The SAGE Handbook of Political Communication provides a much needed wide-ranging selection of articles edited by two renowned researchers in the field, Holli Semetko and Maggie Scammell, and an ace group of contributors. I was particularly impressed with the global ′feel′ of the handbook, which provides insights into the field from among other areas, the emerging economic and political powerhouses of China, India, Russia, and Latin America. This book is a tour de force - a must-read for students, researchers and practitioners of political communication<br /><b>Dr. Paul Baines<br />Reader in Marketing, Cranfield School of Management & Managing Editor, Europe, Journal of Political Marketing</b>
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<p>This is an impressive, up-to-date collection by some of the best scholars in the field. Students and researchers will find it invaluable, as will others interested in the fast-changing world of political communication<br /><b>Philip Seib<br />Director, Center on Public Diplomacy, University of Southern California</b> </p>
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<p>The SAGE Handbook of Political Communication offers an invaluable overview of the best current thinking and research in the field of political communication. As editors, Holli A. Semetko and Margaret Scammell, has brought together some of the most influential international scholars of media and politics. The result is a nicely organized and well-written handbook which will be an ideal resource not only for university students, but also for researchers and practitioners of political communication<br /><b>Professor Toril Aalberg<br /> NTNU Trondheim, Norway </b> </p>
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<p>The SAGE Handbook of Political Communication brings together distinguished scholars to discuss issues of continuity, change and consequence for online and offline global political communications. Semetko and Scammell have produced a significant collection which delivers argument and evidence for scholars, students and everyone who wishes to understand the rapidly changing and significant field of political communication<br /><b>Bob Franklin,<br />Professor of Journalism Studies, Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies</b> </p>
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This authoritative and comprehensive survey of political communication draws together a team of the world′s leading scholars to provide a state-of-the-art review that sets the agenda for future study. It is divided into five sections:
Part One: explores the macro-level influences on political communication such as the media industry, new media, technology, and political systems
Part Two: takes a grassroots perspective of the influences of social networks - real and online - on political communication
Part Three: discusses methodological advances in political communication research
Part Four: focuses on power and how it is conceptualized in political communication
Part Five: provides an international, regional, and comparative understanding of political communication in its various contexts
The SAGE Handbook of Political Communication is an essential benchmark publication for advanced students, researchers and practitioners in the fields of politics, media and communication, sociology and research methods.
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A cutting edge collection for this global and fast-moving field, edited by two of the world′s leading political communications scholars.
Introduction: The Expanding Field of Political Communication in the Era of Continuous Connectivity - Holli A. Semetko and Margaret Scammell
PART ONE
Entertainment Media and the Political Engagement of Citizens - Michael X. Delli Carpini
Do Cosmopolitan Communications Threaten Traditional Moral Values? - Pippa Norris and Ronald Inglehart
Political Communication in a Changing Media Environment - Fred Fletcher and Mary Lynn Young
Blogging and the Future of News - Richard Davis
Political Organizations and Campaigning Online - Rachel K. Gibson and Stephen Ward
Popular Culture and Political Communication - John Street
Government Communication: An Emerging Field in Political Communication Research - María José Canel and Karen Sanders
What′s Good and Bad in Political Communication Research? Normative Standards for Evaluating Media and Citizen Performance - Scott L. Althaus
PART TWO
Digital Media and Citizenship - Bruce Bimber
Digital Media and Youth Engagement - W. Lance Bennett, Deen G Freelon, Muzammil Hussain, Chris Wells
The Internet and Citizenship: Democratic Opportunity or More of the Same? - Stephen Coleman and Jay G. Blumler
Civic Knowledge and Audiovisual Learning - Doris A. Graber and Gregory G. Holyk
Women as Political Communicators: Candidates and Campaigns - Susan A. Banducci with Elisabeth Gidengil and Joanna Everitt
The Impact of Negative Campaigning on Citizens′ Actions and Attitudes - Kim L. Fridkin and Patrick J. Kenney
Changes in European Public Service Broadcasting: Potential Consequences for Political Knowledge, Attitudes and Behavior - Kees Aarts and Holli A. Semetko
Social Networks, Public Discussion, and Civic Engagement: A Socialization Perspective - Jack M. McLeod and Nam-Jin Lee
PART THREE
Measuring Affect, Emotion and Mood in Political Communication - Ann N. Crigler and Marion R. Just
Online Panels and the Future of Political Communication Research - Shanto Iyengar and Lynn Vavreck
Social Networks and Political Knowledge - William P. Eveland, Jr., Myiah J. Hutchens and Alyssa C. Morey
Understanding the Content of News Media - Stephen D. Reese and Jae Kook Lee
Ethnography as Theory and Method in the Study of Political Communication - Debra Spitulnik Vidali and Mark Allen Peterson
Political Visions: Visual Studies in Political Communication - Kevin G. Barnhurst and Kelly Quinn
News Framing Research: An Overview and New Developments - Claes H. de Vreese and Sophie Lecheler
Dynamics in Mass Communication Effects Research - Dennis Chong and James N. Druckman
PART FOUR
Media, Power and U.S. Foreign Policy - Sean Aday, Robert M. Entman and Steven Livingston
News Media and War - Piers Robinson
The Power of Rhetoric: Understanding Political Oratory - Vanessa B Beasley
The Power of Everyday Conversations: Mediating the Effects of Media Use on Policy Understanding - Jisuk Woo, Min-Gyu Kim, Joohan Kim
