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Mediennutzung der westdeutschen Bevölkerung im Jahr 1973.
Themen: Der Inhalt der Studie ist weitgehend identisch mit dem Inhalt
der ZA-Studien-Nr. 0847. Dort ist beschrieben:
Themen: Bekanntheitsgrad sowie Nutzungshäufigkeit von Zeitungen,
Zeitschriften, Abonnementszeitschriften und Lesezirkeln; Bezugsart;
Fernsehgewohnheiten und Beachtung von Werbefernsehen sowie Werbefunk;
Reisen und Reiseziele; Kinobesuch; Führerscheinbesitz; Telefonbesitz;
Farbfernsehgerätebesitz.
Abweichend von der bezeichneten Studie wurden statt Fragen zum
Werbefunk Fragen zum Rundfunkhören gestellt.
Demographie: Alter; Geschlecht; Familienstand; Kinderzahl; Alter der
Kinder (klassiert); Konfession; Schulbildung; Beruf; Berufstätigkeit;
Haushaltseinkommen; Haushaltsgröße; Haushaltszusammensetzung;
Haushaltungsvorstand; Schichtzugehörigkeit; Ortsgröße; Bundesland;
Besitz langlebiger Wirtschaftsgüter.
Interviewerrating: Interviewdauer; Befragungszeitpunkt; Befragungstag;
Interesse am Befragungsthema und Kooperationsbereitschaft des Befragten.
GESIS
In: Key Concerns in Media Studies
A concise introduction to the key ideas and issues in the study of media economics, drawing on a broad range of case studies - from Amazon and Twitter, to Apple and Netflix - to illustrate how economic paradigms are not just theories, but provide important practical insights into how the media operates today.
In: Journal of language and politics, Volume 20, Issue 5, p. 653-675
ISSN: 1569-9862
Abstract
A growing literature on the impact of "fake news" accusations on legacy news outlets suggests that the use of this
term is part of a much larger trend of increased and delegitimizing media criticism by political actors. However, so far, there is
very little empirical evidence on how prevailing politicians' delegitimizing media criticism really is and under which conditions
it occurs. To fill these gaps, we present results of a content analysis of media-related Facebook postings by Austrian and German
politicians in 2017 (N = 2,921). The results suggest that media criticism, in general, is actually rare and that
about half of it can be described as delegitimizing (i.e., characterized by incivility or absence of argumentation). Most often,
media criticism is used by populist politicians, who accuse "the media" in general of bias and falsehoods.
ISSN: 0171-4031
In: Nordic Journal of Media Studies: Journal from the Nordic Information Centre for Media and Communication Research (Nordicom), Volume 2, Issue 1, p. 59-70
ISSN: 2003-184X
Abstract
Since the 1960s, there has been a thriving Nordic tradition of media literacy research, pedagogics, and policy on how to best prepare the emerging media citizen for an increasingly mediatised society. Although the Nordic model of media literacy has previously been characterised by connections to Bildung, critical theory, cultural studies, and progressive pedagogics, much of today's understanding of media literacy is associated with a more instrumental understanding of education, with connections to the commercialisation and digitalisation of compulsory education. By suggesting a historisation of the Nordic media literacy tradition, in connection to the Nordic media welfare state, this article opens a debate about the future directions of Nordic media literacy.
In: Understanding Ethnic Media: Producers, Consumers, and Societies, p. 207-226
In: Key ideas in media and cultural studies
"Written with media students in mind, this accessible book provides both students and researchers with a new perspective on how to research engagement, not as a metric but as a marker of power relations. This book navigates the reader through a tighter analytical notion of engagement within an understanding of media, culture and democracy. Hill and Dahlgren offer a new definition of engagement as an energizing internal force, and as such a powerful means to further human agency. From this definition they build a generative theory of engagement as a nexus of relations we make and break with media on a daily basis, with examples from political activism, news and misinformation, and the global pandemic. They identify five parameters of engagement in order to understand the relations we have with media across changing public and mediated spheres. This new perspective offers students and researchers pathways for investigating the meaning of media engagement as a resource for living. It will be particularly useful for undergraduate courses on media audiences and publics, political communication and democracy, media and cultural theory, journalism, and for media, communication and sociology studies more broadly"--
In: PGMC - Polity Global Media and Communication series
This book provides a clear and authoritative introduction to the emerging Arab media industries in the context of globalization and its impacts, with a focus on publishing, press, broadcasting, cinema and new media. Through detailed discussions of the regulation and economics of these industries, the authors argue that the political, technological and cultural changes on the global media scene have resulted in the reorganization of the Arab media field. They provide striking examples of this through the particular effects on media policies, media technology and the content and genres developed
World Affairs Online