Political communication/ edited by Philip Seib - Los Angeles: Sage, 2008. - 336p.

Volume Four

PART ONE: GLOBAL CONVERSATION
Anantha S Babbili
Understanding International Discourse
Political Realism and the Non-Aligned Nations
W Phillips Davison
Political Communication as an Instrument of Foreign Policy
W Phillips Davison and Alexander L George
An Outline for the Study of International Political Communications
Robert Entman
Framing US Coverage of International News
Contrasts in Narratives of the KAL and Iran Air Incidents
Eytan Gilboa
Global Communication and Foreign Policy
Sallie Hughes and Chappell Lawson
The Barriers to Media Opening in Latin America
Ellen Mickiewicz
Excavating Concealed Tradeoffs
How Russians Watch the News
Ralph Negrine and Stylianos Papathanassopoulos
The 'Americanization' of Political Communication
A Critique
Barbara Pfetsch
Political Communication Culture in the United States and Germany
Andrew Rojecki
Media Discourse on Globalization and Terror
Holli A Semetko and Patti M Valkenburg
Framing European Politics
A Content Analysis of Press and Television News
Hans Speier
International Political Communication
Elite versus Mass

PART TWO: THE RISE OF NEW MEDIA
Scott L Althaus and David Tewksbury
Patterns of Internet and Traditional News Media Use in a Networked Community
Jay Blumer and Michael Gurevitch
The New Media and Our Political Communication Discontents
Democratizing Cyberspace
Peter Dahlgren
The Internet, Public Spheres and Political Communication
Dispersion and Deliberation
Vincent Mosco and Derek Foster
Cyberspace and the End of Politics
Dhavan V Shah, Nojin Kwak and R Lance Holbert
'Connecting' and 'Disconnecting' with Civic Life
Patterns of Internet Use and the Production of Social Capital
Geoffry Taubman
A Not-So World Wide Web
The Internet, China and the Challenges to Non-Democratic Rule
Howard Tumber and Michael Bromley
Virtual Soundbites
Political Communication in Cyberspace

9781412947381

302.23 / SEI/P