Published Works.
The catalogue brings together policy briefs, dossiers, essays, working materials and concepts. The publications examine public communication as a political, strategic and designerly field.
Visibility Under Pressure — Social Media, Resource Scarcity and Strategic Communication in Civil Society
The policy brief analyses the conditions under which civil society actors communicate on social platforms, what structural obstacles limit their visibility, and what strategic consequences this has for political education and organisational communication.
MSNVI works where
communication becomes public.
MSNVI assembles policy briefs, essays, impulses and concepts on questions of political communication. The focus is not communication as surface, but communication as the site where visibility, interpretation and social participation are negotiated.
The works ask how the public sphere emerges, who can speak within it, which narratives gain traction, and under what conditions civil society actors become visible at all. They move between migration, education, media, platform logics and political publicity.
MSNVI is simultaneously an archive, a space for thinking and a starting point for practice: from the publications emerge workshops, communication concepts, advisory formats and publication projects for civil society organisations, educational actors and public institutions.
Public Sphere & Visibility
How is social attention distributed? Who is heard, who remains invisible, and which structures determine whether work is publicly recognised?
Migration & Narrative
Migrant organisations operate in a field of attributions, expectations and political interpretive frameworks. MSNVI examines how own narratives can emerge without conforming to existing images.
Education & Participation
Education is not only an institution but also a public site of conflict. The works ask how communication about education can make inequality visible, enable participation and name structural exclusions.
Platforms & Civil Society
Social media fundamentally transforms political communication. MSNVI analyses what algorithmic pressure, resource scarcity and digital visibility mean for civil society practice.