Results of searching entries for keyword: agenda setting
Media effects in a transitional society: Setting the political agenda in the Kosovo elections of 2007
Lindita Camaj
(Indiana University School of Journalism, USA)Setting students’ professional agenda in the classroom
Raquel Rodríguez
(Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain)Editor’s introduction: Development of agenda-setting theory and research. Between West and East
Wayne Wanta (Oklahoma State University, USA),
Bartłomiej Łódzki (University of Lower Silesia, Poland)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
BOOK REVIEWS: Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska Bartłomiej Łódzki and Wayne Wanta (eds.) (2012) Agenda Setting: Old and New Problems in the Old and New Media...
Anna Paluch
(University of Wrocław, Poland)
INTERVIEW: News trends in agenda-setting
Interview with Professor Maxwell McCombs — one of the two founding fathers of empirical research on the agenda-setting function of the press
Agenda setting priming framing – TV news in Poland during election campaigns 2005 and 2007. Comparative analysis
Ewa Nowak (Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, Poland),
Rafał Riedel (University of Oslo, Norway)The European Parliament election of 2009 in Poland: The agenda-setting in the Polish Internet news portals
Wojciech Walczak
(Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland)BOOK REVIEW: Ewa Nowak (2014). Ustanawianie agendy politycznej przez media. Efekt newsa w Polsce [Media-Policy Agenda-Setting. The News Effect in Poland]...
Bartłomiej Łódzki
(University of Lower Silesia, Poland)
The agenda-setting process in international news
Wayne Wanta (Oklahoma State University, USA),
Simona Mikusova (Comenius University in Bratlislava, Slovakia)Extending our theoretical maps: Psychology of agenda-setting
Maxwell McCombs
(University of Texas at Austin, USA)The agenda-setting studies in Turkey
Erkan Yüksel
(Anadolu University, Turkey)INTERVIEW: The perspectives of media and agenda-setting research in times of Big Data
DOI: 10.19195/1899-5101.11.2 (21).7Interview with Prof. Wayne Wanta
ORCID: 0000-0002-9337-4006
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA , USAFULL TEXT: The-perspectives-of-media-and-agenda-setting-research (PDF / 103.57 kb)Volume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Information literacy on the political agenda: An analysis of Estonian national strategic documents
Kertti Merimaa
MINISTRY OF SOCIAL AFFAIRS, ESTONIA Krista Lepik
UNIVERSITY OF TARTUThe worlds of “the others”? Czech television’s agenda of world news coverage
Tomáš Trampota and Kateřina Kučerová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
European Elections National Agenda: Facebook in the 2019 Romanian EP Elections
Flavia Ţăran
BABEȘ-BOLYAI UNIVERSITY, CLUJ -NAPOCA , ROMANIA Alexandra Catalina Ormenișan
BABEȘ-BOLYAI UNIVERSITY, CLUJ -NAPOCA , ROMANIAThe Right-Wing Perspective: Populist Frames and Agenda on Facebook in Central and Eastern Europe
Rémi Almodt
Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaVolume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
Populism de-globalization and media competition: The spiral of noise
Henrik Müller
(Tu Dortmund University, Germany)Local media and the “political brand”: Candidates attributes portrayed on local media and their consequences on public perceptions
Rocío Zamora
(Catholic University of Murcia, Spain)Danish Public Service Broadcasting in transition: From monopoly to a digital media environment – a shift in paradigms
Poul Erik Nielsen
(University of a Aarhus, Denmark)Election coverage in Poland 2005: A content analysis of the main TV news programs
Bartłomiej Łódzki
(University of Lower Silesia, Poland)Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to Turkey as a global media event: A “frame shift” in media coverages
Gulen Kurt Oncel and Ergen Devrim Karagoz
(Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey)Seeking the H Zone: How we mix media messages to create compatible community in the emerging papyrus society
Donald Shaw (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA),
Sherine El-Toukhy (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA),
Tom Terry (Idaho State University, USA)Challenges and prospects of delivering a diversity of public service content online: A case study of Channel 4 News Online
Olatunji Ogunyemi
(University of Lincoln, United Kingdom)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
Can the Church use media communication channels? Inherent features of media communication channels relative to religious messages in the media
Terézia Rončáková
(Catholic University in Ružomberok, Slovakia)Red danger before elections: Trick or threat?
Jan Křeček and Lenka Vochocová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Volume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Zelensky’s Image in the Russian and Ukrainian News: Presidential Campaign 2019 in Ukraine
Katrin Dkhair
Higher School of Economics, National Research University in Saint Petersburg, Russia Polina Klochko
Higher School of Economics, National Research University in Saint Petersburg, RussiaVolume 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
Surpassing the era of disengaged acceptance: The future of public discourse on nuclear energy
Gabor Sarlos
Rmit University, Vietnam
Mariann Fekete
University of Szeged, Hungary(Liberal) mass media and the (multi)party system in post-communist Lithuania
Irmina Matonytė
(European Humanities University in Vilnius, Lithuania)On the way to dumbing down… The case of Central Europe
Angelika W. Wyka
(Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Germany)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Risk perception and political alienism: Political discourse on the future of nuclear energy in Hungary
Gábor Sarlós
(ELTE Budapest, Hungary)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
Intercultural Mobility and European Identity: Impact of the Erasmus Exchange Programme in Terms of Cultural Differences
Fatih Goksu
ERASMUS UNIVERSITY ROT TERDAM, THE NETHERLANDSWar or Peace Journalism? Study of Media Coverage by Russian Media Outlets of the Trade War Between China and the USA
Viktor Tuzov
City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SARGovernment of Georgia’s Public Rhetoric. Minuscule Model of Russian Propaganda
Davit Kutidze
Gnomon Wise Research Institute at the University of Georgia