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Political Communication

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Deliberation, e-democracy, and the virtual public sphere ... Are opinionated, partisan, biased media a problematic source for political information? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Political Communication


1
Political Communication
  • Course overview
  • Deadlines
  • Essay topics
  • Resources
  • Introductory lecture
  • Defining the concept political communication
  • Social change and the rising importance of
    political communication

2
Course overview
  • Lecture topics
  • Propaganda
  • Public relations, political marketing and spin
  • Media as political actors
  • Media effects
  • Election campaigns
  • Rhetoric and manipulation
  • Foreign affairs and political communication
  • Terrorism as/and communication
  • Deliberation, e-democracy, and the virtual public
    sphere
  • Truth, lying and bullshit in political
    communication

3
Assessments and deadlines
  • Tutorial presentation (requirement, unassessed)
  • Essay (40)
  • Exam (60)
  • Deadline for submitting essay (through turnitin)
    6 December 2006

4
Essay topics
  • Can/should there be limits to freedom of speech?
  • To what extent is political speech the defence
    of the indefensible?
  • Would less hostility between spin doctors and
    journalists be good for democracy?
  • Are opinionated, partisan, biased media a
    problematic source for political information?
  • Does a democracy require well informed citizens?
  • What are the pros and cons of negative
    campaigning?
  • Are democratic elections anything more than
    rhetorical contests?
  • Can modern wars be won without communication
    strategies?
  • If terrorism is a form of communication, then
    whats the message and who is the receiver?
  • Should we abandon general elections and
    substitute them with deliberative polls?

5
Resources
  • All titles on the reading list are accessible
    online or in the Heavy Demand section of Queen
    Mother Library
  • Search engine
  • http//scholar.google.com
  • E-journals databases
  • http//www.il.proquest.com/pqdauto
  • http//www.ingentaconnect.com/search/advanced
  • E-journals alphabetical listing
  • http//www.abdn.ac.uk/diss/library/ejournal/alphal
    ist.shtml
  • E-books
  • http//site.ebrary.com/lib/aberdeenuniv

6
Defining Political Communication
  • Chaffee (1975) Political Communication
  • the role of communication in the political
    process
  • McNair (1995) Introduction to Political
    Communication
  • Any book about political communication should
    begin by acknowledging that the term has proved
    to be notoriously difficult to define with any
    precision, simply because both components of the
    phrase are themselves open to a variety of
    definitions, more or less broad.
  • McQuail (1992) Political Communication in
    Encyclopedia of Government and Politics
  • Political communication refers to all
    processes of information (including facts,
    opinions, beliefs, etc.), transmission, exchange
    and search engaged in by participants in the
    course of institutionalised political
    activities.

7
McQuails definition
  • Communication in the political (constitutional)
    system of democratic society
  • Media fulfilling instrumental functions in
    political communications
  • as a reporter of events
  • as a platform for the expression of political
    opinion
  • as an instrument of political party organization
    and weapon in inter-party conflicts
  • as a watchdog on governmental actions
  • as an instrument of government for information
    and influence

8
Exchange between elites and masses
  • Watts (1997)
  • understands function of mass media to be that of
    intermediaries in the process of political
    communication, enabling the government and its
    opponents to speak to the electorate and the
    electorate to communicate with its leaders
  • Perloff (1998)
  • defines political communication as the process
    by which a nations leadership, media and
    citizenry exchange and confer meaning upon
    messages that relate to the conduct of public
    policy.

9
History of political communication research
  • Beginning with the study of propaganda during and
    between the two world wars
  • Walter Lippmanns Public Opinion (1922)
  • Harold Lasswells Propaganda Technique in the
    World War (1927)
  • Early focus on war/fascist/stalinist propaganda
    resulting in a general preoccupation with
    persuasive effects of political messages (through
    media)
  • According to McQuail (Mass Communication
    Theory), first period of communication studies
    (1920s-1940s) characterised by belief in
    omnipotence of mass media

10
Social, technological, structural change
  • 1940s-1950s first empirical studies of media
    effects, in particular campaign studies
  • Minimal effects model
  • Lazarsfeld et al, The Peoples Choice (1944)
  • Low levels of information, high levels of
    partisanship, habitual voting
  • Social change since 1960s
  • Dealignment
  • Technological change
  • TV becoming main information medium
  • Commercialisation, visualisation, tabloidisation
  • Professionalisation of political communication
  • Political marketing, campaign consultancy

11
Third age of political communication
  • Blumler (2001)
  • First age 1950s
  • easy access to media, political communication
    reflecting partisan positions, reinforcing rather
    than persuading, strong and stable political
    institutions
  • Second age 1960s-1980s
  • Limited-channel network television, dealignment,
    consumerism, public skepticism about elites,
    increasing importance of political communication,
    and increasingly important role for media in
    political process, the modern publicity process
  • Third age 1990s-present
  • Proliferation within and beyond mainstream media,
    abundance of channels, unlimited reach,
    possibility for interactivity

12
Effects of abundance
  • Change in the politics-media relationship
  • Limits of efficacy of news management
  • Costs vs. benefits of political spin
  • Decentralisation, localisation, diversification
    of campaigning
  • Possible reintroduction of political substance at
    expense of spin
  • Hypercompetition
  • Populism
  • talk-show democracy
  • Centrifugal diversification
  • Abundance of channels allows to move away from
    universal audience appeals towards fragmented
    targeting
  • Internet
  • Virtual public sphere
  • E-democracy
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