J&MC Quarterly Index – Political Communication
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Political Communication
Active and Passive Indicators of Public Opinion: Assessing the Call-in Poll (Patrick R. Cotter, David K. Perry, and James G. Stovall) 71:1, 169-175.
Anonymous Attribution during Two Periods of Military Conflict: Using Logistic Regression to Study Veiled Sources in American Newspapers (Bryan E. Denham) 74:3, 565-578.
Buses and Ballots: The Role of Media Images in a Local Election (Gerald M. Kosicki, Lee B. Becker, and Eric S. Fredin) 71:1, 76-89.
The Bush and Gore Presidential Campaign Web Sites: Identifying with Hispanic Voters during the 2000 Iowa Caucuses and New Hampshire Primary (María E. Len-Ríos) 79:4, 887-904.
Campaign Contributions: Online Newspaper Coverage of Election 2000 (Jane B. Singer) 80:1, 39-56.
A Case Study of Deliberative Democracy on Television: Civic Dialogue on C-SPAN Call-in Shows (David D. Kurpius and Andrew Mendelson) 79:3, 587-601.
Commercial Breaks: A Viewing Behavior Study (Sandra E. Moriarty and Shu-Ling Everett) 71:2, 346-355.
Communication and Age in Childhood Political Socialization: An Interactive Model of Political Development (William P. Eveland Jr., Jack M. McLeod, and Edward M. Horowitz) 75:4, 699-718.
Communication Styles and Female Candidates: A Study of the Political Advertising during the 1986 Senate Elections (Anne Johnston and Anne Barton White) 71:2, 321-329.
Differences among Newspapers, Television, and Radio in Their Contribution to Knowledge of the Contract with America (Keith Stamm, Michelle Johnson, and Brennon Martin) 74:4, 687-702.
Direct and Indirect Effects of Socioeconomic Status on Public Affairs Knowledge (Douglas M. McLeod and Elizabeth M. Perse) 71:2, 433-442.
Disengaged and Uninformed: 2000 Presidential Election Coverage in Consumer Magazines Popular with Young Adults (Tom Reichert, James E. Mueller, and Michael Nitz) 80:3, 513-527.
Does the Watchdog Bite? Newspaper Ad Watch Articles and Political Attack Ads (Patrick B. O’Sullivan and Seth Geiger) 72:4, 771-785.
Doing the Traditional Media Sidestep: Comparing the Effects of the Internet and Other Nontraditional Media with Traditional Media in the 1996 Presidential Campaign (Thomas J. Johnson, Mahmoud A. M. Braima, and Jayanthi Sothirajah) 76:1, 99-123.
The Effects of Credibility, Reliance, and Exposure on Media Agenda-Setting: A Path Analysis Model (Wayne Wanta and Yu-Wei Hu) 71:1, 90-98.
Effects of the News Media Environment on Citizen Knowledge of State Politics and Government (Michael X. Delli Carpini, Scott Keeter, and J. David Kennamer) 71:2, 443-456.
Effects of News Slant and Base Rate Information on Perceived Public Opinion (Albert C. Gunther and Cindy T. Christen) 76:2, 277-292.
Erosion of Television Coverage of City Hall? Perceptions of TV Reporters on the Beat (David C. Coulson, Daniel Riffe, Stephen Lacy, and Charles R. St. Cyr) 78:1, 81-92.
Experts and the Operational Bias of Television News: The Case of the Persian Gulf War (Janet E. Steele) 72:4, 799-812.
Fairness and Balance in the Structural Characteristics of Newspaper Stories on the 1996 Presidential Election (Frederick Fico and William Cote) 76:1, 124-137.
The Flawed Characters in the Campaign: Prestige Newspaper Assessments of the 1992 Presidential Candidates’ Integrity and Competence (Erika G. King) 72:1, 84-97.
Forecast 2000: Widening Knowledge Gaps (Cecilie Gaziano) 74:2, 237-264.
Framing the Candidates in Presidential Primaries: Issues and Images in Press Releases and News Coverage (M. Mark Miller, Julie L. Andsager, and Bonnie P. Riechert) 75:2, 312-324.
Framing Gender on the Campaign Trail: Female Gubernatorial Candidates and the Press (James Devitt) 79:2, 445-463.
Gender Politics: News Coverage of the Candidates’ Wives in Campaign 2000 (Betty Houchin Winfield and Barbara Friedman) 80:3, 548-566.
Going Negative: Candidate Usage of Internet Web Sites during the 2000 Presidential Campaign (Robert H. Wicks and Boubacar Souley) 80:1, 128-144.
How Feeling Free to Talk Affects Ordinary Political Conversation, Purposeful Argumentation, and Civic Participation (Robert O. Wyatt, Joohan Kim, and Elihu Katz) 77:1, 99-114.
How Interest Groups Attempt to Shape Public Opinion with Competing News Frames (Julie L. Andsager) 77:3, 577-592.
