In the Web of the Parties: Local Politicians on Facebook in Hungary
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] M. Bene,et al. Facebook as a Political Marketing Tool in an Illiberal Context. Mapping Political Advertising Activity on Facebook during the 2019 Hungarian European Parliament and Local Election Campaigns , 2023, Journal of Political Marketing.
[2] A. Hannah,et al. Local political party presence online , 2022, Party Politics.
[3] L. Littvay,et al. Greater than the sum of its part(ie)s: opposition comeback in the 2019 Hungarian local elections , 2022, East European Politics.
[4] Renáta Ryoko Drávucz. Commissioned Book Review: András Körösényi, Gábor Illés and Attila Gyulai, The Orbán Regime: Plebiscitary Leader Democracy in the Making , 2021, Political Studies Review.
[5] Rudolf Metz,et al. “Mass,” “Movement,” “Personal,” or “Cartel” Party? Fidesz’s Hybrid Organisational Strategy , 2021, Politics and Governance.
[6] V. Mabillard,et al. Digital communication in Swiss cities: A closer look at the low adoption and usage of social media platforms in a technologically advanced and innovative country , 2021, Information Polity.
[7] O. Dovbysh,et al. Towards (Hyper)Local Public Sphere: Comparison of Civic Engagement across the Global North , 2021, Media and Communication.
[8] Andreas Schäfer,et al. Digital heuristics: How parties strategize political communication in hybrid media environments , 2021, New Media Soc..
[9] Kjerstin Thorson,et al. Platform Civics: Facebook in the Local Information Infrastructure , 2020 .
[10] Raymond Gradus,et al. Assessing social media use in Dutch municipalities: Political, institutional, and socio-economic determinants , 2020, Gov. Inf. Q..
[11] N. Merkovity,et al. Migrants during Halftime: the framing of Hungarian political news during the FIFA World Cup , 2020 .
[12] Attila Bátorfy,et al. State advertising as an instrument of transformation of the media market in Hungary , 2020, East European Politics.
[13] Patrícia Silva,et al. The good, the bad and the ugly: Three faces of social media usage by local governments , 2019, Gov. Inf. Q..
[14] Gregory J. Martin,et al. Local News and National Politics , 2019, American Political Science Review.
[15] António F. Tavares,et al. Social Media Activity and Local Civic Engagement in Poland , 2018, ICEGOV.
[16] Anders Olof Larsson,et al. Out with the old, in with the new? Perceptions of social (and other) media by local and regional Norwegian politicians , 2018, New Media Soc..
[17] Alejandro Saez-Martin,et al. Using social media to enhance citizen engagement with local government: Twitter or Facebook? , 2018, New Media Soc..
[18] U. Klinger,et al. “Beer is more efficient than social media”—Political parties and strategic communication in Austrian and Swiss national elections , 2017, Social Media Campaigning in Europe.
[19] Marius Rohde Johannessen,et al. Facebook and local newspapers’ effect on local politicians’ popularity , 2017 .
[20] Concetta Metallo,et al. Factors influencing social media use in local governments: The case of Italy and Spain , 2016, Gov. Inf. Q..
[21] J. Pierre,et al. Mediatised local government: Social media activity and media strategies among local government officials 1989-2010 , 2016 .
[22] Kristof Jacobs,et al. Social Media, Parties, and Political Inequalities , 2016 .
[23] Nili Steinfeld,et al. Local engagement online: Municipal Facebook pages as hubs of interaction , 2015, Gov. Inf. Q..
[24] Eli Skogerbø,et al. Candidate campaigning in parliamentary systems , 2015 .
[25] Girish J. Gulati,et al. Social networks in political campaigns: Facebook and the congressional elections of 2006 and 2008 , 2013, New Media Soc..
[26] Julia Metag,et al. Strategic, Structural, and Individual Determinants of Online Campaigning in German Elections , 2012 .
[27] Daniel Chernilo. Social Theory’s Methodological Nationalism , 2006 .
[28] R. Aplin. Mass movement , 1988, Nature.