Old Media, New Media : Political Communication in Transition
6th Annual Political Communication Preconference
August 27, 2008
Cosponsored by the Political Communication Section of the American Political Science Association and the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
Location : The Shorenstein Center, 79 JFK Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
Taubman Building 5th Floor
PROGRAM
8:00 – 9:00 a.m. REGISTRATION AND CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
Outside NYE Rooms
9:00 – 10:30 a.m SESSION I
Roundtable : Studying the New Media Environment : Theoretical and Methodological Challenges and Opportunities
Room NYE A
Chairs : Michael Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania
Bruce Williams, University of Virginia
Participants :
Geoffrey Baym, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Dannagal Goldthwaite Young, University of Delaware
Markus Prior, Princeton University
Kristina Riegert, Swedish National Defence College
Comparative Political Media
Room NYE B
Chair : Stephen Farnsworth, George Mason University
Media Coverage of Progress and Responsibility Fighting AIDS in Sub-Saharan Anglophone Africa : A Community Structure Approach
John C. Pollock, The College of New Jersey
Paul D’Angelo, The College of New Jersey
Rowena Briones, The College of New Jersey
Danielle Catona, The College of New Jersey
Genevieve Faust, The College of New Jersey
Meghan Higgins, The College of New Jersey
Brian Keefe, The College of New Jersey
Dominique Sauro, The College of New Jersey
Political Communication Undermined : Corruption Within the Nigerian Press and the Challenges of New Media
Muhammad Jameel Yusha’u, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
Political Communication in Transition : How We Do It in Poland
Ewa Musialowska, University of Wroclaw, Poland and Technical University of Dresden, Germany
A Comparative Study on the Policy Development of Network Neutrality in the U.S. and Japan
Shoko Kiyohara, InfoCom Research, Inc., Japan and University of Tokyo
Political Engagement and the Media
Room NYE C
Chair : Marion Just, Wellesley College
What Role do the Media Play in Promoting or Inhibiting Political Engagement ?
Current Research, Problems, and Possible Solutions
Mirjam Gollmitzer, Simon Fraser University
Youth, Attitude Change, and New Media Use
Younei Soe, Indiana University
Erik Bucy, Indiana University
Sexual Orientation, the ‘Funnel of Causality,’ and the Origins of Civic Engagement
Patrick J. Egan, New York University
Kenneth Sherrill, Hunter College, CUNY
Political Video Games : An Emerging Political Communication Tool
Olivier Mauco, Sorbonne, Paris
10:45 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. SESSION II
Perspectives on New Media
Room NYE A
Chair : Trevor Thrall, University of Michigan-Dearborn
Lost in the Spider Web : Citizen Powerlessness in the New Media Information Era
Frank Louis Rusciano, Rider University
Yun Xia, Rider University
The Impact of Global Communications on National Identities.
Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Ronald Inglehart, University of Michigan
Can Internet Promote Democracy ?
Susana Salgado, University of Westminster, UK and Portuguese Foundation to Science and Technology
Political Consumerism Online and Offline : Coffee, Politics, and the Internet
Eleftheria Lekakis, University of London
Election Media
Room NYE B
Chair : Tom Fielder, Boston University
Connecting the Dots for Voters—Can the Internet Close Traditional Communication Gaps ?
Kajsa E. Dalrymple, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Dietram A. Scheufele, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Candidate Website and Local Newspaper Coverage in the 2006 Senatorial Elections : Implications for 2008 and Beyond
Lindsay Neuberger, Michigan State University
Hillary Shulman, Michigan State University
Jennifer Maginnis, University of Kentucky
On Air and Online : Advertising in the 2008 Presidential Election
Sarah Snodgress, The Aspen Institute
Diana Owen, Georgetown University
Social Networking and Video-Sharing Media
Room NYE C
Chair : Jeff Gulati, Bentley College
“YouTube—You Ask—You Vote” : A New Era for Political Communication ?
Anastasia Deligiaouri, Artistotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Facebooked : Groupthink in the Era of Computer Mediated Social Networking
Robert McKeever, Gonzaga University
Youth Engagement 2.0 : The Role of Facebook on College Students’ Civic and Political Participation
Sebastián Valenzuela, Namsu Park, and Kerk F. Kee, University of Texas at Austin
12:30 – 2:00 p.m. LUNCH
Keynote Speaker : Thomas Patterson, Harvard University
News and Voters : Looking Back at the Primaries
2:15 – 3:34 p.m. SESSION III
Researching Political Media
Room NYE A
Chair : Sunshine Hilygus, Harvard University
Adolescence of a New Medium : The Long Term Impact of the Internet on Individual’s Political Communication 2001-2008
Martin Emmer, Ilmenau University of Technology
Gerhard Vowe, Heinrich-Heine-University Dusseldorf
Jens Wolling, Ilmenau University of Technology
Debunking Cyber-Optimism ? : Using Search Engine Technology to Test the Power of Online Activism
Paul Reilly, University of Glasgow
The Effect of Political Interviews on Attitudes Toward the Press : Evidence from Mixed Methods Research
Eran N. Ben-Porath, University of Pennsylvania
Michael X. Delli Carpini, University of Pennsylvania
From Political ‘Surf’ to Political ‘Turf’ : Developing Website Analysis to Discover How Online Engagement Translates Into Offline Action
Sarah Oates, University of Glasgow
News Media
Room NYE B
Chair : Matthew Baum, Harvard University
European News Coverage of U.S. Policy in Iraq and Afghanistan
Stephen J. Farnsworth, George Mason University
S. Robert Lichter, George Mason University
Roland Schatz, Media Tenor, Bonn
Double Standards ? An Evaluation of the Propaganda and Indexing Models on Immigration Coverage from the U.S. News Media
Andrew Kennis, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Polling in the Press : The Effects of Consensus among Elected Officials and the Mobilization of Interest Groups
Jennifer Oats-Sargent, University of Illinois
Comparative Perspectives on the Internet and Elections
Room Taubman 275
Chair : Gadi Wolfsfeld, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Parties, Election Campaigning, and the Internet : A Comparative Institutional Approach
Nick Anstead, University of London
Andrew Chadwick, University of London
The 2007 French Presidential Election and the Internet : Still the Time of Old Media
Thierry Vedel, Sciences-po, Paris
Instant Assessments of the Impact and Dross of Election Campaigns : Advertising and News Agency ‘Copy’ as Artifacts of the Ephemera of U.S., Latin American and European (France and Britain) Election Campaigns, 2004-2008, in the Internet Age
Michael Palmer, University of the Sorbonne
Marie-Danielle Demelas, University of the Sorbonne
4 – 5:30 p.m. RECEPTION
Malkin Penthouse