This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Government communication is a curiously neglected area of discursive analysis. No considered examination of the subject exists which provides either an account of the contemporary governmental landscape or an explanation of the common and divergent themes on both a domestic and international basis. This volume aims to fill that gap, providing a concise and illuminating case-study based review of government communication. It will be divided into three sections to reflect differences in both geography and political allegiances, scrutinizing continental Europe, Anglo-American traditions and newly emerging democracies. Offering a global and thematic account, it is an indispensable resource for all students of political communication.
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Government communication is a curiously neglected area of discursive analysis. No considered examination of the subject exists which provides either an account of the contemporary governmental landscape or an explanation of the common and divergent themes on both a domestic and international basis. This volume aims to fill that gap, providing a concise and illuminating case-study based review of government communication. It will be divided into three sections to reflect differences in both geography and political allegiances, scrutinizing continental Europe, Anglo-American traditions and newly emerging democracies. Offering a global and thematic account, it is an indispensable resource for all students of political communication.
The importance of political communication to the study of media and politics is generally accepted. Why has government communication been neglected? This book provides the first account of government communication worldwide and an exploration of the prevailing themes.
Introduction: Mapping the Field of Government Communication Section One: Continental European Approaches: from Advertising to Marketing: 30 Years of French Government Communication Meeting the Challenges? Government Communication in Germany Looking for News Space or Thinking Strategically? The Case of Spanish Government Communication Government Communication in Sweden: From Public Reliance to Public Relations Poland: Government Communication in Democratic Poland 20 Years After the Collapse of Communism Section Two: Anglo American Traditions: Australia and Government Communication Understanding the Strengths and Limitations of Strategic Communication: The Case of British Government Communication United States Section Three: The Achievements and Challenges for Emerging Democracies: Government Communication in Southern Africa Government Strategic Communication in the Chilean Political Transition Contributing to Consensus, Stability and Economic Growth: Political Communications of the Chinese Government in 2008 Conclusion: A Comparative Perspective in Government Communication?
Karen Sanders is Professor in the Faculty of Communication and Humanities, San Pablo CEU University, Madrid, Spain. She is also visiting lecturer at the University of Navarra, Spain, and teaches on their MA in Political and Corporate Communication run jointly with George Washington University, USA. María José Canel is Professor in Political Communication and Public Relations at the University Complutense of Madrid, Spain, Vice President of the Section in Political Communication of the International Association for Mass Communication Research (IAMCR) and President of ACOP Asociación de Comunicación Política. She has published nationally and internationally on government communication and related matters.
This tour of how different governments communicate to press and
publics is led by top scholars in the field. The authors have
created a valuable sourcebook on an important and changing
topic.
*Lance Bennett, Professor of Political Science and Ruddick C.
Lawrence Professor of Communication, and Director for the Center
for Communication & Civic Engagement, University of Washington,
US*
It has been about time that somebody maps the field of government
communication, a field with ever increasing scientific and
political importance. This book does the job and it does it
theoretically as well as with a plethora of empirical data from no
less than 15 countries around the world. For years to come this
book will be the first stop for scholars and practitioners seeking
information on what is out there and how it can be normatively
assessed on blurring lines between information and advertising or
spin and substance.
*Wolfgang Donsbach, Professor and Founding Director, Department of
Media and Communication at Dresden University of Technology,
Germany*
This is a much needed and deeply thoughtful book about Government
Communication. The authors have brought together a carefully
selected group of comparative case studies from around the world
using the Freedom House Index as the basis for choice and analysis.
The result is a rich picture of the purpose, structure and process
of Government Communication in different settings, or to use Canel
and Sanders words, 'what it is' and 'what it does'. This seminal
text plugs a gap in our knowledge and understanding in a growing
area of study and as such is essential reading for both academics
and practitioners.
*Anne Gregory, Professor and Director, Centre for Public Relations
Studies, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK*
As somebody who is sometimes described as a 'spin doctor,' it is a
pleasure to read a book on government communication that depicts
leaders and citizenry in a relationship, rather than simply
manipulation from the top. Using rich case studies in fifteen
countries, Karen Sanders and María José Canel analyze the different
ways governments cope with growing uncertainty in the world of
politics and media and the importance of strategy and perspective
over tactics and rapid response.
*Stanley Greenberg, Chairman and CEO of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner
Research*
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