Spinning for Labour: Trade Unions and the New Media Environment

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Coal Strike
Collar Unions
communication studies
cultural debates
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Glasgow Team
Health Unions
Industrial Correspondents
Industrial Journalism
industrial relations
journalism studies
Labour Beat
Labour Correspondents
Labour Desk
Labour Journalism
mass media representation of unions
media sociology
media techniques
News Frames
News Media Strategies
News Media Work
Non-official Sources
Offshore Industries Liaison Committee
Plebeian Public Sphere
political communication
Post War
Press Officers
Primary Definers
public relations strategies
Senior Editorial Staff
Specialist Journalism
spin doctoring
TUC Affiliate
union media campaigns
Westminster Lobby
Westminster politics

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138344846
  • Weight: 930g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 219mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1998, this volume asks: are groups or organisations beyond the sphere of Westminster politics doomed to be marginalised in mainstream news coverage, or can the currently fashionable emphasis upon media techniques and 'spin doctoring' offer such non-official news sources a means of securing media success?. This question is now surfacing as a major issue within politics and cultural debates, as well as within the sociology of the mass media and communication studies. We are living through a period of remarkable transformation in politics, culture and social arrangements. Communications experts in the 'new Labour' camp believe that trade unions must respond by becoming more sophisticated in their use of the media and marketing techniques; and by employing new vocabularies for communicating their messages to the public. However, can trade unions succeed in using the tricks of the 1990s spin doctor to restore their position?. This study uses extensive interviews with leading national newspaper journalists and senior figures within trade unions to explore the question. Drawing upon unique archive material the study points to the importance of government in fostering or undermining branches of journalism including coverage of labour relations.

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