In response to the complexities of our globalised world, the past decade has seen the emergence of a new paradigmatic perspective on language in sociolinguistics that does not view language as a number of relatively stable systems of grammar and vocabulary that can be named (English, German, etc.). This paradigmatic perspective proposes a spatial orientation to language practices, which means that language practices (e.g. during media content production) are spatiotemporally entangled with semiotic and material resources and social activities. CIDoRa has advanced this agenda by combining theoretical approaches from sociolinguistics (including linguistic ethnography), media studies and cultural studies to develop an innovative methodological frame that acknowledges how professionally produced media messages are situated in wider spatiotemporal contexts of social activities (e.g. consumer/popular culture, routine practices of journalists, youth cultural practices, public discourses on diversity).
Rather than merely looking at media texts to analyse how ethnic diversity is presented by the media, which was mainly the approach of previous studies in this area, CIDoRa gave unprecedented insights into the often overlooked translingual and transmodal social practices of journalists and their entanglement in sociocultural contexts. A view behind the scenes from the perspective of journalists has revealed that addressing ethnic communities and minorities and framing ethnic and linguistic diversity appears as difficult to most journalists. The main challenges for journalists are how to portray ethnic diversity without producing ethnocentric perspectives, exoticizing the other, or particularly addressing or focusing on one community and thereby excluding other communities. Journalists’ perceptions regarding addressing ethnic communities and minorities and framing ethnic and linguistic diversity are subject to a range of factors shaping content production at the youth radio station, which include the imagined and actual audience, the materiality of the newsroom (e.g. resources available), ethical challenges, the constraints of the medium radio in its function to reach the masses, the media organisation, popular culture and consumerism, and competition in the German media system leading to market segmentation. Another larger issue is that German radio stations are subject to their remits and are expected to serve the democratic needs of a society traversed with widespread discourses on cultural pluralism and national identity. In this context and against the background of a spatial orientation to language, the findings of the CIDoRa project indicate that a move towards a more globally minded journalism as part of this larger system will need to also be part of a larger move towards a more globally minded society in which diversity is regarded as unremarkable.