Results of searching entries for keyword: populism in Hungary
Volume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
Populism de-globalization and media competition: The spiral of noise
Henrik Müller
(Tu Dortmund University, Germany)Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
BOOK REVIEW: Cas Mudde & Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser (2017). Populism: A very short introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press pp. 131 ISBN 9780190234874.
Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
BOOK REVIEW: Antonio Momoc (2014) Comunicarea 2.0. New media participare si populism (Communication 2.0. New Media Participation and Populism)...
Romina Surugiu
(University of Bucharest, Romania)
Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Media populism in Macedonia: Right-wing populist style in the coverage of the “migrant crisis”
Ivo Bosilkov
UNIVERSITY OF MILAN , ITALY
UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM , NETHERLANDSPropaganda against the West in the Heart of Europe. A masked official state campaign in Hungary
Márton Demeter
KAROLI GASPAR UNIVERSITY OF THE REFORMED CHURCH, HUNGARYVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
“Protect our homeland!” Populist communication in the 2018 Hungarian election campaign on Facebook
Tamás Tóth
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Dalma Kékesdi-Boldog
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Tamás Bokor
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARY Zoltán Veczán
CORVINUS UNIVERSITY OF BUDAPEST, HUNGARYThe Right-Wing Perspective: Populist Frames and Agenda on Facebook in Central and Eastern Europe
Rémi Almodt
Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Examining the populist communication logic: Strategic use of social media in populist political parties in Norway and Sweden
Bente Kalsnes
OSLO METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY, NORWAYVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Famous women yearn for Putin and other unlikely tales: Glamorizing right-wing populist actors in the Bulgarian editions of Cosmopolitan and Elle
Miglena Sternadori
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY, USAVolume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
A different kind of massive attack: How the Bulgarian Ultranationalist Party Ataka engineered its political success using electronic media
Elza Ibroscheva
(Southern Illinois University, USA)(Liberal) mass media and the (multi)party system in post-communist Lithuania
Irmina Matonytė
(European Humanities University in Vilnius, Lithuania)Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Nonverbal components of the populist style of political communication: A study on televised presidential debates in Poland
Dorota Piontek
ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIVERSITY, POZNAŃ , POLAND Małgorzata Tadeusz-Ciesielczyk
ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIVERSITY, POZNAŃ , POLANDVolume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
METHODS/RESEARCH: Some remarks on the comparative experiment as a method in assessing populist political communication in Europe
Dominika Kasprowicz
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, POLAND Agnieszka Hess
JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY, POLANDThe Populist Dimension of Mediated Discourses About Corruption in Romania
Delia Cristina Balaban
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Hanna Orsolya Vincze
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Mihnea S. Stoica
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania Iulia Medveschi
Babes-Bolyai University, Romania