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[ecrea] New Book On Political Communication
Sat Dec 06 11:57:47 GMT 2014
New book on Political Communication in Ireland
Political Communication in the Republic of Ireland
Edited by Mark O’Brien and Donnacha Ó Beacháin
Liverpool University Press (2014)
This book presents an overview of political communication in the
Republic of Ireland from a multiplicity of perspectives and sources. It
brings together academics and practitioners to examine the development
and current shape of political communication in modern Ireland. It also
examines what the future holds for political communication in an
increasingly gatekeeper-free media landscape.
The field of political communication, where journalists, public
relations professionals and politicians intersect and interact, has
always been a highly contested one fuelled by suspicion, mutual
dependence and fraught relationships.
While politicians need the media they remain highly suspicious of
journalists. While journalists remain wary of politicians, they need
access to them for information. For most of the time, what emerges is a
relatively stable relationship of mutual dependence with the boundaries
policed by public relation professions.
However, every so often, in times of political crisis or upheaval, this
relationship gives way to a near free-for-all. Politicians,
spokespersons and sometimes even journalists, become fair game in the
battle for public accountability and support. The determination of
public relations professions to avoid this and keep the relationship
based on mutual dependence has become a central component of modern
statecraft and systems of governance. The need to keep politicians and
the media ‘on message’ and use the media to inform, shape and manage
public discourse has become central to the workings of government,
opposition and interest groups.
On the other hand, the packaging of politics has potentially troublesome
implications for the democratic process. In the era of the instant news
cycle, new technologies and constant opinion polling, just where does
information end and misinformation begin? With millions being spent
annually on advisors and ‘spin-doctors’, just where does media access
end and media manipulation begin?
Contents
Intorduction
PART ONE: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION AND POLITICIANS
1. Farrel Corcoran - Political communication: an overview
2. Donnacha Ó Beacháin - Elections and political communication
3. Sarah Kavanagh - A pragmatic partnership? Politicians and local media
4. Bryce Evans - Political communication and the ‘loony left’
PART TWO: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION AND JOURNALISM
5. Mark O’Brien - ‘Sources say . . .’ Political journalism since 1921
6. Mark Byrne - In sickness and in health: politics, spin and the media
7. Tom Clonan - Media advisors and programme managers
8. Declan Fahy - A limited focus? Journalism, politics and the Celtic Tiger
PART THREE: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION AND THE PUBLIC
9. Gary Murphy - A private affair? Lobbying and transparency in modern
Ireland
10. Colum Kenny - Equal Time for Judas Iscariot? Broadcast treatment of
political contests in the Republic of Ireland
11. Kevin Rafter - ‘There now follows . . .’ The role of the party
political broadcast and the 2007 ‘peace broadcast’
12. Martin Molony - Social Media and political communication
13. Eoin O’Malley et al - Mediating elections in Ireland: evidence from
the 2011 general election
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
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