Communication in U.S. Elections: New Agendas
| Edited by Roderick P. Hart and Daron R. Shaw |
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Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. | |||||||||||||||||
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"This book lives up to its promise of establishing new agendas for research in the rapidly-growing field of political communication and elections. Impressive in its scope, vision, and intellectual excitement, this is an important source for all scholars of elections and democracy."W. Lance Bennett, University of Washington
Over the past thirty-five years, the rapid development of communication technology, the decline of political parties, a growing culture of cynicism, and the rise of the Internet have all affected U.S. political campaigns. But while these forces seem powerful, little scientific evidence has been gathered of their impact. Communication in U.S. Elections presents work from some of the best young scholars in two disciplinescommunication and political scienceon how modern election campaigns are affected by such forces. The authors look at how voters acquire political information, how issues are framed for them by the mass media, how attitudes about social groups are created, and how political advertising uses popular culture to affect voting patterns. The result is a fresh and comprehensive overview of why modern political campaigns turn out as they do.
List of Contributors
Scott L. Althaus, Mark Hetherington, Sharon Jarvis, Robert Klotz, Daniel Lipinski, Glenn Richardson, Dietram Scheufele, Dhavan Shah, Daron Shaw, Adam Simon, Nick Valentino, and Lynn Vavreck.
About the Editors
Roderick P. Hart is Shivers Chair in Communication and professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin and director of the Annette Strauss Institute for Civic Participation. Daron Shaw is assistant professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin.

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