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Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Media, information & communication industries
From the Constitutional Convention in 1787 and the fight for
ratification of the Constitution in the pages of America's
newspapers through the digital era of 24/7 information technologies
and social media campaigns, this book tells the story of the press
as a decisive and defining part of America's elections, parties,
and political life. The Press In American Politics, 1787-2012
supplies a far-reaching and fast-moving historical narrative of the
decisive and defining moments in U.S. politics as told through the
history of America's press, beginning from the emergence of the
press in American politics during the 1787 Constitutional
Convention through to 21st-century campaigning that utilize "big
data" and harness the power of social networking. Suitable for
general readers with an interest in the history of American
elections and political campaigns and students and academic
scholars studying the press and American politics, the book tells
the story of "the press"-collectively, some of the most familiar
institutions in American news, broadcasting, and technology-as a
defining part of America's elections, political parties, and
political life. Author Patrick Novotny examines topics such as the
expansion of the press into the Western territories and states in
the early 19th century, the growing independence of the press after
the Civil War, the early history of wireless communication, the
emergence of radio and television as powerful media, and the
daunting challenges newspapers face in the Internet era. Provides a
compelling and unique perspective of American politics through the
early adoptions of technology by the press, especially in the era
of electronic broadcasting and information technology in the 20th
century Thoroughly documents the early emergence of the uses of
radio, television, and the Internet across history Offers
up-to-date accounts of some of the latest campaigning for elective
office in the past decade, up to and including the 2012
presidential election
Co-creativity has become a significant cultural and economic
phenomenon. Media consumers have become media producers. This book
offers a rich description and analysis of the emerging
participatory, co-creative relationships within the videogames
industry. Banks discusses the challenges of incorporating these
co-creative relationships into the development process. Drawing on
a decade of research within the industry, the book gives us
valuable insight into the continually changing and growing world of
video games.
This unique text addresses the gap between journalism studies,
which have tended to focus on national and international news, and
the fact that most journalism is practised at the local level,
where people live, work, play and feel most 'at home'. Providing a
rich overview of the role and place of local media in society, Hess
and Waller demonstrate that, in this changing digital era, the
local journalist must not only specialize in niche 'place-based'
news, but also have a clear understanding of how their locality and
its people 'fit' in the context of a globalized world. Equipping
readers with a nuanced and well-rounded understanding of the field
today, this is an essential resource for students of journalism,
media and communication studies, as well as for practising and
aspiring journalists.
Edward Snowden's revelations about the mass surveillance
capabilities of the US National Security Agency (NSA) and other
security services triggered an ongoing debate about the
relationship between privacy and security in the digital world.
This discussion has been dispersed into a number of national
platforms, reflecting local political realities but also raising
questions that cut across national public spheres. What does this
debate tell us about the role of journalism in making sense of
global events? This book looks at discussions of these debates in
the mainstream media in the USA, United Kingdom, France, Germany,
Russia and China. The chapters focus on editorials, commentaries
and op-eds and look at how opinion-based journalism has negotiated
key questions on the legitimacy of surveillance and its
implications to security and privacy. The authors provide a
thoughtful analysis of the possibilities and limits of
'transnational journalism' at a crucial time of political and
digital change.
The transformation of the world economy from a system of nations
trading materials-intensive goods to a system of seamless global
networks for information-intensive goods and services has created
the need for a comprehensive restructuring of transportation and
communications activities. The contributors - transportation and
communications analysts from Japan and the United States - address
this restructuring from a variety of perspectives ranging from
theoretical treatments of the role of information in the economy to
applications of communications technologies for the collection of
travel data. The authors transcend traditional methods of
transportation and communication analysis in order to address
emerging issues that are not well represented by the prevailing
cost-benefit framework. Many draw from advances in social sciences,
such as game theory, that recognize the interdependence of human
decision making. New ways of assessing the economic benefit of
infrastructure and the evolving role of institutions in the
information economy are demonstrated, along with novel approaches
to analyzing human mobility and interaction in a knowledge-rich
environment. By moving beyond traditional forms of analysis that
were better suited to an earlier time, the chapters in this book
provide a wealth of insights for policy formulation in the
globalized knowledge economy. This comprehensive volume will be of
great value to regional scientists and economic geographers, as
well as civil engineers, economists, and analysts interested in
transportation and communications.
