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DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5281/ri.v3i1.265Abstract
The papers that make up this issue move in two areas: the pandemic and virtual networks and have been produced by researchers from the Latin American area, showing the impact of borderline scenarios in the research work. These scenarios have developed as a result of the pandemic and the emergence of virtual networks as a disruptive factor in the communicational narrative. Both phenomena have conditioned the attention of communication researchers because they have strengthened each other.
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