
Theoretical persepectives on new media and politics: A resource list
March 31, 2008Agre, Philip E (2002). “Real Time Politics: The Internet and the Political Process.” The Information Society, 18:311–331, 2002.
Bakkar, Bradley. (2007). Blogs as constitutional dialogue. New York University Survey of American Law, 63, 215.
Davis, R. and D. Owen. (2000). New media and American politics. Annals of the American Academy of Political Science, 567, 209-210.
Edsall, Thomas B. (October 2007) The New Media and US Politics. eJournal USA.
Farrell, H. (2008). The power and politics of blogs. Public Choice, 134, 15-30.
Howard, Philip. “Deep Democracy, Thin Citizenship: The Impact of Digital Media on Campaign Strategy,” The Annals of the Academy of Political and Social Science, 597.1 (2005)
Mathias Kepplinger, H. (2007). Reciprocal effects: Toward a theory of mass media effects on decision makers. The Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics.
Munger, MC. (2008). Blogging and political information: truth or truthiness? Public Choice, 134, 125-138.
Rogers, B. (2005). The new trend of blogging. Document Processing Technology, 13, 38-39.
Ryfe, David Michael (2007). The Future of Media Politics. Rhetoric & Public Affairs.
Stromer-Galley, Jennifer (2000). “Online interaction and why candidates avoid it” Journal of Communication50 (4):
111-32.
Wagner, J. (1983). Media do make a difference: the differential impact of mass media in the 1976 presidential election. American Journal of Political Science, 27, 407-430.