Media and Public Policy
By (Author) Robert J. Spitzer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Media studies
Political science and theory
302.23
Hardback
256
Political scientists and media specialists accept that the mass media have made a profound and direct impact on virtually every aspect of the political process, yet remarkably few systematic studies examining the relationship between media and policy exist. "Media and Public Policy" bring together 16 scholars who aim to focus analytic attention on the connection betwen the media and public policymkaing. It includes a chapter on media impact on the political status quo by leading expert Doris S. Graber, and another on newsmaking and policymaking by Julio Borquez. It also features chapters on FCC decisions, understanding public policy through news broadcast, the role the media plays in economic development and agenda setting, and media and the right to privacy. Jerry and Michael Medler contribute a chapter about media images as environmental policy, and Montague Kern examines the rhetoric of public policy issues in mass media elections. The final section discusses mass media and US foreign policy processes, and how AIDS reporters in several countries use the media to affect policymaking.
ROBERT J. SPITZER is Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York at Cortland. He is the author of four books, including The Presidency and Public Policy, The Right to Life Movement and Third Party Politics (Greenwood Press, 1987), The Presidential Veto, and President and Congress, and editor of The Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. Spitzer has conducted research and published many articles on public policy subjects.