All Stories

  1. Editorial
  2. Through the Lens: The Pandemic and Black Lives Matter, Lauren Walsh (2022)
  3. Editorial
  4. Egypt’s feminist counterpublic: The re-invigoration of the post-revolution public sphere
  5. Photographing the ‘battlefield’: The role of ideology in photojournalist practices during the anti-austerity protests in Greece
  6. ‘Searching for something to believe in’: Voter uncertainty in a post-truth environment
  7. “Yes We Vote”: Civic Mobilisation and Impulsive Engagement on Instagram
  8. Prototype politics: technology-intensive campaigning and the data of democracy
  9. The structure of political e-expression: What the Brexit campaign can teach us about political talk on Facebook
  10. Social media campaigning in Europe: Mapping the terrain
  11. What Drives Political Participation? Motivations and Mobilization in a Digital Age
  12. Digital Politics: Mobilization, Engagement, and Participation
  13. Civic political engagement and social change in the new digital age
  14. Comparing online campaigning: The evolution of interactive campaigning from Royal to Obama to Hollande
  15. The normalization of online campaigning in the web.2.0 era
  16. Introduction: Political Communication, Digital Technology and the Challenges of the ‘New Normal’
  17. The professionals speak: Practitioners’ perspectives on professional election campaigning
  18. Towards hypermedia campaigning? Perceptions of new media's importance for campaigning by party strategists in comparative perspective
  19. Interactivity and Branding: Public Political Communication as a Marketing Tool
  20. Poland’s 2011 Online Election Campaign: New Tools, New Professionalism, New Ways to Win Votes
  21. Elite Tweets: Analyzing the Twitter Communication Patterns of Labour Party Peers in the House of Lords
  22. Politics and the Internet in Comparative Context
  23. The Media, Political Participation and Empowerment
  24. Online Political Communication Strategies: MEPs, E-Representation, and Self-Representation
  25. Reaching Inward Not Outward: Marketing via the Internet at the UK 2010 General Election
  26. Political Campaigning, Elections and the Internet
  27. Customer Lifetime Value
  28. Knowledge sharing and lesson learning: consultants' perspectives on the international sharing of political marketing strategy
  29. People, parties and parliaments: Election campaigns, media and their impactMaierMichaelaStrömbäckJesperKaidLynda Lee (eds), Political Communication in European Parliamentary Elections, Ashgate: Farnham, 2011; 268 pp.: £60.00WringDominicMortimoreRogerAt...
  30. The Member for Cyberspace
  31. Campaign Websites and Hypermedia Campaigning: Lessons from the Ed Balls Labour Leadership Campaign 2010
  32. Informing, engaging, mobilizing or interacting: Searching for a European model of web campaigning
  33. Political Public Relations
  34. Microblogging, Constituency Service and Impression Management: UK MPs and the Use of Twitter
  35. Tentative steps towards interaction
  36. Political Parties and Web 2.0: The Liberal Democrat Perspective
  37. Levels of Interactivity in the 2007 French Presidential Candidates’ Websites
  38. Building an Architecture of Participation? Political Parties and Web 2.0 in Britain
  39. MPs and E-representation: Me, MySpace and I
  40. Reviews: Heather Savigny, The Problem of Political Marketing. London: Continuum, 2008. £60.00. 147 pp
  41. SEEKING UNMEDIATED POLITICAL INFORMATION IN A MEDIATED ENVIRONMENT: The uses and gratifications of political parties' e-newsletters
  42. Key Concepts in Political Communication
  43. Political Marketing: The Cause of an Emerging Democratic Deficit in Britain?
  44. The Impact of Political Marketing on Internal Party Democracy
  45. Just Public Relations or an Attempt at Interaction?
  46. Review Article: Politics, Citizens and Cyberspace
  47. Not Big Brand Names but Corner Shops
  48. The Rise of a Proactive Local Media Strategy in British Political Communication: clear continuities and evolutionary change 1966-2001
  49. Whose Left? Working-Class Political Allegiances in Post-industrial Britain
  50. Professionalization: Of What? Since When? By Whom?
  51. Professionalization
  52. The Professionalization of Political Communication
  53. THE BRITISH LABOUR PARTY AND THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC DURING THE ERA OF NON-RECOGNITION, 1949–1973