Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10071/25049
Author(s): | Van Aelst, P. Belchior, A. M. Merle, P. Santana Pereira, J. |
Date: | 1-Jan-2020 |
Title: | Introduction: Mass media effects and the political agenda: Assessing its scope and conditions |
Volume: | 4 |
Number: | 1 |
Pages: | 3 - 16 |
ISSN: | 2452-0063 |
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): | 10.1075/asj.00005.int |
Abstract: | Do the mass media influence the issue priorities of politicians? This question has been present in the literature on the media and political agenda-setting since the mid-1970s when scholars first addressed it within the broader agenda-setting research. While only eighteen empirical pieces examined this topic until the mid-2000s (Walgrave & Van Aelst, 2006), in the last decade the number of studies on the media and the political agenda has expanded considerably (Van Aelst & Walgrave, 2016). In fact, in the last ten years (2005–2015), more than thirty studies focused on the media’s political agenda-setting power. The research now features a wider geographical scope, richer datasets, and more contingent factors have been investigated in detail. Studying the relationship between the media agenda and the political agenda has therefore become a flourishing subfield in political communication. In addition, it connects a community of political scientists interested in factors that influence public policy with communication scholars who work on the political influence of the mass media. |
Peerreviewed: | yes |
Access type: | Open Access |
Appears in Collections: | CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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article_71220.pdf | Versão Aceite | 294,26 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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