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Becker, Lee B.; McCombs, Maxwell E. – 1977
Agenda setting provides an analysis strategy for linking press coverage and voter perceptions of front runners, and underscores the importance of studying the primaries early in an election year. Two studies were undertaken in 1976. The first study, in Onandaga County (New York), involved telephone interviews of 335 registered Democrats in late…
Descriptors: Elections, Mass Media, News Media, Political Attitudes
Self, Charles; Stovall, Jim – 1980
Presidential candidates in the United States tend to seek consensus rather than to try to discover new answers to problems and to convince voters that they should be elected to implement those answers. Reporters in the mass media emphasize objectivity and fairness in their reporting. This emphasis produces an intense interest in the…
Descriptors: Adults, Attitudes, Mass Media, News Media
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Neuman, W. Russell; Ewick, Patricia – 1979
The relationship between the media and public opinion concerning national elections is examined. Trends in public opinion and media emphasis were analyzed according to attention to political issues, ideological concepts, and party identification. A random sample of approximately 220 presidential election stories in the New York Times was taken for…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, News Media, Political Affiliation, Political Attitudes
McLeod, Jack M.; And Others – 1973
It is widely accepted that the news media, especially in specific expressions of press opinion, have the effect of setting the agenda of issues in many political campaigns. The nature and extent of such agenda-setting is not yet established, although a study of two test newspapers tends to define further this effect. An analysis of the…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Beliefs, Bias, Content Analysis
Monroe, Alan D. – 1975
The purposes of this book are to summarize and analyze the nature of public opinion in contemporary America and to examine the implications of that nature for the possibility of a functioning democracy. Material in the four sections covers the following topics: "The Study of Public Opinion: Political Theory and Methodology"--opinions and…
Descriptors: American Culture, Elections, Political Attitudes, Political Influences
Strouse, James C. – 1975
The purpose of this book is to explore the effects of public opinion on governmental policy making, with a special focus on the role of the mass media in this process. Specific areas covered include political campaigning, the President and the press, blacks and the media, and cable television. Topics of discussion in the ten chapters are: linkage…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cable Television, Government Role, Information Dissemination
Roper Organization, Inc., New York, NY. – 1975
The relative credibility of media is measured and compared over a 16-year period by the Roper Organization for the Television Information Office. Sources of information and trends in viewing habits and hours of viewing are described; the relative desirability of media as viewed by various population groups is reported. Changes in opinion as to…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Broadcast Industry, Commercial Television, Elections
McBride, Genevieve G. – 1986
Analysis of the Wisconsin woman suffrage campaign of 1910-1920 suggests that public relations belonged not only to political or business practices, but was equally a process by which the masses achieved their own best interests in nineteenth and early twentieth century social reform movements. Woman suffragists were led by women, and the public…
Descriptors: Activism, Females, Feminism, Fund Raising