Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be aware of how events are presented in the press, with this media awareness being said to threaten civil servants’ traditional bureaucratic values. In this article, we argue that media awareness is unevenly spread in public bureaucracies, and rather is contingent on individual and organizational characteristics. More specifically, we present the hypotheses that media awareness depends on the amount of media related work, the amount of media attention on the organization in which they work, as well as the civil servants’ fundamental views on the role of the media in society. To test the hypotheses, the article utilizes a large-N survey of civil serv...
Communication professionals are increasingly found within government ministries. Based on classic wo...
Communication managers in public sector organizations operate in increasingly complex environments. ...
Public bureaucracies have mostly been invisible in research on political communication, but more rec...
Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be awar...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
Pressure from the media affects the daily work of bureaucrats and induces ‘media stress’, with poten...
Public agencies have varying degrees of self-determination. In the existing literature this autonomy...
At least part of the academic literature on public administration asserts that the mass media is res...
The personalization of politics has received much attention in both the political science and politi...
Nowadays, media and media logic have become important and inherent elements in everyday practices of...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
This article examines what qualifies as news when public agencies in Sweden claim to engage in media...
While the position of press secretaries to ministers has become routinized, we still know little abo...
Public servants’ value dispositions is a central theme of inquiry in Public Administration research....
Nowadays, media and media logic have become important and inherent elements in everyday practices of...
Communication professionals are increasingly found within government ministries. Based on classic wo...
Communication managers in public sector organizations operate in increasingly complex environments. ...
Public bureaucracies have mostly been invisible in research on political communication, but more rec...
Scholars claim that civil servants are increasingly having to engage in media management and be awar...
Decision-making in public bureaucracies should be guided by rules and formal procedures, securing pr...
Pressure from the media affects the daily work of bureaucrats and induces ‘media stress’, with poten...
Public agencies have varying degrees of self-determination. In the existing literature this autonomy...
At least part of the academic literature on public administration asserts that the mass media is res...
The personalization of politics has received much attention in both the political science and politi...
Nowadays, media and media logic have become important and inherent elements in everyday practices of...
This article seeks to explain why the media affect some governmental agencies more than others. We d...
This article examines what qualifies as news when public agencies in Sweden claim to engage in media...
While the position of press secretaries to ministers has become routinized, we still know little abo...
Public servants’ value dispositions is a central theme of inquiry in Public Administration research....
Nowadays, media and media logic have become important and inherent elements in everyday practices of...
Communication professionals are increasingly found within government ministries. Based on classic wo...
Communication managers in public sector organizations operate in increasingly complex environments. ...
Public bureaucracies have mostly been invisible in research on political communication, but more rec...