The article is a transcript of a conversation with Andrew Chadwick about his latest book “The Hybrid Media System. Politics and Power” (Oxford University Press, 2013). Andrew Chadwick is professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the New Political Communication Unit in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Royal Holloway, University of London. Starting from the thesis developed in the book, Chadwick argues that we should stop studying digital and older media “in isolation”; on the contrary, according to the British scholar, it is time to adopt “hybridity” as a guiding principle for reconfiguring our understanding of contemporary media systems
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This article examines the roles of the media in the process of political agenda setting. There is a ...
The book represents the outcome of the author’s research during his PhD and postdoctoral study at th...
Drawing on data from the moral psychology of political communication and literature on news media co...
Andrew Chadwick’s view of today’s “hybrid media system,” as outlined first in his 2013 book of the s...
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New media technologies have been lauded for their potential in de-monopolizing gatekeeper power and ...
The rise of new media and the broader set of social changes they are part of present political commu...
Philosophy’s engagement with mass media has often been ambiguous: many critical theorists, from Benj...
This article analyses the relationship between mediated politics and participation, adopting a hybri...
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This article examines the roles of the media in the process of political agenda setting. There is a ...
The book represents the outcome of the author’s research during his PhD and postdoctoral study at th...
Drawing on data from the moral psychology of political communication and literature on news media co...