This paper raises the question of whether comparative national models of communications research can be developed, along the lines of Hallin and Mancini’s (2004) analysis of comparative media policy, or the work of Perraton and Clift (2004) on comparative national capitalisms. Taking consideration of communications research in Australia and New Zealand as its starting point, the paper will consider what are relevant variables in shaping an “intellectual milieu” for communications research in these countries, as compared to those of Europe, North America and Asia. Some possibly relevant variables include:\ud \ud • Type of media system (e.g. how significant is public service media?);\ud • Political culture (e.g. are there significant left-of-...
This paper serves as an introduction and scene-setter to a series of four papers (including this) th...
Jay Blumler deserves credit for introducing the comparative approach to the communication discipline...
Media and Politics (2004). Hallin discusses methodological difficulties with comparative media resea...
Funding bodies and policy imperatives increasingly favour comparative research. Stimulated also by t...
j Funding bodies and policy imperatives increasingly favour comparative research. Stimulated also by...
The communication discipline in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Hong Kong is strong and diver...
Comparative research guides our attention to understanding how communication phenomena vary in diffe...
This chapter argues that the process of globalisation means that comparative research is no longer a...
This chapter highlights the particular advantages of comparative international approaches for media ...
National media systems are the central units of analysis in comparative mass communication research...
Comparative communication research is conventionally perceived as the contrasting of different macro...
This contribution provides a critical reflection on the state-of-the-art of cross-national media use...
National media systems are the central units of analysis in comparative mass communication research....
The integration of American and European mass communication research models would provide a broader ...
This paper tracks the development of critical communicatiosn research in Australia over a 30 year pe...
This paper serves as an introduction and scene-setter to a series of four papers (including this) th...
Jay Blumler deserves credit for introducing the comparative approach to the communication discipline...
Media and Politics (2004). Hallin discusses methodological difficulties with comparative media resea...
Funding bodies and policy imperatives increasingly favour comparative research. Stimulated also by t...
j Funding bodies and policy imperatives increasingly favour comparative research. Stimulated also by...
The communication discipline in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Hong Kong is strong and diver...
Comparative research guides our attention to understanding how communication phenomena vary in diffe...
This chapter argues that the process of globalisation means that comparative research is no longer a...
This chapter highlights the particular advantages of comparative international approaches for media ...
National media systems are the central units of analysis in comparative mass communication research...
Comparative communication research is conventionally perceived as the contrasting of different macro...
This contribution provides a critical reflection on the state-of-the-art of cross-national media use...
National media systems are the central units of analysis in comparative mass communication research....
The integration of American and European mass communication research models would provide a broader ...
This paper tracks the development of critical communicatiosn research in Australia over a 30 year pe...
This paper serves as an introduction and scene-setter to a series of four papers (including this) th...
Jay Blumler deserves credit for introducing the comparative approach to the communication discipline...
Media and Politics (2004). Hallin discusses methodological difficulties with comparative media resea...