Familj, massmedier och politik: [Mit engl. Zsfassung:] Family, mass media, and politics
In: Media Panel report 35
In: Lund studies in sociology 83
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In: Media Panel report 35
In: Lund studies in sociology 83
World Affairs Online
In: Dziennikarstwo i Media 5
In: Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis No 3640
From a publisher's website: The media is changing because the world is changing. It is not clear whether this dependency is working the other way. The relationship between the changing media and the changing world is devoted to most of the texts that make up the new volume of the year's Wroclaw mediates. At the center of the media are the media of the changing civilizations of the media systems of Europe and America. Authors who are both recognized researchers and newcomers try to answer questions about journalism, media professions, image communication, branding, public relations in multinational inquiries. The value of the texts is primarily an ambitious attempt to keep up with the current problems of media studies, combined with broader reflection on foreign media systems and Polish public discourse. Reading for media people, journalists and students of journalism, cultural scientists, political scientists and sociologists
In: Wrocławskie studia politologiczne: czasopismo Instytutu Politologii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego, Heft 11, S. 161-183
ISSN: 1643-0328
In: Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis 3580
In: Statsvetenskaplig tidskrift, Band 110, Heft 4, S. 351-367
ISSN: 0039-0747
This article examines the relationship between media & the partisan ministerial staff of the Government Office. The main objective of the article is to make a contribution to the knowledge about & comprehension of how medialization has affected the work of the partisan ministerial staff. The article is empirically based on four focus groups, with respectively ministers, secretaries of state, political advisors & press secretaries working under the third Persson government (2002-2006). The article demonstrates that media management is an area that The Government Office was not originally adapted for. Therefore media & communication do not enter into the existing routines & formal decision-making processes of the organization. As a result, media challenge both the process behind the government's collective decision-making & the up-holding of the impression that the government decides collectively. Thus, there is a need for complementary routines for the contacts between the partisan staff & the civil servants. Adapted from the source document.
In: Acta Universitatis Wratislaviensis no 3482
Literaturverz. S. 264 - [274]
In: Kultura i społeczeństwo: kwartalnik, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 177-188
ISSN: 0023-5172
In: Tiden: magasin, Band 49, Heft 4, S. 227-231
ISSN: 0040-6759
In: Statsvetenskaplig tidskrift, Band 113, Heft 1, S. 3-24
ISSN: 0039-0747
By affecting conceptualizations of crime, media depictions of crime play a crucial part in the way criminal policy is shaped. An analysis of Swedish newspaper articles suggest that crime today is depicted in a more exclusionary way than a few decades ago. This is particularly true for the culprit, whose actions are accounted for in an individualized way. Crime victims are described in a manner that invites identification. During the 1980s, media depictions change from structural accounts of the crime to individualized accounts of the culprit and the criminal deed, often in terms of the psychology of the culprit However, it is not until around 1990 that the media depiction of the crime victim change, with fairly neutral descriptions being replaced by more detailed and personal images. In contemporary media stories, crime and criminality are seen as external threats to society. The culprit is depicted as an intruder, and often also as disordered or irrational. The victim, on the other hand, is depicted as a human being just as you and I, with a particular personality. The consumer of these media stories is primarily encouraged to identify with the victim and those close to him or her. Adapted from the source document.