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Governing in the Media Age: The Impact of the Mass Media on Executive Leadership in Contemporary Democracies1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
Abstract
The effects of old and new media on governing and executive leadership have remained curiously under-studied. In the available literature, assessments prevail that consider the media to have developed a strongly power-enhancing effect on incumbent chief executives. A careful reconsideration of mass media effects on the conditions and manifestations of political leadership by presidents and prime ministers in different contemporary democracies suggests that the media more often function as effective constraints on leaders and leadership. Overall, the constraining effects of the traditional media have been more substantial than those generated by the new media. While there are obvious cross-national trends in the development of government–mass media relations, important differences between countries persist, which can be explained to some considerable extent by the different institutional features of contemporary democracies.
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Footnotes
A previous draft of this paper was written while the author was a Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Social Science, University of Tokyo, Japan, early in 2006. The unique hospitality of the Institute and the generous financial support of the German Research Council that made this visit possible are gratefully acknowledged. Thanks are also due to the anonymous referees of this journal. All remaining errors are the sole responsibility of the author.
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