Publication | Closed Access
The Political Conditionality of Mass Media Influence: When Do Parties Follow Mass Media Attention?
194
Citations
35
References
2010
Year
Mass Media InfluenceSocial InfluencePublic OpinionPolitical BehaviorCommunicationMedia OwnershipMedia StudiesJournalismSocial SciencesMediatizationIssue OwnershipPolitical CommunicationPublic SphereMajority InfluenceSocio-political StudiesMass MediaMedia InstitutionsInternational MediumPolitical ConditionalityMedium OwnershipMedia InfluenceGlobal MediaPublic Perception StudiesPolitical AgendaMass CommunicationArtsMedia LawsPolitical ScienceInfluence Model
Claims regarding the power of the mass media in contemporary politics are much more frequent than research actually analysing the influence of mass media on politics. Building upon the notion of issue ownership, this article argues that the capacity of the mass media to influence the respective agendas of political parties is conditioned upon the interests of the political parties. Media attention to an issue generates attention from political parties when the issue is one that political parties have an interest in politicizing in the first place. The argument of the article is supported in a time-series study of mass media influence on the opposition parties’ agenda in Denmark over a twenty-year period.
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