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[ecrea] New book: Political Communication in Europe
Tue Oct 29 12:35:50 GMT 2013
New book: Political Communication in Europe: The cultural and structural
limits of the European public sphere
By Francisco Seoane Pérez, Assistant Professor in Political
Communication, University of Castilla-La Mancha
Published by Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN: 9781137305121 (Hardcover)
304 pages
Online info:
http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=656785
About the book:
The patent disconnection between the institutions of the European Union
and the citizens of Europe has been widely attributed by political
leaders and scholars to a 'communications gap', that is, to the way EU
affairs are mediated by the media, and to the apparent lack of interest
by national elites in conveying the importance of Europe. This book
challenges this 'mediation theory' and suggests instead a cultural and
systemic explanation for the distant and bureaucratic character of the
European Union. Apportioning the blame for the communication gap to the
media and national politicians neglects two real deficits which prevent
Europe from enjoying a vibrant public sphere: a deficit of
domesticisation, a popular disconnection with the idea of the EU, and a
deficit of politicisation with European politics, it being difficult to
categorise as through traditional methods of 'left vs. right'. This book
suggests that popular disengagement with the EU is a consequence of the
fact that Europe as a cultural community is an interdependent continent
rather than a nation and that, as a political institution, the EU is a
pseudo-confederation full of anti-publicity bias, elite-driven
integration, corporatism and diplomacy. The result is a book that is an
essential read for students and scholars of political communication and
of the European Union.
Contents:
Introduction
1. The True Deficits of the European Public Sphere: Domesticisation and
Politicisation
2. The Anti-popular Bias of Integration by Stealth
3. Governing the EU: Consensus Diplomacy and Associative Corporatism
4. The 'no demos' Conundrum
5. Explaining the Domesticisation Deficit
6. Explaining the Politicisation Deficit
7. Conclusions
Methodological Appendix
Endorsements:
‘Seoane Pérez confronts the questions key to understanding not so much
why people seemingly do not 'love' the EU but why they continue to find
engaging with it unappealing. With Euroscepticism rising on the eve of
the 2014 elections to the European Parliament, the book could not be
more timely.'
- Juliet Lodge, Institute of Communication Studies and Jean Monnet
European Centre of Excellence, University of Leeds, UK
'Seoane Pérez offers a sharp and astute analysis of the EU's chronic
malaise coming to the conclusion that it suffers from not one, but a
double democratic deficit: a domesticisation deficit, the failure to
connect to the EU as is always remote, and a politicisation deficit as
EU politics is not 'normal' politics, amenable to a left versus right
distinction. Across the axes of community, integration and governance,
the book manages through original research and analysis to open new
horizons in a tired and self-fulfilling debate about the EU, democracy
and citizenship.'
- Katharine Sarikakis, Department of Communication, University of
Vienna, Austria
'With his careful study of the system of political communication in
Europe, Seoane Pérez demonstrates how the political organizations of the
EU have been built to stifle any pervasive sense of a European polity.
From euroskeptic Yorkshire to pro-EU Galicia, his interviews,
observations and news content analysis reveals why the framing of
regional issues by political actors has actually prevented citizens from
feeling that EU issues are relevant or contentious enough to engage them.'
- Philip N. Howard, Department of Communication, University of
Washington, USA
About the author:
Francisco Seoane Pérez holds a PhD in Communications Studies from the
University of Leeds, an MA in Communication from the University of
Illinois at Chicago (USA, 2006, with a grant from the Fundación Pedro
Barrié de la Maza) and a BA in Journalism from the University of
Santiago de Compostela (2001). His scholarly interests include the role
of journalism in liberal democracies, the idea of a European public
sphere, and the impact of the Internet on political participation. He is
an associate editor for the International Journal of Media Cultural
Politics. Dr. Seoane Pérez was the recipient of the 2013 THESEUS Award
for promising research on European integration for his PhD dissertation
upon which this book is based.
###
-------
Francisco Seoane Perez
Profesor Ayudante / Assistant Professor
Facultad de Periodismo / School of Journalism
Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM)
E-mail: (francisco.seoane /at/ uclm.es)
Web: http://www.uclm.es/cu/periodismo/profesorado/franciscoseoane.asp
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