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ARTICLES

Consequences of Politicians’ Perceptions of the News Media

A hostile media phenomenon approach

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Read on this site (9)

Andrea Ceron, Giovanni Pagano & Margherita Bordignon. (2023) Facebook as a media digest: user engagement and party references to hostile and friendly media during an election campaign. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 20:4, pages 454-468.
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Karolin Soontjens, Kathleen Beckers, Stefaan Walgrave, Emma van der Goot & Toni G. L. A. van der Meer. (2023) Not All Parties are Treated Equally Journalist Perceptions of Partisan News Bias. Journalism Studies 24:9, pages 1194-1213.
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Alena Kluknavská & Olga Eisele. (2023) Trump and circumstance: introducing the post-truth claim as an instrument for investigating truth contestation in public discourse. Information, Communication & Society 26:8, pages 1583-1600.
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Basyouni Ibrahim Hamada & Davis Vallesi. (2023) Determinants of Journalists’ Trust in Public Institutions: A Macro and Micro Analysis Across 67 Countries. Journalism Practice 0:0, pages 1-22.
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Karolin Soontjens, Annelien Van Remoortere & Stefaan Walgrave. (2021) The hostile media: politicians’ perceptions of coverage bias. West European Politics 44:4, pages 991-1002.
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Brian E. Weeks, Dam Hee Kim, Lauren B. Hahn, Trevor H. Diehl & Nojin Kwak. (2019) Hostile Media Perceptions in the Age of Social Media: Following Politicians, Emotions, and Perceptions of Media Bias. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 63:3, pages 374-392.
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Jana Laura Egelhofer & Sophie Lecheler. (2019) Fake news as a two-dimensional phenomenon: a framework and research agenda. Annals of the International Communication Association 43:2, pages 97-116.
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Articles from other publishers (8)

Peter Maurer. (2022) Perceptions of media influence and performance among politicians in European democracies. International Communication Gazette 85:5, pages 347-364.
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Anu Kantola & Juho Vesa. (2022) Silence of the wealthy: How the wealthiest 0.1% avoid the media and resort to hidden strategies of advocacy. European Journal of Communication 38:1, pages 43-57.
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David Irwin & Njeri Kiereini. (2022) External influence on parliamentarians in Kenya. Journal of Public Affairs 23:1.
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Kristoffer Kolltveit, Rune Karlsen & Tine Figenschou. (2022) Partiske medier?. Norsk statsvitenskapelig tidsskrift 38:4, pages 214-229.
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Michael Hameleers & Sophie Minihold. (2020) Constructing Discourses on (Un)truthfulness: Attributions of Reality, Misinformation, and Disinformation by Politicians in a Comparative Social Media Setting. Communication Research 49:8, pages 1176-1199.
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Michael Hameleers, Anna Brosius, Franziska Marquart, Andreas C. Goldberg, Erika van Elsas & Claes H. de Vreese. (2021) Mistake or Manipulation? Conceptualizing Perceived Mis- and Disinformation among News Consumers in 10 European Countries. Communication Research 49:7, pages 919-941.
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Yariv Tsfati, Jesper Strömbäck, Elina Lindgren, Alyt Damstra, Hajo G Boomgaarden & Rens Vliegenthart. (2022) Going Beyond General Media Trust: An Analysis of Topical Media Trust, its Antecedents and Effects on Issue (Mis)perceptions. International Journal of Public Opinion Research 34:2.
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Sounman Hong, Haneul Choi & Taek Kyu Kim. (2019) Why Do Politicians Tweet? Extremists, Underdogs, and Opposing Parties as Political Tweeters. Policy & Internet 11:3, pages 305-323.
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