Comparing Political Journalism

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carsten
Category=JP
Category=KNTP2
claes
Claes De Vreese
Commercial Television News
comparative media systems
comparative political news research
Country's News Media
Country’s News Media
cross-national journalism study
De Vreese
democratic media roles
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
hard
Hard News
Hard News Reporting
International Monetary Fund
interpretive
Interpretive Journalism
Interpretive News
Journalistic Approach
Journalistic Interpretations
market
mass
Mass Market Newspapers
media system typologies
Multivariate OLS Regression
Ne Ga
Negative Relationship
news
news content analysis
newspapers
OLS Regression
Personalized Coverage
political communication theory
Political News Coverage
Political News Journalism
Political Parties
Public Service Television News
Soft News
Strategy Framing
upmarket
Upmarket Newspapers
Van Aelst
vreese

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138655850
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Aug 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Comparing Political Journalism is a systematic, in-depth study of the factors that shape and influence political news coverage today.

Using techniques drawn from the growing field of comparative political communication, an international group of contributors analyse political news content drawn from newspapers, television news, and news websites from 16 countries, to assess what kinds of media systems are most conducive to producing quality journalism.

Underpinned by key conceptual themes, such as the role that the media are expected to play in democracies and quality of coverage, this analysis highlights the fragile balance of news performance in relation to economic forces.

A multitude of causal factors are explored to explain key features of contemporary political news coverage, such as Strategy and Game Framing, Negativity, Political Balance, Personalization, Hard and Soft News

Comparing Political Journalism offers an unparalleled scope in assessing the implications for the ongoing transformation of Western media systems, and addresses core concepts of central importance to students and scholars of political communication world-wide.

Claes de Vreese is Professor and Chair of Political Communication at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He is the founding Director of the Center for Politics and Communication (www.polcomm.org). His most recent book is Political Journalism in Comparative Perspective (2014, with Erik Albæk, Arjen van Dalen and Nael Jebril).

Frank Esser is Professor and Chair of International & Comparative Media Research at the University of Zurich, Swizterland. He co-directs the National Research Center on the Challenges to Democracy in the 21st Century (NCCR Democracy). His most recent book is Mediatization of Politics (2014, with Jesper Strömbäck).

David Nicolas Hopmann is Professor with special responsibilities at the Centre for Journalism and the Department of Political Science at the University of Southern Denmark in Odense, Denmark.