1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910476877603321

Autore

Reunanen Esa

Titolo

Medioitunut valta ja politiikan paluu : kyselytutkimus suomalaispäättäjien suhteesta mediaan 2009 ja 2019 / / Esa Reunanen & Risto Kunelius

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Tampere, Suomi : , : Tampere University Press, , [2021]

ISBN

978-952-359-030-4

Descrizione fisica

1 verkkoaineisto (139 sivua) : kuvitettu

Soggetti

Political leaders & leadership

Media studies

päätöksenteko

poliittinen päätöksenteko

päättäjät

vaikutusvalta

valta

media

joukkoviestimet

sosiaalinen media

politiikka

medioituminen

mediasuhteet

julkisuus

poliitikot

uutiset

beslutsfattande

politiskt beslutsfattande

beslutsfattare

inflytande

makt

massmedier

sociala medier

politik

medialisering

mediekontakter

offentlighet

politiker

nyheter (meddelanden)



Suomi

Finland

Lingua di pubblicazione

Finlandese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Vertaisarvioitu.

Refereed.

Peer-reviewed.

Nota di bibliografia

Sisältää bibliografisia viitteitä.

Sommario/riassunto

This book [Mediatized power and the return of the political] describes Finnish decision-makers’ relationship with the media. It is based on surveys in 2009 and 2019. In 2009 there were 419 and in 2019 484 respondents, all of them having an influential position in some of the eight societal sectors covered in the study. The results show a moderate change from a consensus-oriented and networking decision-making culture towards a more ideologic and power-based way of negotiating. However, it seems that this has not affected how open or transparent the negotiation-processes are or how prone the decision-makers are to leak confidential information. The decision-makers’ relationship with media publicity has become more professional and strategic. The results point to an increased role of social media in communications management while the role of the news media seems to be diminishing. Even though the decision-makers view publicity as an even more risky and strategic arena of political struggle than they did before, they also seem now acknowledge more clearly the rational aspects of journalism. The self-reported role of media publicity as a source of personal authority has somewhat diminished while there seems to be no change in how prone the decision-makers think they are for the impacts of media publicity.