This book explores the important role that economic performance
measurement is playing in the regulation of network utilities in
many countries today. The contributors to the book - researchers
from academia, regulatory agencies and consulting firms - address
the use of efficiency measures in price regulation and in assessing
the effects of past regulatory reforms. Industries examined include
electricity supply, water supply, telecommunications and airlines,
across a range of countries including the USA, UK, Norway, the
Netherlands, Australia and New Zealand.Performance Measurement and
Regulation of Network Utilities is unique in that, unlike many
other books in this area, it is devoted to the use of performance
measurement in these regulatory settings. It is a timely
contribution to the literature, given that performance measurement
is an integral part of the new incentive regulation methods which
have been adopted by many regulatory agencies around the world.
Academics specialising in regulation and performance measurement
and students of regulatory economics courses, organization studies
and public sector economics will all find this book of great
interest. It will also appeal to regulators, regulatory consultants
and regulatory sections of major utilities.
This book takes television news seriously. Over the course of nine
chapters, Elections and TV News in South Africa shows how six
democratic South African general elections, 1994-2019, were
represented on both local and international news broadcasts. It
reveals the shifting narratives about South African democracy,
coupled with changing and challenging political journalism
practices. The book is organised in three parts: the first contains
a history of South African democracy and an overview of the South
African media environment. The second part is a visual analysis of
the South African elections on television news, exploring
portrayals of violence, security, power, and populism, and how
these fit into normative news values and the ruling party's
tightening grip on the media. The final part is a conclusion, a
call to action, and a suggestion to improve political journalistic
practice.
At the end of 2019, Americans were living in an era of post-truth
characterized by fake news, weaponized lies, alternative facts,
conspiracy theories, magical thinking, and irrationalism. Science
and scientific knowledge were under attack. While many complex
interconnected factors were at work, post-truth in the United
States was partly the culmination of a cadre of anthropologists and
other academics in American universities and colleges during the
1980's and 1990's. In Science and Anthropology in a Post-Truth
World, H. Sidky examines how their untoward dalliance with
problematic and dangerous ideas by Michel Foucault, Jacques
Derrida, Jean-Francois Lyotard, Bruno Latour, and Jean Baudrillard
informed and empowered a forceful assault on science and truth in
the following decades by corporate organizations, politicians,
religious extremists, and right-wing populists.
La Fontaine's Contes et nouvelles en vers was probably the most
famous illustrated book to have appeared in France during the
eighteenth century. The celebrated 1762 edition, published by Louis
XV's detested tax-gatherers, the Compagnie des Fermiers generaux,
held among its claims to supremacy its magnificent copperplate
illustrations, designed by Charles Eisen. In this highly
illustrated book, David Adams first sets out a publishing history
of the edition, using historical, bibliographical and cultural
evidence, and next provides a detailed study of the plates as a
whole. In so doing, he gives his interpretation of the values and
attitudes of the Compagnie, the members of which took great care to
ensure that the plates reflected their view of contemporary
society. Finally, he gives a synoptic view of the illustrations,
and situates the work in the wider context of contemporary French
illustrated books. This pioneering study of the relationship
between text and image in eighteenth-century France shows that the
illustrations the Fermiers generaux commissioned for this literary
classic were intended to promote their own patrician values, and to
assert their freedom of action, turning literature into propaganda
with consequences they did not foresee.
Examining the emergence of a European Union telecommunications
policy, Joseph Goodman explains how and why the policy developed as
it did and why certain reforms in the sector were easier to achieve
than others. He provides a history of the key actors in the
policy-making process from the first attempts by the national
postal, telegraph, and telecommunication administrations to
coordinate their telecommunications policies in the 1950s, to the
implementation of a comprehensive EU telecommunications regulatory
structure in 1998 and the development of a new regulatory structure
in 2003. The analytical framework employed by the author draws upon
new institutionalism and actor-based approaches, providing an
opportunity to evaluate the utility of a synthetic approach for
examining and explaining EU policy-making. The focus of his
analysis is on the European Commission's two-pronged strategy of
liberalisation and harmonisation, which began in the late 1980s and
culminated in an important milestone on January 1st 1998, when the
EU Member States fully opened their telecommunications markets to
competition. He concludes that a synthetic approach, which enables
the researcher to apply a number of approaches to multiple settings
and various levels of analysis, is useful - even necessary - in
understanding and explaining the many dimensions of EU
policy-making. This authoritative study will be of interest to all
those in the telecommunications industry - including attorneys,
consultants, and lobbyists - who would like to know how the EU's
policy developed. It will appeal, more generally, to political
scientists and scholars of European history and politics.
