Tactical communication activities at workplace, such as writing to mitigate the damages that result from corporate accidents, require creative linguistic and narrative techniques.
Choose a corporate accident [you are aware of] and discuss the narrative techniques that were manipulated by that corporate in the light of Greenblatt’s notion of ‘self-fashioning’ [2005 (1980)].
The focus of the TMA will be on the deliberations [analyses, thoughts, discussions, narratives, argumentations etc.] you will develop. How they reflect the techniques used by leaders and report writers to maintain their integrity.
The corporate crisis that will be talked about in the assignment is the Facebook scandal and the leak of people’s private info. Please write an essay in 1300 words with two narratives that go againts each other concerning the crisis. Each narrative has a title and source material below that should we referenced. Most important thing in the essay is how the first narrative after the corporate crisis happened really contradicts the second narrative.
Corporate Crisis:
Contradictory statements given by Mark Zuckerburg and the giant corporation of Facebook following the leak of their sensitive private emails and info, raising distrust and suspicions from the media and their custormers/users.
First Narrative:
Article from Businessinsider.com, reporting on the scandal and leaks that happened to the company and the mistrust on how the company handles its’ user’s private and sensitive info.
Title: After admitting to their mistakes, Mark Zuckerburg is taken to court to be questioned about his company’s unethical practices.
Source: https://www.businessinsider.com/stolen-data-of-533-million-facebook-users-leaked-online-2021-4
Second Narrative:
Statements given by the company to defend its practices and clean their image in the eyes of the media and the public, using lies and deceit in the process.
hat Locke’s work is still highly relevant today, and plays a key role in understanding the modern use of prerogative powers at the behest of the executive; Lockean prerogative theory is the basis of a large amount of contemporary scholarship and one may appreciate the echoes of these constitutive ambiguities in the contemporary theory and obdurate practice of emergency powers. There are a number of key theorists regarding this approach to the assessment of the use of prerogative by the executive, allowing an expansive insight into the practice of Lockean theory in modern society.
Citing Locke directly, American political scientist Jack Goldsmith discusses the mobilisation of Lockean theory during post 9-11 contemporary policy debate during the Bush administration of the early 21st century. Such declarations of crisis powers also operate in the ambiguous space between the legal and the extra-legal, and were central to most of the subsequent emergent contemporary debate and literature on the ‘legality’ of extra-legal powers.
In conclusion, although Locke makes an effort in order to charge the legislature with some degree of authority over that of the executive upon the practice and enforcement of prerogative powers, the extent to which this theory provides and equal share in the scope of
power between such bodies is widely contested. Within the boundaries that Locke sets for the use of executive prerogative, the extent that Locke’s model provides exacting requirement of single-agent executives who act in the contrary or absence of the letter of the
law leaves such a gap for tyrannous actions in the event of the emergence of a power vacuum where normative law does not hold authority. Therefore, although this theory is a useful lens through which to view the dilemmas and debates of contemporary crisis governance, Locke’s theory of prerogative is not a solution to the concerns or critiques of prerogative powers, namely the resulting imbalance of power between the executive and the legislative.