Results of searching entries for keyword: social media
A walk in the public relations field: Theoretical discussions from a social media and network society perspective
Kaja Tampere
(Tallinn University, Estonia)Volume 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, NORWAYFacebook influences you more than me: The perceived impact of social media effects among young Facebook users
Nicoleta Corbu,
Oana Ştefăniţă,
Raluca Buturoiu
(National Univeristy of Political Studies and Public Administration, Romania)Social media in campaigning — citizens and politicians in the 2010 Swedish election
Annika Bergström
(University of Gothenburg, Sweden)Russian journalists and social media: updated transitions and new challenges
Elena Johansson and Gunnar Nygren
(Södertörn University, Sweden)Volume 13 No 1 (25) Spring 2020
The Image of Germany in Social Media: Political and Social Aspects of Public Service Media in Poland
Agnieszka Węglińska
UNIVERSITY OF LOWER SILESIA , POLANDSocial Media News: A Comparative Analysis of the Journalistic Uses of Twitter
Rosella Rega
University of Siena, ItalyEVENTS: Online Conference of Young Scientists: "Media and Social Communication – 1st Edition. Coronavirus – Challenges of Modern Society” (May 15-16 2020)
Marlena Sztyber
University of WarsawVolume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
Campaigning on Facebook: Posts and online social networking as campaign tools in the 2017 general elections in the Republic of Kosovo
Dren Gërguri
UNIVERSITY OF PRISHTINA ‘’HASAN PRISHTINA”, KOSOVOConstructing identity on social networks. An analysis of competences of communication constituted on Facebook.com
David Dobrowsky
(University of Vienna, Austria)The role of PR in healthcare and social insurance reform in Poland and the United States
Michael Szporer (University of Maryland, USA),
Jacek Barlik (Woodstock Leasor Warszawa, Poland)The scope and limit for the development of corporate social responsibility in the Baltic States as a strategy of corporate communication
Kaja Tampere
(Tallinn University, Estonia)Volume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
Empirical research on the functions of audiovisual advertising from the perspective of recipients - students of the Journalism and Social Communication Faculty at the University of Łódź
Agnieszka Barczyk-Sitkowska
UNIVERSITY OF ŁÓDŹ , POLAND, Mateusz Krzekotowski
UNIVERSITY OF ŁÓDŹ , POLANDPublic relations and trust in contemporary global society: A Luhmannian perspective of the role of public relations in enhancing trust among social systems
Chiara Valentini (Aarhus University, Denmark),
Dean Kruckeberg (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA)Volume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
BOOK REVIEW: Øyvind Ihlen & Magnus Fredriksson (eds.) (2018). Public Relations and Social Theory: Key Figures Concepts and Developments 2nd edition. London: Routledge pp. 454 ISBN: 9-781-13828-1-301 9-781-13828-1-295 9-781-31527-1-231.
Nina on the Net. A study of a politician campaigning on social networking sites
Jakob Svensson
(Karlstad University, Sweden)Volume 12 No 1 (22) Spring 2019
Corporate social responsibility developments in post-communist countries: Towards organisations’ social legitimacy
Kaja Tampere
TALLINN UNIVERSITY, ESTONIAVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
BOOK REVIEW: SERGEY DAVYDOV (ED.) (2020). INTERNET IN RUSSIA. A STUDY OF THE RUNET AND ITS IMPACT ON SOCIAL LIFE. CHAM: SPRINGER NATURE SWITZERLAND AG 298 PP. ISBN 978-3-030-33015-6
Jakub Jakubowski
ADAM MICKIEWICZ UNIVERSITY IN POZNAŃ, POLAND[EVENT] THE 71ST ANNUAL ICA (VIRTUAL) CONFERENCE “ENGAGING THE ESSENTIAL WORK OF CARE: COMMUNICATION CONNECTEDNESS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE” MAY 27-31 2021 (ONLINE)
Agnieszka Stępińska
Volume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
10 Years of the Polish Communication Association
Bogusława Dobek-Ostrowska
University of Wrocław
Michał Głowacki
University of Warsaw
Editors of the Central European Jurnal of CommunicationVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Fact-checking initiatives as promoters of media and information literacy: The case of Poland
Michał Kuś
UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAW Paulina Barczyszyn-Madziarz
UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAWVolume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
INTERVIEW: Media freedom in Central and Eastern Europe
Interview with Professor Andrei Richter — Director of the OSCE Office of the Representative on Freedom of the Media on the state of media freedom in Central and Eastern Europe
Volume 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, HungaryPolish and Swedish journalist-politician Twitter networks: Who are the gatekeepers?
