ABSTRACT

This book examines how political communication and the mass media have played a central role in the consolidation of emerging democracies around the world.

Covering a broad range of political and cultural contexts, including Eastern and Southern Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa, this new volume investigates the problems and conflicts arising in the process of establishing an independent media and competitive politics in post-autocratic societies. Considering the changing dynamic in the relationship between political actors, the media and their audience, the authors of this volume address the following issues:

  • changing journalistic role perceptions and journalistic quality
  • the reasons and consequences of persisting instrumentalization of the media by political actors
  • the role of the media in election campaigns
  • the way in which the citizens interpret political messages and the extent to which the media influence political attitudes and electoral behaviour
  • the role of the Internet in building a democratic public sphere

This book will be of great interest to all those studying and researching democracy and democratization, comparative politics, political communication, journalism, media and the Internet.

part |92 pages

The mass media and journalistic practice

chapter |19 pages

The role of the press in times of transition

The building of the Spanish democracy (1975–78)

chapter |17 pages

‘In the name of democracy'

The paradox of democracy and press freedom in post-communist Russia

chapter |17 pages

Conflicts of interest?

Debating the media's role in post-apartheid South Africa

chapter |16 pages

In journalism we trust?

Credibility and fragmented journalism in Latin America

chapter |21 pages

Old and new media, old and new politics?

On- and offline reporting in the 2002 Ukrainian election campaign

part |73 pages

Political parties, governments and elections

chapter |19 pages

Democratization and election campaigning in Taiwan

Professionalizing the professionals

chapter |16 pages

Where's the party?

Television and election campaigns in Russia

chapter |18 pages

The Internet in politics

Democracy in e-government in Taiwan

part |69 pages

Audience responses to political messages

chapter |21 pages

Does ‘trust' mean attention, comprehension and acceptance?

Paradoxes of Russian viewers' news processing

chapter |18 pages

New democracies without citizens?

Mass media and democratic orientations—a four-country comparison

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

Political communication between democratization and the trajectories of the past