ABSTRACT

The links between distinctive political regimes and media systems are undeniable. As Siebert, Peterson and Schramm wrote (1956: 1) 60 years ago: ‘the press always takes on the form and coloration of the social and political structures within which it operates’. Nevertheless, today’s world and politics are completely different from the bipolar era that inspired the ground breaking Four Theories of the Press. What are the main changes and continuities that have driven the study of politics and the media in the last decades? How to approach this interaction in the light of the challenges that democracy is facing or the continuing technological revolution that at times hampers the media?

This provocative book explores the main premises that have guided the study of politics and the media in the last decades. In so doing, it gives the reader key analytical tools to question the sustainability of past categorizations that no longer match up with current developments of both, political regimes and the media. In searching for clarification about current discrepancies between democracies and media’s distinctive structures or purposes, Four Theories of the Press: 60 Years and Counting puts forward an alternative premise: the political-media complex.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

Four Theories of the Press and Its Legacy

chapter 2|21 pages

Beyond the Dichotomy

Authoritarianism vs. Democracy

chapter 3|23 pages

Thinking Institutionally About Politics and the Media

Why and How

chapter 4|22 pages

The Political-Media Complex at Work

A New Perspective on the Study of Transitional Democracies

chapter |6 pages

Conclusions