Browsing by Subject "Kommunikationsforschung"
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Publication Intermedia agenda-setting from the far right? Three case studies on spillover effects by alternative media inGermany(2023) Klawier, TilmanRight-wing alternative media can increase their public impact if they succeed to set their issues on the mainstream media’s agenda. In three qualitative case studies, the present article explores whether and how such intermedia agenda-setting occurs in Germany. Special attention is given to spillover effects between different actors, both at the level of attention and tone towards the issues. Furthermore, the analysis of news articles is supplemented with Twitter data to account for the role of social media. Two of the case studies indicate that right-wing alternative media contributed to push pseudo-scandals into the mainstream. The analyses also reveal alternative news outlets with particular agenda-setting power and point to the crucial role of tabloid media as a bridge to the mainstream. The third study, however, which centered on the Global Compact for Migration, presents a case where intermedia agenda-setting failed. Against this background, the article discusses the conditions under which intermedia agenda-setting by right-wing alternative media is likely to occur and how journalists should deal with such attempts.Publication Interne Kommunikation in der Wahrnehmung von Mitarbeitern : Ergebnisse einer Befragung(2009) ; Huck-Sandhu, SimoneDie interne Kommunikation ist eines der zentralen Felder der Organisations- oder Unternehmenskommunikation. In der Praxis professionalisiert sie sich zusehends: Was früher von PR-Fachleuten als Allroundern der Organisationskommunikation mit abgedeckt wurde, ist heute in immer mehr Organisationen eine eigenständige Teilfunktion der Kommunikation. Abteilungen für interne Kommunikation existieren nicht mehr länger nur in Großunternehmen, sondern zunehmend auch in mittelständischen Unternehmen, in Non-Profit-Organisationen oder Behörden. Damit einher geht der Bedarf an qualifizierten Fachkräften, die nicht nur die Medien interner Kommunikation gestalten und mit Inhalten füllen können, sondern auch der strategischen Dimension interner Kommunikation und ihrer Einbettung in die Organisationskommunikation insgesamt gerecht werden.Publication Privacy, self-disclosure, social support, and social network site use : research report of a three-year panel study(2013) Trepte, Sabine; Dienlin, Tobias; Reinecke, LeonardThis research report presents data from a study conducted in Germany based on a 3-year panel design. From October 2009 to April 2012, five waves of data collection were established. N = 327 participants from a convenience sample gave answers to questions regarding media use, privacy behaviors, well-being, social support, authenticity, and specific online experiences with a particular emphasis on social network sites (SNSs). It was found that across the 3 years of the study, people increasingly gained online social capital, developed a greater need for privacy, started to disclose more personal information online, and continually spent more time on SNSs. At the same time, people's willingness to disclose information in offline settings as well as their risk assessment of SNSs significantly decreased over time. Furthermore, frequent users of SNSs had more online social capital than less frequent users, disclosed more personal information online, knew more ways to restrict the access to their profiles, and were more authentic in their online profiles. People who had a higher need for privacy were less satisfied with their lives, less authentic in both their personal relationships and their online profiles, and generally showed more negative effects on different psychological variables. Respondents who had more online social capital also reported having more general positive affect and more offline social support. In the research report, further results are reported: Each variable is presented both individually and in context with other measures. The study is the first longitudinal study on online privacy and as such the first to be able to report mutual causalities between online experiences and privacy behaviors.