Manufacturing Government Communication on Covid-19 A Comparative Perspective /
| Tác giả của công ty: | |
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| Tác giả khác: | |
| Tóm tắt: | XI, 395 p. 1 illus. text |
| Ngôn ngữ: | Tiếng Anh |
| Được phát hành: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
2022.
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| Phiên bản: | 1st ed. 2022. |
| Loạt: | Springer Studies in Media and Political Communication,
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| Những chủ đề: | |
| Truy cập trực tuyến: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09230-5 |
| Định dạng: | Điện tử Sách |
Mục lục:
- Chapter 1. Similar and Dissimilar Patterns of Government Communication on COVID-19
- Part I. Organizing Centralized Government Strategies
- Chapter 2. Pros and Cons of the Eu Response and Communication During COVID-19 Crisis
- Chapter 3. Fighting COVID-19 by State Mobilization: China in the Lens of Social Constructivism
- Chapter 4. Crisis Communication During the First Wave of the Pandemics: the Latvia’s Case
- Chapter 5. South Korea: Positive to Negative Attention
- Chapter 6. No Lockdown, please, We Are Swedish: How the Middle Way Country Suddenly Became the Extreme Case of Government Communication
- Part II. Local Versus National
- Chapter 7. National Leadership Versus Regional Command: The Case of the Spanish COVID-19 Crisis
- Chapter 8. Rituals and Reassurance: Government Communication in Australia During the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Chapter 9. Efforts in Communicating Science in Brazil in a Context of a Denialist Government and Contradictory Realities
- Chapter 10. Government Communication Policy for Dealing with the COVID-19, the Case of Israel: How to Explain to Groups with Unique Communication Characteristics a Universal Phenomenon
- Part III. Taking the Leader's Way
- Chapter 11. “Trump Confronts COVID — in Press Briefings and on Twitter”
- Chapter 12. Between Empathy and Threat: Legitimation Strategies and Rhetorical Appeals in Angela Merkel’s Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Chapter 13. Italian Government Communication from Giuseppe Conte to Mario Draghi: Between ‘permissive Consensus’ and ‘leadership Building’
- Part IV. The Weight of Government Credibility
- Chapter 14. The Greeks and the Coronavirus Pandemic: Assessing the Credibility and Effectiveness of Social Institutions and Public Sphere Players
- Chapter 15. The UK: ‘not One Rule for Everyone’ and the Impact of Elite Rule-breaking on Public Trust
- Chapter 16. The Messenger and the Message: South African Government Communication During the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Chapter 17. Pushing Through Own Agenda: COVID-19 and Government Communication in Poland
- Part V. The Importance of Social Media
- Chapter 18. Redefining the Citizen-government Relationship: Policy Communication Through Social Media in Post-COVID Japan
- Chapter 19. A Vos Seringues : French Governmental Communication on COVID-19 Vaccination via Twitter.