Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.

The thesis is a study of political communications in a general election campaign in Iceland in 1987. The theoretical background is the so-called agenda-setting approach to communication. A multimethodological approach was used: first, a content analysis was applied to printed pamphlets published by...

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Main Author: Arnason, Gudmundar Runar
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/
http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/1/U615534.pdf
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spelling ftlschooleconom:oai:etheses.lse.ac.uk:2585 2023-05-15T16:48:44+02:00 Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987. Arnason, Gudmundar Runar 1991 application/pdf http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/ http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/1/U615534.pdf en eng http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/1/U615534.pdf Arnason, Gudmundar Runar (1991) Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 1991 ftlschooleconom 2022-03-16T20:00:15Z The thesis is a study of political communications in a general election campaign in Iceland in 1987. The theoretical background is the so-called agenda-setting approach to communication. A multimethodological approach was used: first, a content analysis was applied to printed pamphlets published by the political parties, election broadcasts on TV, daily newspapers, television news and current affairs programmes over a period of eight weeks; second, a three wave panel survey of a sample of 1500 voters, twice before the election and once immediately after it; third, a survey of news-reporters' attitudes towards media and their job, organized and run by students at the University of Iceland; and fourth, a qualitative study of practices and atmosphere inside the State's TV newsroom some days before the election. The thesis is divided into four main parts, which are further divided into sub-sections. The first part deals with theoretical considerations, offers an outline of Icelandic history and social reality and discusses the methodologies employed. Part two is based on the panel survey, a survey of news-reporters and a qualitative study inside the state's TV newsroom. Part two considers the uses of media in the campaign and attitudes towards them. It reports on news values and practices as found in the survey of news-reporters and the qualitative survey inside the TV newsroom. Part three is based on content analysis and the survey. It discusses the "three agendas": the party agenda, the media agenda and the voter agenda. Part four is an assessment of the research. An effort is made to relate the three agendas, in order to measure statistically their impact on one another. A final chapter discusses the conclusions that can be drawn from the various parts of the thesis about the agenda setting process. Thesis Iceland The London School of Economics and Political Science: LSE Theses Online
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collection The London School of Economics and Political Science: LSE Theses Online
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language English
description The thesis is a study of political communications in a general election campaign in Iceland in 1987. The theoretical background is the so-called agenda-setting approach to communication. A multimethodological approach was used: first, a content analysis was applied to printed pamphlets published by the political parties, election broadcasts on TV, daily newspapers, television news and current affairs programmes over a period of eight weeks; second, a three wave panel survey of a sample of 1500 voters, twice before the election and once immediately after it; third, a survey of news-reporters' attitudes towards media and their job, organized and run by students at the University of Iceland; and fourth, a qualitative study of practices and atmosphere inside the State's TV newsroom some days before the election. The thesis is divided into four main parts, which are further divided into sub-sections. The first part deals with theoretical considerations, offers an outline of Icelandic history and social reality and discusses the methodologies employed. Part two is based on the panel survey, a survey of news-reporters and a qualitative study inside the state's TV newsroom. Part two considers the uses of media in the campaign and attitudes towards them. It reports on news values and practices as found in the survey of news-reporters and the qualitative survey inside the TV newsroom. Part three is based on content analysis and the survey. It discusses the "three agendas": the party agenda, the media agenda and the voter agenda. Part four is an assessment of the research. An effort is made to relate the three agendas, in order to measure statistically their impact on one another. A final chapter discusses the conclusions that can be drawn from the various parts of the thesis about the agenda setting process.
format Thesis
author Arnason, Gudmundar Runar
spellingShingle Arnason, Gudmundar Runar
Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
author_facet Arnason, Gudmundar Runar
author_sort Arnason, Gudmundar Runar
title Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
title_short Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
title_full Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
title_fullStr Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
title_full_unstemmed Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
title_sort political communications in the icelandic general election campaign of 1987.
publishDate 1991
url http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/
http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/1/U615534.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2585/1/U615534.pdf
Arnason, Gudmundar Runar (1991) Political communications in the Icelandic general election campaign of 1987. PhD thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science.
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