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Power and Mass Media
In: Mass Media, Politics and Democracy, S. 283-302
Mass Media and Democratic Politics
In: Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research; Handbook of Politics, S. 477-491
Cognitive effects of political mass media
In: Political communication., S. 547-568
"This chapter reviews the major lines of research on five prominent concepts of political communication research linked to the cognitive effects of political mass media: Knowledge gains and gaps, cultivation, agenda setting, priming, and framing. Basic ideas, typical methodologies, key findings and the cognitive processes behind the concepts are discussed in detail, common conceptual roots are identified, and key methodological challenges are highlighted. Finally, some of the overlaps and differences between the approaches are discussed in order to take a step toward a more integrative and coherent view of cognitive media effects in political communication. The chapter argues that both empirical and theoretical advances are needed to get to a better and less fragmented understanding of cognitive media effects in political communication." (publisher's description).
Cognitive effects of political mass media
In: Political communication, S. 547-568
"This chapter reviews the major lines of research on five prominent concepts of political communication research linked to the cognitive effects of political mass media: Knowledge gains and gaps, cultivation, agenda setting, priming, and framing. Basic ideas, typical methodologies, key findings and the cognitive processes behind the concepts are discussed in detail, common conceptual roots are identified, and key methodological challenges are highlighted. Finally, some of the overlaps and differences between the approaches are discussed in order to take a step toward a more integrative and coherent view of cognitive media effects in political communication. The chapter argues that both empirical and theoretical advances are needed to get to a better and less fragmented understanding of cognitive media effects in political communication." (publisher's description)
Political Agenda Setting and the Mass Media
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Political Agenda Setting and the Mass Media" published on by Oxford University Press.
Collective Identity and the Mass Media
In: The Political Psychology of Democratic Citizenship, S. 277-298
The Mass Media and the Policy Process
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"The Mass Media and the Policy Process" published on by Oxford University Press.
The Mass Media as Actors in Innovation Systems
In: Innovation Policy and Governance in High-Tech Industries, S. 77-100
A Free Press: Democracy and Mass Media
In: Mass Media, Politics and Democracy, S. 303-328
The Global Governance of Mass Media Content
In: Governing Global Electronic Networks, S. 275-304
Mass Media: From 1945 to the Present
In: A Companion to Post-1945 America, S. 78-95
Extreme Speech and the Democratic Functions of the Mass Media
In: Extreme Speech and Democracy, S. 608-630
Încrederea publicului în mass-media din România post-comunistă: rolul politizării și consumului media
In: Political Communication
The erosion of media trust raises concerns about the ways in which the conduit of political information could undermine citizens' trust in democracy. While a large body of research in western democracies shows that media trust is contingent on specific media-system, political and cultural factors pertaining to national contexts, little is known about the sources of media trust in the new democracies from Central and Eastern Europe. Based on statistical analyses of public opinion surveys, this research tests if levels of trust in various traditional (television, radio, written press) and alternative mediums (Internet and online social networks) are differentiated along political party lines and depending on media consumption patterns in post-communist Romania. The results reveal a stronger association between trust in political parties and trust in traditional mediums, while trust in online media is more strongly linked to consumption patterns. These findings have practical, theoretical and normative implications for the functioning of democracy in post-communist societies.