Deliberation, Democracy, and the Media
Contributions by James Bohman, Andrew Calabrese, Heather Fraizer, Roderick P. Hart, Gerard A. Hauser, Shanto Iyengar, Alison M. Jaggar University of Colorado, Boulder, Mark Kingwell, Doug McAdam Stanford University, James W. Nickel, Phil Weiser Edited by Simone Chambers University of Toronto, Anne Costain
Publication date:
20 September 2000Length of book:
232 pagesPublisher
Rowman & Littlefield PublishersDimensions:
228x149mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780847698110
Is deliberative democracy the ideal goal of free speech? How do social movement organizations, activists, and political candidates use the media to frame their discourse? What responsibilities does the media have in maintaining or promoting democracy? In this broadly interdisciplinary volume, top scholars in communication, political science, sociology, law, and philosophy offer new perspectives on these and other intersections within democratic discourse and media. Interweaving elements of social, political, and communication theory, they take on First Amendment and legal issues, privacy rights, media effects and agenda setting, publicity, multiculturalism, gender issues, universalism and global culture, and the rhetoric of the body, among other topics. This unique book provides a foundation for evaluating the current state of democratic discourse and will be of interest to students and scholars of deliberative democracy across the social sciences.
Concerned with the intersection and interdependence of public deliberation, democracy, and a politically free but responsible mass media, this volume of essays by prominent scholars in a variety of fields constitutes an important contribution to the literature on the wellsprings and safeguards of free speech, democracy, and civil society in the literally heavily-mediated social world of today. Particularly illuminating and provocative is the book’s interdisciplinary discussion of the ways in which the media is and can be used in the service of deliberative equality within the public sphere—and of the ways in which the media can function both to facilitate and inhibit deliberative democracy.