New Article: Boundary-Drawing Power and the Renewal of Professional News Organizations: The Case of the Guardian and the Edward Snowden NSA Leak

Simon Collister and I have written a new article that examines the mediation of the Snowden leak. It will be out with the International Journal of Communication very soon. We’re presenting this at the APSA Political Communication Section Preconference in Washington, DC next week. Abstract and full PDF below

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Oxford Studies in Digital Politics: New Title: Presidential Campaigning in the Internet Age

Oxford Studies in Digital Politics: New Title: Presidential Campaigning in the Internet Age

The latest book in my series is now available: Jennifer Stromer-Galley's Presidential Campaigning in the Internet Age. This valuable and unique book is ideal for courses on U.S. politics, political parties, campaigns and elections, and political communication.

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Report of the Commission on Civil Society and Democratic Engagement

Report of the Commission on Civil Society and Democratic Engagement

As you may have heard, the British government recently introduced a new bill to regulate lobbying and non-party campaigning during the year leading up to an election, without consulting any organisations and on a very rushed parliamentary timetable.

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My new book The Hybrid Media System: Politics and Power—now available

My new book The Hybrid Media System: Politics and Power—now available

This is the culmination of a research project stretching back more than four years, though my thinking on hybridity in organisations goes back further—to early 2005. With this new book, however, I have tried to use hybridity as a bigger concept for explaining how the systemic interdependence among older and newer media logics now shapes many different aspects of political life.

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Giving the 2013 Attallah Lecture at Carleton University, March 7, 2013

I will be giving the 2013 Attallah Lecture at Carleton University on March 7, 2013. The Lecture takes place annually in honour of Paul Attallah and is part of Carleton’s Communication Graduate Caucus Annual Conference, whose theme this year is [Re]visions: Protest and Resistance.

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Speaking at an event on the European Citizens’ Initiative in Westminster, November 29, 2012

Organised by the European Parliament Information Office, held at Europe House, Smith Square, Westminster, and entitled Can Digital Democracy Work? the meeting will consist of MEPs and representatives from the Officer of the Leader of the House of Commons, 38 Degrees, and transnational civil society movement, European Alternatives.

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Oxford Studies in Digital Politics Book Series: New Title Now Out: Digital Cities

A new title in the Oxford University Press book series I edit, Oxford Studies in Digital Politics, has just been published: Digital Cities: The Internet and the Geography of Opportunity, by Karen Mossberger, Caroline J. Tolbert, and William W. Franko.

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New OUP Digital Politics Title: “Taking Our Country Back” by Daniel Kreiss

A further new title in the Oxford University Press book series I edit, Oxford Studies in Digital Politics, has just been published: Taking Our Country Back: The Crafting of Networked Politics from Howard Dean to Barack Obama, by Daniel Kreiss.

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Speaking at the Holberg Prize Symposium Next Week, June 5

This year, the prize of NOK 4.5 million (or EUR 570,000/USD 800,000) has been awarded to Manuel Castells for his outstanding work as the leading sociologist of the city and new information and media technologies. The prize is awarded annually for outstanding scholarly work in the fields of the arts and humanities, social sciences, law, and theology. Congratulations to Manuel!

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On Instagram and Temporal Authenticity

Last night, Tom Standage tweeted a link to an interesting piece about the merits or otherwise of the popular photo editing and sharing service, Instagram. I retweeted Tom’s link and followed this up with the point that the main problem with Instagram is that these retro effects look great now, but will you really want to look at these photos in five or ten years time?

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News on the Internet: Information and Citizenship in the 21st Century, by David Tewksbury and Jason Rittenberg

News on the Internet: Information and Citizenship in the 21st Century, by David Tewksbury and Jason Rittenberg

The latest title in the book series I edit, Oxford Studies in Digital Politics, has just been published: News on the Internet: Information and Citizenship in the 21st Century, by David Tewksbury and Jason Rittenberg.

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My Newly-Published Article in “Connecting Democracy”

My 2009 journal article, “Web 2.0: New Challenges for the Study of E-Democracy in an Era of Informational Exuberance,” which originally appeared in I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society 5 (1), pp. 9-41, has now been reprinted in Stephen Coleman’s and Peter Shane’s excellent new edited volume, Connecting Democracy: Online Consultation and the Flow of Political Communication (MIT Press). 

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Workshop: Digital Methods: Tools for Analysis

I can’t make it up to Manchester for this conference due to a clash with teaching, but Rob Procter and Rachel Gibson are presenting some preliminary findings from a pilot study of mining public opinion on Twitter, on which I’ve collaborated: “An Experiment in Opinion Mining Tweets” by Rob Procter, Manchester eResearch Centre, University of Manchester;

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November 2: Speaking at Hansard Society/University of Manchester Debate on Social Media and Campaigning

This roundtable, organised as part of the ESRC Festival of Social Science and taking place during Parliament Week (Oct 31 – Nov 6) brings together academics, politicians, activists, news producers and journalists to debate how social media are being used to promote protest and political change.

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