authors, Hamilton Bean and Edward Comor, argue that "the renewed and intensified desire to measure and evaluate PD...stems from at least two under assessed and interrelated sources. One, we propose, is the ideological residue of the Cold War and a way of thinking about communication that contributes to a profound institutional inertia. [...] The other source of this compulsion involves a general lack of clarity as to what PD officials are meant to achieve, specifically PD’s measurable impacts."
The article "Data-Driven Public Diplomacy: A Critical and Reflexive Assessment" is available for download here. You can also read the original report to which CPD contributed, here.
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