|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
In The Global President: International Communication and the US
Government, scholars Stephen J. Farnsworth, S. Robert Lichter and
Roland Schatz provide an expansive international examination of
news coverage of US political communication, and the roles the US
government and the Presidency play in an increasingly communicative
and interconnected political world. This comprehensive yet concise
text will engage and inform students in many intersecting
disciplines, as it includes analyses of not just the Presidency,
but US foreign policy and contemporary political media itself. The
media developed to keep pace with the headwinds of political change
are being asked more and more to adapt to and enhance the ways in
which policy-makers, voters, and students make sense of the process
of governance. The realities of an ever-changing political
landscape are magnified nowhere more greatly than in the realm of
foreign policy, and the stakes surrounding the need for quality
communicational skills are no higher than at 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue because - when the voices of the US government speak - the
world is listening. This book provides students a perfect entry
point into the complex and amorphous relationship between media and
government, where that relationship has been, and where it looks to
be heading in the future.
In The Global President: International Communication and the US
Government, scholars Stephen J. Farnsworth, S. Robert Lichter and
Roland Schatz provide an expansive international examination of
news coverage of US political communication, and the roles the US
government and the Presidency play in an increasingly communicative
and interconnected political world. This comprehensive yet concise
text will engage and inform students in many intersecting
disciplines, as it includes analyses of not just the Presidency,
but US foreign policy and contemporary political media itself. The
media developed to keep pace with the headwinds of political change
are being asked more and more to adapt to and enhance the ways in
which policy-makers, voters, and students make sense of the process
of governance. The realities of an ever-changing political
landscape are magnified nowhere more greatly than in the realm of
foreign policy, and the stakes surrounding the need for quality
communicational skills are no higher than at 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue because - when the voices of the US government speak - the
world is listening. This book provides students a perfect entry
point into the complex and amorphous relationship between media and
government, where that relationship has been, and where it looks to
be heading in the future.
|
|