political_communication_theory
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| + | Theories of media effects | ||
| + | * Agenda setting Theory | ||
| + |   * Priming theory  | ||
| + | * Framing theory | ||
| + | Theories about the politics-media axis | ||
| + |   * impoverished information provision;  | ||
| + |   * narrowed political discourse;  | ||
| + | * elevation of perceptions of political reality over objective ones; | ||
| + |   * increased negativity and reliance on attack campaigning;  | ||
| + | * pervasive cynicism; and | ||
| + | * heightened politician-journalist conflict | ||
| + |    | ||
| + | * theory of press-state relations | ||
| + |   * mediatization of politics theory, see [[http:// | ||
| + | Theories in digital era | ||
| + | * **The Hyperlinked Society** | ||
| + | * **spill-over effects:** Drawing on theories of agenda building, hyperlinked network analysis, and the logic of connective action, they have developed a framework for investigating the conditions under which challengers’ online communication agendas may spill over into traditional mass media agendas, with corresponding chances of influencing public opinion and politicians’ policy agendas. | ||
| + | * **The Hybrid Media System** | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[http:// | ||
| + | [[http:// | ||
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