Elena Johansson
UMEÅ UNIVERSITY, SWEDENJacek Nożewski
UNIVERSITY OF WROCŁ AW, POLANDPolish discourses concerning the Spanish Civil War. Analysis of the Polish press 1936–2015
Wojciech Opioła
(University of Opole, 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)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)Political advertising - a research overview
Christina Holtz-Bacha
FRIEDRICH-ALEX ANDER -UNIVERSITÄT ERL ANGEN-NÜRNBERG, GERMANYVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
The importance of media literacy education: How Lithuanian students evaluate online news content credibility
Andrius Šuminas
VILNIUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIA Deimantas Jastramskis
VILNIUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIAVolume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Contextualizing media behavior: Media environments and individuals' media use in the European Union
Matthew Loveless
(University of Kent, United Kingdom)Political communication in the EU: Civic potential of new media (case study: Poland)
Małgorzata Winiarska-Brodowska
(Jagiellonian University, Poland)Volume 8 No 1 (14) Spring 2015
Economic foundations of morality: Questions of transparency and ethics in Russian journalism
Anna Klyueva (University of Houston-Clear Lake, USA),
Katerina Tsetsura (University of Oklahoma, USA)Young people as a media audience: From content to usage processes
Anda Rožukalne
(Rīga Stradiņš University, Latvia)Public radio and the problem of demographic change. The presenters’ perspective on senior citizens’ well-being factors in Polish Radio programmes.
Grażyna Stachyra
UNIVERSITY OF MARIA CURIE- SKŁODOWSKA IN LUBLIN, POLANDVolume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Forms of local media relations in local communities – case studies
Sylwia Męcfal
(University of Łódź, Poland)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
The unlikely advocates of media literacy education: Jean-Jacques Rosseau and John Stuart Mill
Anamaria Neag
(Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary)Journalists and politicians in television interviews after elections: A redefinition of roles?
Dorota Piontek and Bartosz Hordecki
(University of Adam Mickiewicz in Poznań, Poland)Volume 9 No 1 (16) Spring 2016
Facebook as an alternative public space: The use of Facebook by Ukrainian journalists during the 2012 parlimentary election
Dariya Orlova and Daria Taradai
(National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine)(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
Who defines the narrative of a crisis? The case of an Estonian online boycott campaign against an international supermarket chain
Päivi Tampere, Kaja Tampere, Scott Abel
(Tallin University, Estonia)“I went to resist. I’ll be back”: Otekilerin Postasi as an example of citizen journalism in Turkey
Dilek Özhan Koçak
(Giresum University, Turkey)Television: the challenges of pluralism to media regulation
Lilia Raycheva
(Sofia University St. Kliment Okhridski, Bulgaria)Political campaign communication in Sweden: Change but not too much
Lars Nord
(Mid Sweden University in Sundsvall, Sweden)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)The development of online political communication in Poland in European Parlimentary elections 2014: Technological innovation versus old habits
Michał Jacuńsk and Paweł Baranowski
(University of Wroclaw, Poland)Agency awakening and the audiovisual: Developments in late-Soviet Latvian Broadcasting
Sergei Kruk (Rīga Stradiņš University, Latvia),
Janis Chakars (University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA)Media culture and professionalism in reporting on minority issues in Bulgaria: Practices and problems
Bissera Zankova
(Bulgaria)Can a “Lone wolf” quasi-investigative journalist substitute low functionality of the law enforcement system?
