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Exploring Organizational Resilience Asset and Its Antecedents for Effective Internal Crisis CommunicationKim, Young 21 April 2016 (has links)
Nowadays crises are omnipresent with daily news headlines as reminders. The public continues to see or experience many different crises that affect numerous individuals and organizations as well as society in general. Against this backdrop, corporate communication professionals, for effective crisis management, are expected to help the organizations and their leaders make decisions, as well as communicate clearly when crises arise.
Considering a fast changing media environment, recent scholars have called for new approaches to crisis communication to enhance theoretical developments. They suggested that researchers should take a broader context beyond the dominant crisis communication research perspectives based on the symbolic approach, which focuses on image or reputation management through strategic messages. In response to their clarion call for new crisis communication theory development, some researchers suggested resilient-oriented crisis communication, adopting the resilience concept (e.g., capacity to bounce back) and highlighting its role in the crisis communication, management and rebuilding processes. Nevertheless, there is ample room for further research to improve their efforts because there remains a lack of empirical evidence.
Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore effective internal crisis communication within the strategic management perspective, considering organizational resilience. By doings so, the study attempted to not only fill the research gaps regarding internal crisis communication but also respond to the calls for a new direction of theoretical development beyond symbolic approach. Considering the resilience concept, the results in this study provide meaningful insight into how organizational resilience can be measured by employees confidence and communicative actions for sensemaking and sensegiving, conceptualized as employee generated organizational resilience (EGORA).
In addition, the results of the current study highlighted how internal communication factors such as two-way symmetrical communication and transparent communication can be used strategically to communicate with employees for the organization resilience. The results also revealed the important mediating role of between the resilience and its antecedents, demonstrating that organization-employee relationships (OER) is a strong underlying factor in constructing why strategic internal communication and leadership can exert an impact on organizational resilience.
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The Unattainable Ideal: Walter Lippmann and the Limits of the Press and Public OpinionWhitehead, Amy Solomon 11 December 2015 (has links)
Walter Lippmanns classic work, Public Opinion, crystallized thinking about the dynamic relationship between the press and public opinion, and clarified the role of each in democracy. Evaluations of that book, however, tend to be one-dimensional. Public Opinion captured just one iteration of his thinking on the subject, not his final statement on the matter. A comprehensive survey of his writing reveals Lippmanns views on the press and public opinion were not static, yet the attention Public Opinion receives continues to overshadow his other works; his evolving views on the press and public opinion are rarely mentioned. Although his views shifted in significant ways over the decades, those changes hewed to a familiar set of issues and oscillated between a fairly narrow set of differences. Lippmanns primary concern was always the functioning of democracy. He wanted it to work. His views on the press and public opinion revolved around a central tenet of progressive thinking that an informed public would reach reasoned conclusions. But Lippmann always wrestled with doubts about the capacity of the electorate; his elitist attitudes conflicted with his reformist sympathies. Could the public really govern itself intelligently? How could the press, with its own limitations, facilitate that process? Lippmann puzzled over the answers to those questions throughout his career. Ultimately, his experiences with the manufacture of consent during World War I undermined his confidence in public opinion; his stature as a member of the press coincided with greater hope in that institution.
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Framing the Ebola Outbreak: Systemic Influences on News CoverageDuru, Adaobi Vivian 13 July 2016 (has links)
ABSTRACT
Using a media systems comparative framework, I investigated the relationship between systemic characteristics and news coverage of international events. Leveraging a highly salient event: the Ebola outbreak, I extended the Hallin and Mancini Model to non-western democracies. This dissertation explored differences in media coverage of Ebola across media systems. Findings revealed that characteristics of media systems inform how news about an event is framed by reporters. By investigating news influences, this dissertation broadly sheds light on the latent influences of politics and culture on what audiences receive as news.
My results showed that liberal media systems such as those found in the U.S. or the U.K. were more likely to adopt advocacy and partisanship in coverage. I also found that the liberal media systems were more likely to use health expert sources in coverage of health issues rather than elite political sources. I found no difference in the overall type of frame used. Both systems used more of episodic frames than thematic frames.
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Exploring Intermedia Agenda Setting Effects of Last Week Tonight with John OliverAbad, Andrew 29 April 2016 (has links)
The HBO television program Last Week Tonight with John Oliver is a new and unique take on the typical political comedy show popularized by programs like The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. Uninterrupted by commercial breaks and with full creative control, host John Oliver and his team spend 30 minutes on Sunday nights discussing a typically underreported story at length, abandoning the monologue and interview portions reminiscent of traditional political comedy shows in favor of a long-form style investigation into a particular issue or topic. The main segment of each episode is then uploaded to the social media website, YouTube, within 24 hours of the shows airing for free viewing by anyone with an Internet connection. As a result, the show has garnered both critical acclaim and an active fanbase of millions who view, share, and interact with the show by responding to numerous calls to action that usually follow each segment.
This study seeks to analyze the shows potential effects on news production, specifically within the context of intermedia agenda setting, the ability for the shows content to lead news outlets to cover the topics discussed during each episode in the time following the episodes airing. Through keyword searches, counts of news coverage on online news entities in periods both before and after the shows air date were collected in an effort to determine if there are more articles in the days following a Last Week Tonight episode than in the days preceding one. Paired sample t-tests were used as the primary method of statistical analysis to compare the means of each set of counts. Results indicate at least a moderate effect of the show on levels of news coverage across 25 different episodes for both traditional and native online news entities.
