Chapter 1: The Politics-Media-Politics Approach
Chapter 2: PMP and Election Campaigns
Chapter 3: PMP, Violent Conflicts, and Peace Processes
Chapter 4: PMP and Historical Changes
Chapter 5: PMP and Comparative Political Communication
Chapter 6: Using the PMP Approach to Assess Media: Performance in
both Democratic and Autocratic Regimes
Conclusion
References
Index
Gadi Wolfsfeld is Professor of Communication and Head of the
Communication and New Media MA program at Reichman University's
Sammy Ofer School of Communication.
Tamir Sheafer is Professor of Political Science, Professor of
Communication and Journalism, and the Dean of the Faculty of Social
Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Scott Althaus is Merriam Professor of Political Science, Professor
of Communication, and Director of the Cline Center for Advanced
Social Research at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Many good ideas take a decade to mature. That is also the case in
this book. Eminent colleagues Wolfsfeld, Sheafer, and Althaus have
written a compelling and inspiring 'big picture' book. Their
Politics-Media-Politics approach provides a broad framework and a
refreshing lens through which to see political communication
theorizing. The endeavour is ambitious and likely to inform a new
decade of political communication scholarship.
*Claes de Vreese, Professor of Political Communication, University
of Amsterdam*
In an era of increasingly complex media and political ecosystems,
Wolfsfeld, Sheafer, and Althaus' theorizing offers a much-needed
prism through which to view sociopolitical developments.
Integrating disparate findings across fields and over time and
space, their Politics-Media-Politics principle and conceptual map
speak incisively to both democratic theory and practice. This
big-thinking book is a must-read for anyone interested in
understanding how our world operates today.
*Patricia Moy, Christy Cressey Professor of Communication,
University of Washington*
I have often used the PMP principle in my work and teaching as it
helps to understand and clarify the complex interactions between
politicians and journalists. This ambitious book extends, updates,
and deepens the original PMP framework so it can be used in more
(non-Western) contexts and in today's political information
environment. The authors sketch a sophisticated roadmap, supported
by examples from across the globe, that will allow political
communication studies to speak to each other and stay on track.
*Peter Van Aelst, Professor in Political Communication, University
of Antwerp, Belgium*
This book provides the most ambitious attempt so far to integrate
almost the entire field of political communication into a single
framework. A truly erudite, well-written, and thought-provoking
effort.
*Stefaan Walgrave, Professor of Political Science, University of
Antwerp*
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