Results of searching entries for keyword: right wing populist actors
Volume 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, USAThe 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
Media populism in Macedonia: Right-wing populist style in the coverage of the “migrant crisis”
Ivo Bosilkov
UNIVERSITY OF MILAN , ITALY
UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM , NETHERLANDSVolume 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, NORWAYThe 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, RomaniaVolume 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, HUNGARYVolume 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
BOOK REVIEW: Toril Aalberg Frank Esser Carsten Reinemann Jesper Strömback Claes H. de Vreese (Eds.) (2017). Populist political communication in Europe. New York-London: Routledge pp. 402 ISBN 9781138614826 9781138654792.
Volume 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, POLANDCommunicating with citizens? Representations of public opinion in Polish public discourse
Robert Szwed
(Catholic University of Lublin, Poland)Volume 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 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Forms of local media relations in local communities – case studies
Sylwia Męcfal
(University of Łódź, Poland)Constitutional debate in the Czech Republic
Vlastimil Nečas
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Emerging patterns and trends in citizen journalism in Africa: The case of Zimbabwe
Bruce Mutsvairo and Simon Columbus
(Amsterdam University College, The Netherlands)Introducing the panspectric challenge: A reconfiguration of regulatory values in a multiplatform media landscape
Jonas Andersson Schwarz (Södertörn University, Sweden),
Karl Palmås (Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
METHOD & CONCEPTS: Democracy and Digital Dissonance: The Co-Occurrence of the Transformation of Political Culture and Communication Infrastructure
Barbara Pfetsch
FREIE UNIVERSITY OF BERLIN, GERMANYJournalists and politicians in television interviews after elections: A redefinition of roles?
Dorota Piontek and Bartosz Hordecki
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)Transformations in Second-Order Campaigning: A German-Finnish Comparison of Campaign Professionalism in the 2004 and 2009 European Parliamentary Elections
Jens Tenscher (Austrian Academy of Sciences/Alpen-Adria-University of Klagenfurt, Austria),
Juri Mykkänen (University of Helsinki, Finland)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)American political campaigns
William L. Benoit
(Ohio University, USA)Volume 12 No 2 (23) Special Issue 2019
Hyperlink networks as a means of mobilization used by far-right movements
Ina Fujdiak
MASARYK UNIVERSITY, CZECH REPUBLIC Petr Ocelík
MASARYK UNIVERSITY, CZECH REPUBLICThe worlds of “the others”? Czech television’s agenda of world news coverage
Tomáš Trampota and Kateřina Kučerová
(Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)Polarization in the Turkish Press: Framing the Social Movement in Iran
Ali Çağlar Karabiyik
Tekirdağ Namık Kemal University, TurkeyVolume 17 No 1 (35) Special Issue 2024
Futures of algorithms and choices: Structuration of algorithmic imaginaries and digital platforms in Europe
Miloš Hroch
Charles University, Czech Republic Panos Kompatsiaris
IULM University, Italy Volker Grassmuck
Leibniz Institute for Media Research Hans-Bredow-Institut (HBI), Germany José Moreno
MediaLab CIES – University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal Lutz Peschke
Bilkent University, Türkiye Jan Jirák
Charles University, Czech Republic Debashmita Poddar
Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy