

Beschreibung
Political Communication in Britain is a now established series of nine books, the first of which appeared in the aftermath of the 1979 General Election. This book follows the structure of previous volumes and features commentaries and assessments from the poll...Political Communication in Britain is a now established series of nine books, the first of which appeared in the aftermath of the 1979 General Election. This book follows the structure of previous volumes and features commentaries and assessments from the pollsters who monitored voter opinion during the 2017 General Election. It also includes chapters from party strategists responsible for devising and executing the rival campaigns. Furthermore contributions from journalists offer a media perspective on the campaign. The remainder of the book consists of academic material designed to complement and augment the aforementioned professionals' chapters. Here the focus is on the major dynamics of political communication, specifically the roles of the press, television, advertising, internet and other such phenomena during the 2017 Snap Election.
Is the 10th volume in the Political Communications longstanding series launched in 1979 Provides practitioner as well as academic commentaries from those responsible for organising, reporting and monitoring the 2017 Election Seeks to understand the relationships between the parties, media and voting public
Autorentext
Dominic Wring is Professor of Political Communication at Loughborough University, UK.
Roger Mortimore is Professor of Public Opinion and Political Analysis at King's College London, UK, and Director of Political Analysis at Ipsos MORI.
Simon Atkinson is Chief Knowledge Officer at Ipsos MORI, UK.
Klappentext
Against prior expectations the 2017 General Election proved to be particularly dramatic, repeatedly stunning commentators from its surprise calling right through to its frenetic conclusion. In seven weeks a hitherto dominant Prime Minister saw her once seemingly unassailable lead in the polls eroded as support for her previously beleaguered rival surged. The subsequent restoration of two-party dominance contributed to the return of a hung parliament with profound consequences for both Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn. Political Communication in Britain , the tenth volume in a series that began nearly four decades ago, revisits a momentous election by providing unique insights from the vantage point of those who fought, reported and researched a campaign that is likely to live long in the public imagination.
Dominic Wring is Professor of Political Communication at Loughborough University, UK.
Roger Mortimore is Professor ofPublic Opinion and Political Analysis at King's College London, UK, and Director of Political Analysis at Ipsos MORI.
Simon Atkinson is Chief Knowledge Officer at Ipsos MORI, UK.
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