Illusions of Media Power: The Third-Person Effect (L. Erwin Atwood) 71:2, 269-281.
The Impact of Traditional and Nontraditional Media Forms in the 1992 Presidential Election (Jack M. McLeod, Zhongshi Guo, Katie Daily, Catherine A. Steele, Huiping Huang, Edward Horowitz, and Huailin Chen) 73:2, 401-416.
The Impact of Web Site Campaigning on Traditional News Media and Public Information Processing (Gyotae Ku, Lynda Lee Kaid, and Michael Pfau) 80:3, 528-547.
Individual and Routine Forces in Gatekeeping (Pamela J. Shoemaker, Martin Eichholz, Eunyi Kim, and Brenda Wrigley) 78:2 , 233-246.
The Influence of Political Talk Radio on Confidence in Democratic Institutions (Michael Pfau, Patricia Moy, R. Lance Holbert, Erin A. Szabo, Wei-Kuo Lin, and Weiwu Zhang) 75:4, 730-745.
The Interaction of News and Advocate Frames: Manipulating Audience Perceptions of a Local Public Policy Issue (David Tewksbury, Jennifer Jones, Matthew W. Peske, Ashlea Raymond, and William Vig) 77:4, 804-829.
Interest-Group Influence on the Media Agenda: A Case Study (Kyle Huckins) 76:1, 76-86.
Intermedia Agenda Setting in the 1996 Presidential Election (Thomas P. Boyle) 78:1, 26-44.
Interpretation of Issues and Voter Decision-Making Strategies: A New Perspective on “Issue-Oriented” Election Coverage (David Domke and Dhavan V. Shah) 72:1, 45-71.
Intertwining of Campaign News and Advertising: The Content and Electoral Effects of Newspaper Ad Watches (Young Min) 79:4, 927-944.
Measurement Effects in Comparing Voter Learning from Television News and Campaign Advertisements (Xinshu Zhao and Glen L. Bleske) 72:1, 72-83.
Measuring New-Voter Learning Via Three Channels of Political Information (Kathleen A. Martinelli and Steven H. Chaffee) 72:1, 18-32.
Media Effects on Political and Social Trust (Patricia Moy and Dietram A. Scheufele) 77:4, 744-759.
Media Use, Involvement, and Knowledge of the Gulf War (Ven-Hwei Lo) 71:1, 43-54.
The Metro Wide Web: Changes in Newspapers’ Gatekeeping Role Online (Jane B. Singer) 78:1, 65-80.
Multiple Newspapers and Electoral Competition: A County-Level Analysis (Jan P. Vermeer) 72:1, 98-105.
The New News and the 1992 Presidential Campaign: Perceived vs. Actual Political Knowledge, 72:4 (Barry A. Hollander) 786-798.
News Information Processing as Mediator of the Relationship between Motivations and Political Knowledge (William P. Eveland Jr.) 79:1, 26-40.
News Media, Candidates and Issues, and Public Opinion in the 1996 Presidential Campaign (David Domke, David P. Fan, Michael Fibison, Dhavan V. Shah, Steven S. Smith, and Mark D. Watts) 74:4, 718-737.
News Media Exposure and Its Learning Effects during the Persian Gulf War (Zhongdang Pan, Ronald E. Ostman, Patricia Moy, and Paula Reynolds) 71:1, 7-19.
News on The 700 Club: The Cycle of Religious Activism (Robert Abelman) 71:4, 887-892.
Newspaper Photographs and the 1996 Presidential Election: The Question of Bias (Paul Waldman and James Devitt) 75:2, 302-311.
Nonrecursive Models of Internet Use and Community Engagement: Questioning Whether Time Spent Online Erodes Social Capital (Dhavan Shah, Michael Schmierbach, Joshua Hawkins, Rodolfo Espino, and Janet Donavan) 79:4, 964-987.
Of Horse Race and Policy Issues: A Study of Gender in Coverage of a Gubernatorial Election by Two Major Metropolitan Newspapers (Shirley A. Serini, Angela A. Powers, and Susan Johnson) 75:1, 194-204.
Partisan and Structural Balance in Local Television Election Coverage (Sue Carter, Frederick Fico, and Jocelyn A. McCabe) 79:1, 41-53.
Policing Political Ads: An Analysis of Five Leading Newspapers’ Responses to 1992 Political Advertisements (Lori Melton McKinnon, Lynda Lee Kaid, Janet Murphy, and Cynthia K. Acree) 73:1, 66-76.
Predicting Pluralistic Ignorance: The Hostile Media Perception and Its Consequences (Albert C. Gunther and Stella Chih-Yun Chia) 78:4, 688-701.
Predictors of State Legislators’ Attitudes toward Public Affairs Television in the State Capital (Glen Sussman) 73:1, 77-89.