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Adding Flesh to Sullivans Bones: The Legacy of St. Amant v. ThompsonRobinson, Eric P. 07 July 2016 (has links)
The 1962 Democratic primary for the United States Senate seat from Louisiana was not much of a contest, with incumbent Russell B. Long handily defeating his opponent, Phil A. St. Amant. But the defamation case that stemmed from that campaign has had a lasting impact on defamation law in the United States.
While the U.S. Supreme Courts decision in St. Amant v. Thompson often now gets lost in the myriad decisions labelled as Sullivans progeny, the ruling established standards for the application of the actual malice test established in New York Times v. Sullivan. The confusion over these standards is shown by the shifting results in the St. Amant case as it progressed through the trial and appellate courts, and in the debate amongst the justices of the Supreme Court.
This dissertation examines the law of defamation prior to the trial in Deputy Sherriff Herman Thompsons libel case against St. Amant, including its origins in English common law, the development of the principles of the First Amendment, and the influence of Louisianas unique history on defamation law in the state. It then examines the circumstances of the 1962 Senate campaign, and the televised statement that led to the lawsuit. It then examines the court proceedings in the trial and appellate courts in detail, with a particular emphasis on the behind-the-scenes deliberations of the U.S. Supreme Court justices.
Finally, the dissertation examines the lasting legacy of the St. Amant v. Thompson decision, including how it has been cited and used in subsequent cases, both nationally and in Louisiana. It concludes with an analysis of the legacy of the case and its meaning for libel law today and in the future.
The St. Amant case came in the midst of a redefinition of the meaning of the First Amendment, expressed in a series of U.S. Supreme Court precedents from the 1960s thorough the 1980s. Until this work, it has been an underappreciated part of this history. This dissertation is an attempt to examine the case and place it in its proper role in the legacy of First Amendment jurisprudence.
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The print media's perception of Sino-Vietnamese relations (1979-91)Mukhopadhyay, Gautam. January 1993 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Comparative Asian Studies / Master / Master of Arts
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Reappearance of the classic: liturgy reform of the Roman Catholic mass from Latin to Chinese in Hong Kong湯迪斯, Tong, Daicie. January 2007 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Conservation / Master / Master of Science in Conservation
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The Spiral of Silence in Virtual Space: Examining How Expert Participation, Digital Media Form, and Opinion Congruency Relate to Opinion ExpressionZhang, Yiwei 28 May 2015 (has links)
This study tested the spiral of silence in both Social Networking Sites (SNS) and online discussion forums. It argued that online expert participation may influence people's willingness to take part in an online discussion. A two (opinion climate) by two (expert participation) experiment was designed to examine how expert participation influenced the relationship between peoples willingness to speak out and opinion climate with the controversial topic: abortion. In this study, the spiral of silence effect was only found when experts were present in the discussion.
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Defining Dad: Media Depiction Of The Modern Father In Print AdvertisingEvans, John Robert 28 July 2015 (has links)
From an advertising perspective fathers are a highly attractive consumer demographic. In order to market to this audience it is important to understand how fathers are framed. With an increase in the number of fathers identifying themselves as caregivers according to the 2012 census, effective marketers would be well-served if they understood what type of frame applies when fathers are employed vs. stay at home. This analysis used framing theory to determine how message givers use frames within their advertisements to explain which particular aspects of the father are given salience. This study is a content analysis of father frames in advertising over a variety of highly circulated mens magazines from 2009-2014. This analysis divided the magazines into two-time periods and looked for examples of care-giving fathers, wage-earning fathers, and recreational fathers in advertisements. In addition, the analysis looked at the question of competence in these advertisements, observing if the fathers were depicted as competent or not. The research supported that the dominant father frame of the pre-2012 time period was the care-giving father and the dominant father frame of the post-2012 time period was the recreational father. Fathers were not mostly observed as competent. This study supported the idea that the post-2012 father frame in male-based highly circulated magazines is more likely to be a father who leads their children in leisurely activities.
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INVESTIGATIONS OF THE RF-ONLY QUADRUPOLE MASS ANALYZER.MILLER, PHILIP EDWARD. January 1985 (has links)
The performance of a quadrupole mass filter operated in the RF-only mode has been investigated. A discussion of both the formal and qualitative theories of quadrupole mass analyzers is given. Data is presented which demonstrates that the transmission properties of such devices deviate markedly from those which would be predicted from the Mathieu stability diagram. The transmission efficiency of ionic species, through an RF-only quadrupole, is shown to depend primarily on three factors. The first of these is the formal stability of the ion trajectory as summarized by the coordinates of the particle in a, q space. The second factor is the acceptance aperture of the quadruople in combination with the emittance of the ion source. The final factor is shown to be spacial focusing conditions which arise due to the nature of the frequency components that are contained within the trajectory of an ion as it traverses the quadrupole electrode structure. The theory of such spacial focusing conditions is reported. The measurement of naturally occurring isotope abundance ratios is used to demonstrate the magnitude of errors which may result due to the nonideal transmission properties of the RF-only quadrupole. Suggestions are provided to minimize such mass discrimination effects. Additional experiments dealing with the quadrupole notch filter are described. Performance of a unique voltage tuned quadrupole notch filter is demonstrated. The theory, design, and construction details of such a device are reported.
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