Televised presidential debates and public policy

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Televised presidential debates and public policy

Sidney Kraus

(LEA's communication series)

Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers, 2000

2nd ed

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 297-311) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

With this second edition, Kraus continues his examination of formal presidential debates, considering the experience of television in presidential elections, reviewing what has been learned about televised debates, and evaluating that knowledge in the context of the election process, specifically, and the political process, generally. He also examines the media and the role they occupy in presidential elections. Because critics often refer to the Lincoln-Douglas debates when reproaching presidential debates, comparisons of the two are discussed throughout the book. Much of the data and information for this accounting of televised presidential debates comes from the author's first-hand experience as one who was involved with these debates as a participant observer, on site at nearly all of the debates discussed. Throughout these discussions, emphasis is placed on the implications for public policy. To suggest policy that will be accepted and adopted by politicians and the public is, at best, difficult. Proposals for changes in public policy based on experience -- even when scientific data support those changes -- must be subjected to an assessment of the values and predispositions of the proponent. These values and predispositions, however, may not necessarily inhibit the proponent's objectivity. As such, this review of television use in the presidential election process provides the context for examining televised debates.

Table of Contents

Contents: Dedication. Preface. Dedication (First Edition). Preface (First Edition). Introduction. Overview: Television and the Presidential Election. Debate Formats: Candidates in Charge. Debate Coverage: Who's Winning. Debate Effects: Voters Win. Debate Policy: Every Four Years by Mandate. Addendum: Participant-Observation and Retrospective Interviewing: Methods for Depicting Communication Events.

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