The ubiquity of technology in modern society has opened new
opportunities for businesses to employ marketing strategies.
Through digital media, new forms of advertisement creativity can be
explored. Narrative Advertising Models and Conceptualization in the
Digital Age is a pivotal reference source that features the latest
scholarly perspectives on the implementation of narration and
storytelling in contemporary advertising. Including a range of
topics such as digital games, viral advertising, and interactive
media, this book is an ideal publication for business managers,
researchers, academics, graduate students, and professionals
interested in the enhancement of advertising strategies.
Lively and engaging, How to Launch a Magazine in this Digital Age
adopts a practical guide for students and inexperienced editors,
detailing the process of setting up and launching a new publication
-- be it digital, print or a combination of both. Using case
studies, theoretical/critical insights, and tests/exercises, this
is the first how-to to embrace digital technologies, including a
companion website with additional support with podcasts, web links,
forums and timed live author chats. The key to the text's success
is its ability to encompass the complete process. It begins with
the initial idea and follows the process through to developing a
business plan as well as setting an editorial strategy to achieve
and maintain an audience in a digital age -- where traditional
print formats face an uncertain future. It includes checklists and
realistic timescales for producing a digital/print magazine, for
both the working professional and the student in the classroom
setting.
The advent of digital technologies has changed the news and
publishing industries drastically. While shrinking newsrooms may be
a concern for many, journalists and publishing professionals are
working to reorient their skills and capabilities to employ
technology for the purpose of better understanding and engaging
with their audiences. Contemporary Research Methods and Data
Analytics in the News Industry highlights the research behind the
innovations and emerging practices being implemented within the
journalism industry. This crucial, industry-shattering publication
focuses on key topics in social media and video streaming as a new
form of media communication as well the application of big data and
data analytics for collecting information and drawing conclusions
about the current and future state of print and digital news. Due
to significant insight surrounding the latest applications and
technologies affecting the news industry, this publication is a
must-have resource for journalists, analysts, news media
professionals, social media strategists, researchers, television
news producers, and upper-level students in journalism and media
studies. This timely industry resource includes key topics on the
changing scope of the news and publishing industries including, but
not limited to, big data, broadcast journalism, computational
journalism, computer-mediated communication, data scraping, digital
media, news media, social media, text mining, and user experience.
Periodicals were an integral part of eighteenth-century European
civilisation. This volume brings together original articles in
English and French dealing with the press both in the main centres
of Enlightenment thought and in such often-neglected countries as
Portugal and Sweden. The contributions span the long eighteenth
century, from Germany in the 1690s to Britain in the
post-Napoleonic era. They cover the full range of the period's
press, including manuscript newsletters, political gazettes,
learned journals and revolutionary propaganda sheets. Joao Lisboa
and Marie-Christine Skuncke show how periodicals allowed the
circulation of news and political criticism even in societies such
as Portugal and Sweden, where audiences were limited and censorship
was severe; Anne-Marie Mercier-Faivre's study of press coverage of
the Ottoman Empire shows that news reports gave a picture of
'oriental despotism' very different from the literary construct of
Montesquieu's Lettres persanes; Bernadette Fort's essay on art
criticism and Martin Stuber's analysis of the correspondence of a
learned journal's editor broaden our understanding of the place of
periodicals in the period's high culture. The revolutionary era
brought major innovations in the press although, as Maria Lucia
Pallares-Burke shows, older genres such as the 'spectator' were
adapted to the new conditions. Political radicals like Jacques Roux
(the focus of Eric Negrel's study) and the German emigre
journalists who had fled to France (examined in Susanne
Lachenicht's essay) owed their careers to the press. But the press
could also serve conservative ends, as Philip Harling demonstrates
in his analysis of Tory journalism in England in the early
nineteenth century. Placed within a broader theoretical and
historical context by Hans-Jurgen Lusebrink, Jack Censer and Jeremy
Popkin, these studies expand our picture of the role of periodicals
in the age of Enlightenment and Revolution, and suggest important
new directions for further research.
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