Andrej Školkay
(School of Communication and Media, Bratislava, Slovakia)Volume 7 No 1 (12) Spring 2014
Crowdsourcing the mainstream. An analysis of the most frequently posted links on Facebook
Wojciech Walczak
(Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland)Public Service Broadcasting in Latvia: Old images new user needs and market pressure
Inta Brikše
(University of Latvia in Riga, Latvia)Digital switchover in Hungary. European policies and national circumstances
Márk Lengyel
(Council of Europe)Advertising in communication of the Catholic Church. The case of Poland
Krzysztof Stępniak
CARDINAL STEFAN WYSZYŃSKI UNIVERSITY IN WARSAW, POLANDVolume 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 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Media education in the common interest: Public perceptions of media literacy policy in Latvia
Anda Rožukalne
RIGA STRADINS UNIVERSITY, L ATVIA Ilva Skulte
RIGA STRADINS UNIVERSITY, L ATVIA Alnis Stakle
RIGA STRADINS UNIVERSITY, L ATVIAFear of Missing Out scale - a nationwide representative CAWI survey in Poland
Anna Jupowicz-Ginalska
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND Małgorzata Kisilowska
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND Tomasz Baran
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLAND & ARIADNA RESEARCH PANEL Aleksander Wysocki
ARIADNA RESEARCH PANEL Justyna Jasiewicz
UNIVERSITY OF WARSAW, POLANDNuclear media discourses after the closure of the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant: Is the game over?
Natalija Mažeikienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIA Judita Kasperiūnienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIA Ilona Tandzegolskienė
VYTAUTAS MAGNUS UNIVERSITY, LITHUANIAVolume 13 No 2 (26) Special Issue 2020
Meme literacy in Russia: Perceptions of internet memes by a student audience and issues of critical thinking
Svetlana Shomova
NATIONAL RESEARCH UNIVERSITY HIGHER SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS, RUSSIATraditional and Online Media: Relationship between Media Preference Credibility Perceptions Predispositions and European Identity
Waqas Ejaz
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, ISLAMABAD, PAKISTANVolume 14 No 1 (28) Spring 2021
Challenges and Opportunities for the Future of Media and Mass Communication Theory and Research: Positionality Integrative Research and Public Scholarship
Mark Deuze
University of Amsterdam, The NetherlandsVolume 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 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 11 No 1 (20) Spring 2018
The purposes of interpersonal communication: A survey to fi nd the most likely general reasons why people engage in communication
Mikael Jensen
University of Gothenburg, SwedenVolume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
Polish journalism: A profession (still) in transition?
Agnieszka Stępińska
(Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań, Poland)Volume 10 No 1 (18) Spring 2017
Distributed gatekeeping. Uncovering the patterns of linking behaviors on Facebook
Wojciech Walczak,
Michał Meina,
Krzysztof Olechnicki
(Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland)Extending our theoretical maps: Psychology of agenda-setting
Maxwell McCombs
(University of Texas at Austin, USA)Russian TV market: Between state supervision commercial logic and simulacrum of public service
Ilya Kiriya (State University - Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia),
Elena Degtereva (Moscow State University, Russia)Data literacy among journalists: A skills-assessment based approach
Ragne Kõuts-Klemm
UNIVERSITY OF TARTU, ESTONIAVolume 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 REPUBLICIs news liberated or enslaved? Consequences of news aggregation
Paweł Wieczorek
(University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Warsaw, Poland)The global society and its impact on public relations theorizing: Reflections on major macro trends
Chiara Valentini (Aarhus University, Denmark),
Dean Kruckeberg (University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA),
Kenneth Starck (University of Iowa, USA)Volume 6 No 1 (10) Spring 2013
What can the history of communication studies tell us about its practical relevance in the future? The four “currencies” of academic success and an alternative chronology of the subject’s development in Germany since 1945
Christian Schäfer
(Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany)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 TARTUPolish and Ukrainian University Students’ Perspectives on Academic Writing: A Comparative Overview
Mariya Kozolup
IVAN FRANKO NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF LVIV, UKRAINE Mariya Kokor
IVAN FRANKO NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF LVIV, UKRAINE Ruslan Savchynskyi
IVAN FRANKO NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF LVIV, UKRAINEAdolescents on YouTube: gender differences regarding the videos they upload and watch
Rebeca Suárez-Álvarez
Rey Juan Carlos University, Spain Antonio García-Jiménez
Rey Juan Carlos University, Spain Manuel Montes-Vozmediano
Rey Juan Carlos University, SpainExploring Visual Culture of COVID-19 Memes: Russian and Chinese Perspectives
Olga V. Smirnova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Anna A. Gladkova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Alexandre P. Lobodanov
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Olga V. Sapunova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Galina V. Denissova
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Anastasia L. Svitich
Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia