ABSTRACT

Over time and across Western democracies, the media has become increasingly influential, and a great deal more political processes have become altered, shaped or structured by the media and the perceived need of individuals, organizations and social systems to communicate with or through the media. The key theoretical perspective to understand this process is mediatization. As a long-term process which has increased the importance of the media and their spill-over effects on political processes, institutions, organizations and actors, mediatization is one of the most important processes reshaping politics and transforming democracies across the Western world.

While the theoretical perspective of mediatization has become increasingly popular in recent years, scholarly understanding of the mediatization process and its antecedents, consequences and contingencies are still hampered by unresolved questions and a lack of systematic empirical studies. This volume addresses this by bringing together contributions that analyze and investigate different facets of the mediatization of politics, making a significant contribution to our theoretical as well as empirical understanding of the mediatization of politics, and setting the agenda for further research on the mediatization of politics.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Studies.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Making sense of the mediatization of politics

chapter |15 pages

Mediatization and Political Leadership

Perspectives of the Finnish newspapers and party leaders

chapter |17 pages

Opposing the Government but Governing the Audience?

Exploring the differential mediatization of parliamentary actors in Switzerland

chapter |18 pages

The Mediatization of Political Accountability

Politics, the news media logic and industrial crises in the 1980s and 2000s

chapter |17 pages

News Coverage of Politics and Conflict Levels

A cross-national study of journalists' and politicians' perceptions of two elements of mediatization

chapter |21 pages

Phases of Mediatization

Empirical evidence from Austrian election campaigns since 1970

chapter |16 pages

Jumping the Shark

Mediatization of Canadian party leadership contests, 1975–2012

chapter |16 pages

Metacoverage and Mediatization in US Presidential Elections

A theoretical model and qualitative case study

chapter |16 pages

Media Logic and Political Logic Online and Offline

The case of climate change communication

chapter |15 pages

Passive Accomplice or Active Disruptor

The role of audiences in the mediatization of politics