Press Support for the U.S. Administration during the Panama Invasion: Analyses of Strategic and Tactical Critique in the Domestic Press (Sonia Gutierrez-Villalobos, James K. Hertog, and Ramona R. Rush) 71:3, 618-627.
Prestige Newspaper Coverage of Foreign Affairs in the 1990 Congressional Campaigns (Robert A. Wells and Erika G. King) 71:3, 652-664.
Public Opinion on Investigative Reporting in the 1990s: Has Anything Changed since the 1980s? (Lars Willnat and David H. Weaver) 75:3, 449-463.
Question-Order Effects in Surveys: The Case of Political Interest, News Attention, and Knowledge (Dominic L. Lasorsa) 80:3, 499-512.
The Relationship Between Censorship and the Emotional and Critical Tone of Television News Coverage of the Persian Gulf War (John E. Newhagen) 71:1, 32-42.
Revisiting the Civic Duty to Keep Informed in the New Media Environment (Paula M. Poindexter and Maxwell E. McCombs) 78:1, 113-126.
Revisiting the Clinton/Lewinsky Scandal: The Convergence of Agenda Setting and Framing (Julie Yioutas and Ivana Segvic) 80:3, 567-582.
The “Rhetorical Presidency” Meets the Press: The New York Times and the State of the Union Message (Todd M. Schaefer) 76:3, 516-530.
Setting the News Story Agenda: Candidates and Commentators in News Coverage of a Governor’s Race (Frederick Fico and Eric Freedman) 78:3, 437-449.
The Sound Bites, the Biters, and the Bitten: A Two-Campaign Test of the Anti-Incumbent Bias Hypothesis in Network TV News (Dennis T. Lowry and Jon A. Shidler) 75:4, 719-729.
Source Credibility during the Gulf War: A Q-Study of Rural and Urban Saudi Arabian Citizens (Safran S. Al-Makaty, Douglas A. Boyd, and G. Norman Van Tubergen) 71:1, 55-63.
Speaking Up and Silencing Out in Face of a Changing Climate of Opinion (Jacob Shamir) 74:3, 602-614.
The Specialized Business Press and Industry-Related Political Communication: A Comparative Study (C. Ann Hollifield) 74:4, 757-772.
The Spiral of Silence and Public Opinion on Affirmative Action (Patricia Moy, David Domke, and Keith Stamm) 78:1, 7-25.
Symbolic Politics: Congressional Interest in Television Violence from 1950 to 1996 (Keisha L. Hoerrner) 76:4, 684-698.
Talk or Conversation? Dimensions of Interpersonal Discussion and Their Implications for Participatory Democracy (Dietram A. Scheufele) 77:4, 727-743.
Think about It This Way: Attribute Agenda-Setting Function of the Press and the Public’s Evaluation of a Local Issue (Sei-Hill Kim, Dietram A. Scheufele, and James Shanahan) 79:1, 7-25.
Time of Voting Decision and Use of Political Advertising: The Slade Gorton-Brock Adams Senatorial Campaign (Lawrence Bowen) 71:3, 665-675.
Turning the Spotlight Inward: How Five Leading News Organizations Covered the Media in the 1992 Presidential Election (Thomas J. Johnson and Timothy Boudreau, with Chris Glowaki) 73:3, 657-671.
Understanding Media Bias: The Press and the U.S. Invasion of Panama (Sandra H. Dickson) 71:4, 809-819.
Using Is Believing: The Influence of Reliance on the Credibility of Online Political Information among Politically Interested Internet Users (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye) 77:4, 865-879.
Using TV News for Political Information during an Off-Year Election: Effects on Political Knowledge and Cynicism (Glenn Leshner and Michael L. McKean) 74:1, 69-83.
Values and the Vote: Linking Issue Interpretations to the Process of Candidate Choice (Dhavan V. Shah, David Domke, and Daniel B. Wackman) 74:2, 357-387.
Voter Learning and Interest in the 2000 Presidential Election: Did the Media Matter? (David Weaver and Dan Drew) 78:4, 787-798.
Voter Learning in the 1996 Presidential Election: Did the Media Matter? (Dan Drew and David Weaver) 75:2, 292-301.
Voter Learning in the 1992 Presidential Election: Did the “Nontraditional” Media and Debates Matter? (David Weaver and Dan Drew) 72:1, 7-17.
When the Frame Is the Game: Revisiting the Impact of “Strategic” Campaign Coverage on Citizens’ Information Retention (Nicholas A. Valentino, Thomas A. Buhr, and Matthew N. Beckmann) 78:1, 93-112.
Who Cares about Local Politics? Media Influences on Local Political Involvement, Issue Awareness, and Attitude Strength (Dietram A. Scheufele, James Shanahan, and Sei-Hill Kim) 79:2, 427-444.
Willingness to Discuss “Official English”: A Test of Three Communities (Michael B. Salwen, Carolyn Lin, and Frances R. Matera) 71:2, 282-290.
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