Communication in the Age of Suspicion: Trust and the MediaVian Bakir, David M. Barlow Palgrave Macmillan, 12 kwi 2007 - 244 Communication in the Age of Suspicion explores and interrogates the relationship between media and trust. It begins by examining the decline of trust in key institutions and the relationship between Trust Studies and Media Studies. Fourteen international contributions follow, focusing on a variety of genres and examining a number of media forms. Can we speak of The End of Trust? The book concludes by delineating three emergent themes, before outlining implications for media communication and future directions for research in this Age of Suspicion. |
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Exploring Relationships between Trust Studies | 9 |
Notes | 22 |
The Erosion of Trust in Australian Public Life | 39 |
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Communication in the Age of Suspicion: Trust and the Media V. Bakir,D. Barlow Ograniczony podgląd - 2007 |
Communication in the Age of Suspicion: Trust and the Media Vian Bakir,David M. Barlow Widok fragmentu - 2007 |
Communication in the Age of Suspicion: Trust and the Media Vian Bakir,David M. Barlow Widok fragmentu - 2007 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
actions advertising agent argued audience Australian autism BBC2 Big Brother British broadcast cent Chapter citizens commercial communication confidence consumers context coverage cultural Daily Mail debate deep-sea disposal democracy discourse distrust economic editorial Estonian example expert food scares Giddens Greenpeace Greenpeace's guardian of trust Habermas ILR services individual Indymedia institutions interaction Internet interviews Ipsos MORI issue journalists Lauristin London Luhmann mass media medium Minister MMR vaccine Model MORI networks newspapers Ogoni Ogoniland Oprah organisations parties political politicians Poll precautionary principle principal-agent produced propaganda public opinion public sphere radio relations relationship response Retrieved risk role service journalism Shell social capital social contract society stance suggests surveillance Swansea Sound Sztompka television terrorism tion Tony Abbott Transparency International users vaccine viewers Vihalemm Wales Winfrey World Wide World Wide Web