Fr. 240.00

Political Communications - Why Labour Won the General Election of 1997

English · Hardback

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Description

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The dialogue conducted via the press, television, advertising and the opinion polls beween politicians and the people in the 1997 campaign and its run-up is analyzed here. Special attention is paid to the innovations and changes that marked the 1997 campaign.

List of contents

Part 1 Party strategies: why Labour won; Philip Gould; why the Conservatives lost, Daniel Finkelstein; Sausages or Policemen? the role of the Liberal Democrats in the 1997 general election campaign, Richard Holme and Alison Holmes; the role of Labour's advertising in the 1997 general election, Chris Powell; the Conservative Party's advertising strategy, Steve Hilton. Part 2 Campaigning and opinion polls: the media and the polls - pundits, polls and prognostications in British general elections, Robert M. Worcester; constituency campaigning in the 1997 general election - party effort and electoral effort, David Denver and Gordon Hands; the first Internet election? UK political parties and campaigning in cyberspace, Stephen Ward and Rachel Gibson; swingers, clingers, waverers, quaverers - the tabloid press in the 1997 general election, David McKie; leaders and leading articles - characterization of John Major and Tony Blair in the editorials of the national daily press, Colin Seymour-Ure. Part 4 The campaign on television: too much of a good thing? television in the 1997 election campaign, Peter Goddard et al; change in the air - campaign journalism at the BBC, 1997, Jay G. Blumler and Michael Gurevitch; television and the 1997 election campaign - a view from Sky News, Adam Boulton; the debate that never happened - television and the party leaders, 1997, Richard Tait. Part 5 The regulation of television in elections: debate on Section 93 of the Representation of the People Act in favour - the case for the society for the prevention of cruelty to candidates, Austin Mitchell; debate on Section 93 of the Representation of the People Act the case against - scrap it, Ivor Gaber; regulations, the media and the 1997 general election - the ITC perspective, Stephen Perkins; legal constraints, real and imagined, Colin Munro.

About the author

John Bartle, Ivor Crewe, Brian Gosschalk

Summary

The dialogue conducted via the press, television, advertising and the opinion polls beween politicians and the people in the 1997 campaign and its run-up is analyzed in this work.

Product details

Assisted by John Bartle (Editor), Bartle John (Editor), Ivor Crewe (Editor), Crewe Ivor (Editor), Brian Gosschalk (Editor), Gosschalk Brian (Editor)
Publisher Taylor and Francis
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.10.1998
 
EAN 9780714649238
ISBN 978-0-7146-4923-8
No. of pages 280
Weight 680 g
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Politics & government, Politics and government

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