Leaders on the Campaign Trail: The Impact of Television News on Perceptions of Party Leaders in British General Elections - Holli A. Semetko, Margaret Scammell and Andrew Kerner
The Interdependency of Mass Media and Social Movements - Rens Vliegenthart and Stefaan Walgrave
PART FIVE
Media Consolidation, Fragmentation and Selective Exposure in the US - Diana Owen
Democratization and the Changing Media Environment in South Korea - June Woong Rhee and Eun-mee Kim
The Changing Landscape of Political Communications in China - Xian Zhou
Political Communication in Latin America - Silvio Waisboard
Political Communication and Media Effects in the Context of New Democracies of East-Central Europe - Hubert Tworzecki
Post-Soviet Political Communication - Sarah Oates
Al-Jazeera Arabic, Transnational Identity and Influence - Sam Cherribi
Grassroots Political Communication in India: Women′s Movements, Vernacular Rhetoric and Street Play Performance - Christine Garlough
Political Communication in Post-Apartheid South Africa - Ian Glenn and Robert Mattes
Some Caveats about Comparative Research in Media Studies - Paolo Mancini and Daniel C. Hallin
Never Waste A Good Crisis: The British Phone Hacking Scandal and its Implications for Politics and the Press - Richard Tait
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Biographical note
Holli A. Semetko, PhD is vice provost for international affairs and director of the Office of International Affairs (OIA) and the Claus M. Halle Institute for Global Learning, and Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Media and International Affairs at Emory University.
An award-winning scholar with more than 90 publications, her research on communication, information and public opinion in campaigns and international contexts extends from the United States, Turkey, and the European Union (EU) to India, China, and Korea. Most recently, she published the Sage Handbook of Political Communication (May 2012), which includes 41 chapters by leading scholars around the world on the latest research and developments in the field.
Dr. Semetko is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, an advisor to The Carter Center China Program, and board chair of Emory’s Confucius Institute in Atlanta. She sits on a number of non-profit boards and is a consultant to academic institutions and international media. She has held elected offices in the American Political Science Association, International Political Science Association, International Communication Association, and the World Association for Public Opinion Research. Her networks in the fields of politics and government, public opinion, and media span the globe.
Before arriving at Emory in 2003, Dr. Semetko lived abroad first as a graduate student completing her MSc and PhD at the London School of Economics and Political Science in the UK, then as a research scholar in Germany, and later as a professor in the Netherlands. She received the Samuel Beer Prize for the best dissertation on British politics, and a fellowship from the German Marshall Fund of the U.S. supported her research in Germany. She had held teaching and research positions at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, and the University of Michigan.
In Amsterdam, Dr. Semetko spent eight years as professor and chair of Audience and Public Opinion Research and served as chair of the Department of Communication Science. She was founding chair of the board of the Amsterdam School for Communication Research (ASCoR), a school for advanced research recognized by the Dutch Academy of Sciences (KNAW), where she remains an honorary professor. Major grants from the EU and Dutch National Science Foundation supported her research in the context of European governance, campaigns, and the economic integration process.
Since her arrival at Emory in 2003, the university launched new international programs and partnerships with nations in Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East and North Africa. She has led numerous delegations to Asia, including China, India, Singapore, and South Korea, and has been a frequent visitor to Turkey, Morocco, and destinations in the EU. Her work has helped to obtain support from foreign governments and foundations to launch Korean at Emory in 2007 and the annual India Summit in 2010, and to expand Chinese language and culture offerings.
As director of the Halle Institute for Global Learning, Dr. Semetko launched several new programs, including the endowed Turkish Lecture Series; Cartooning for Peace at the United Nations and Cartooning for Peace and Health at Emory; and the expansion of the Halle Institute’s study trip program from Germany and India to Turkey, China, Korea, Brazil, and Indonesia.
She established the Halle Institute’s research program in 2004 to advance faculty research through expert meetings and conferences at Emory and abroad. A wide range of cosponsors, such as the European Central Bank; Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta; local offices of consul generals for France, Turkey, the UK, and Germany; and Nanjing University’s Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences have helped to make symposia and other research events possible. Hundreds of scholars have benefited from the program.
Dr. Semetko launched the Knowledge Futures initiative, an interdisciplinary program that sponsors conferences, panels, and speakers to address critical issues about the digital, mediated and wireless world.
Alongside a team of Emory faculty and students, Dr. Semetko is already planning next year’s India Summit, which will take place February 21-23, 2013. Cosponsors over the past three years have included the India, China & America Institute, the Embassy of India in the United States, WIPRO, and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). Maggie Scammell is a lecturer in media and communications. She was appointed to the LSE in January 1999. Before that she was for five years a lecturer at the School of Politics and Communications at the University of Liverpool, and a Research Fellow at Joan Shorenstein Center for Press/Politics, at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. She took her PhD at the LSE, investigating the Thatcher government′s use of marketing and public relations.