- School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
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ItemNot biting the hand that feeds?: Media reporting of government advertising in AustraliaYoung, S (Informa UK Limited, 2006-01-01)
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ItemThe broadcast political interview and strategies used by politicians: how the Australian prime minister promoted the Iraq WarYoung, S (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2008-09)
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ItemContemporary Political Communications: Audiences, Politicians and the Media in International ResearchYoung, S ; Bourne, S ; Younane, S (WILEY, 2007-09)Abstract Research into political communication has grown rapidly in the past three decades, shifting from specific, quantitative and utilitarian studies to include a broad variety of research questions, methods and theoretical frameworks. Interdisciplinary work in political communication takes audiences, political actors (such as governments and politicians), and media content and media institutions as central foci. Research has traditionally focused on election campaign‐specific studies within national contexts. Emerging research, however, is now addressing broader questions about media texts and organisations and also about representations and power. This research is working to trace technological changes and developments in an era of globalised media and political communication and developing new, complex conceptions of audience agency and reception.
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ItemPolitical and parliamentary speech in AustraliaYoung, S (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2007-04)
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ItemProtest or error? Informal voting and compulsory votingHill, L ; Young, S (ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2007-09)
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ItemPolicy-making in a 'cold climate' of ruling party benefit: Party government and the regulation of government advertising in AustraliaYoung, S (ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2007-09)
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ItemThe convergence of political and government advertising: theory versus practiceYOUNG, S ( 2006)Although they are sometimes confused, in theory, government and political advertising are separate and quite distinct. By convention, government advertising, paid for directly by taxpayers, is to be used only for necessary government information campaigns which are neutral in manner and not liable to be perceived as creating a partisan benefit for the ruling party. By contrast, political advertising occurs predominantly during elections, is paid for by political parties or candidates and is necessarily partisan, persuasive and usually highly emotive, in nature. However, in the past two decades, these distinctions have broken down. This paper explores the growing links between the two types of advertising at the federal level and concludes that there is a vast gap between the theory and reality of government advertising.