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Mass media's agenda setting function in the age of globalization: A multi-national agenda-setting test

Posted on:2010-08-30Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of North Carolina at Chapel HillCandidate:Du, Ying RoselynFull Text:PDF
GTID:1448390002987986Subject:Journalism
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation explores mass media's agenda-setting function in a context of increased globalization to determine whether the theory, which was built upon intra-nation environments, functions in the global setting. The study matches public agendas with media agendas to investigate agenda-setting effects in 11 countries worldwide. It also compares media agendas across countries, both at the object level and the attribute level, to consider whether inter-nation intermedia influence exists.;The results suggest a general pattern of the agenda-setting function of mass media in the countries examined. The study finds evidence of inter-nation intermedia influence and thus presents a new way to look at the intermedia agenda-setting relationship -- moving this research from comparisons within a local area to cross-national intermedia comparisons.;Moreover, this study explores for evidence of directional inter-nation intermedia agenda-setting, presuming that the media of the pivotal and powerful West have stronger influence on their non-Western counterparts than vice versa. Due to the lack of evidence found, the study cannot argue a general causality between Western and non-Western countries' media.;Finally, the study examines second level intermedia agenda-setting effect at the global level to determine whether the attribute agendas of the media in different countries are dissimilar. The multi-national investigation did not yield clear-cut results. Findings suggest a complex inter-nation intermedia relationship at the attribute level and imply that, in the age of globalization, a simple "ideological difference" reasoning derived from the Cold War days is probably outdated.
Keywords/Search Tags:Agenda-setting, Media, Globalization, Function, Mass
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