Directives in COVID-19 government guidance: An international comparison

•New categorization of directive speech acts developed based on corpus of monologic briefings.•Categorization includes attention to directness and forcefulness of directives.•Briefings of political leaders Ardern, Johnson, Morrison and sturgeon are compared.•Suggests directive realisations for effec...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied Corpus Linguistics Vol. 3; no. 3; p. 100063
Main Authors Vincent, Benet, Power, Kate, Crosthwaite, Peter, Gardner, Sheena
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.12.2023
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Summary:•New categorization of directive speech acts developed based on corpus of monologic briefings.•Categorization includes attention to directness and forcefulness of directives.•Briefings of political leaders Ardern, Johnson, Morrison and sturgeon are compared.•Suggests directive realisations for effective public health messaging. The importance of language to changing public behaviours is acknowledged in crisis situations such as the COVID-19 pandemic. A key means of achieving these changes is through the use of directive speech acts, yet this area is currently under-researched. This study investigates the use of directives in the 2020 COVID-19 briefings of four leaders of English-speaking nations, Jacinda Adern, Boris Johnson, Scott Morrison, and Nicola Sturgeon. We developed a classification system including 16 directive types and used this to compare directive use across these four leaders, examining directness and forcefulness of directive use. The analysis finds Sturgeon to be the most prolific directive user and also to have the highest reliance on imperatives. Johnson, meanwhile, has a preference for directives involving modal verbs, particularly with first- and second-person pronouns. In contrast, Ardern and Morrison show a higher use of indirect directives, normally thought to be a less effective strategy. While Ardern often combines this strategy with judicious use of imperatives, this is not seen in Morrison's COVID-19 briefings. These findings tend to confirm earlier, more impressionistic evaluations of the communication styles of these leaders but also suggest other avenues for research on directive use. We conclude with implications for political crisis communication and analysis of directives in crisis communication.
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ISSN:2666-7991
2666-7991
DOI:10.1016/j.acorp.2023.100063