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Media and Communication
2013 - 2025
Current editor(s): Raquel Silva From Cogitatio Press Bibliographic data for series maintained by António Vieira () and IT Department (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
2019, volume 7, articles 4
- Space for the Liminal pp. 1-7

- Valerie Belair-Gagnon, Avery E. Holton and Oscar Westlund
- Where Do We Draw the Line? Interlopers, (Ant)agonists, and an Unbounded Journalistic Field pp. 8-18

- Scott A. Eldridge
- Working on the Margins: Comparative Perspectives on the Roles and Motivations of Peripheral Actors in Journalism pp. 19-30

- Aljosha Karim Schapals, Phoebe Maares and Folker Hanusch
- Online Participatory Journalism: A Systematic Literature Review pp. 31-44

- Katherine M. Engelke
- The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism pp. 45-55

- Patrick Ferrucci and Jacob L. Nelson
- Molo.news: Experimentally Developing a Relational Platform for Local Journalism pp. 56-67

- Andreas Hepp and Wiebke Loosen
- Activism, Advertising, and Far-Right Media: The Case of Sleeping Giants pp. 68-79

- Joshua A. Braun, John D. Coakley and Emily West
- Open-Source Trading Zones and Boundary Objects: Examining GitHub as a Space for Collaborating on “News” pp. 80-91

- Mario Haim and Rodrigo Zamith
- From Peripheral to Integral? A Digital-Born Journalism Not for Profit in a Time of Crises pp. 92-102

- Alfred Hermida and Mary Lynn Young
- Negotiating Roles and Routines in Collaborative Investigative Journalism pp. 103-111

- Maria Konow-Lund
- Friend, Foe or Frenemy? Traditional Journalism Actors’ Changing Attitudes towards Peripheral Players and Their Innovations pp. 112-122

- Sherwin Chua and Andrew Duffy
- About Actor Positioning in Journalism…Slowly pp. 123-126

- Laura Ahva
- Prophets without Honor: Peripheral Actors in Kenyan Journalism pp. 127-132

- j. Siguru Wahutu
- Populist Postmodernism: When Cultural Critique of an Enlightenment Occupation Goes Viral pp. 133-137

- Jane B. Singer
- Journalism at the Periphery pp. 138-143

- Edson C. Tandoc
- Editorial: Video Games as Demanding Technologies pp. 144-148

- Nicholas David Bowman
- Modality-Specific Effects of Perceptual Load in Multimedia Processing pp. 149-165

- Jacob Taylor Fisher, Frederic René Hopp and René Weber
- Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger? The Relationship between Cognitive Task Demands in Video Games and Recovery Experiences pp. 166-175

- Tim Wulf, Diana Rieger, Anna Sophie Kümpel and Leonard Reinecke
- Between a Troll and a Hard Place: The Demand Framework’s Answer to One of Gaming’s Biggest Problems pp. 176-185

- Christine L. Cook
- Audible Efforts: Gender and Battle Cries in Classic Arcade Fighting Games pp. 186-197

- Milena Droumeva
- Cognitive and Behavioral Correlates of Achievement in a Complex Multi-Player Video Game pp. 198-212

- Adam M. Large, Benoit Bediou, Sezen Cekic, Yuval Hart, Daphne Bavelier and C. Shawn Green
- (A)morally Demanding Game? An Exploration of Moral Decision-Making in a Purpose-Made Video Game pp. 213-225

- Sarah E. Hodge, Jacqui Taylor and John McAlaney
- Interaction Tension: A Sociological Model of Attention and Emotion Demands in Video Gaming pp. 226-236

- Sebastian Deterding
- Elements of Infrastructure Demand in Multiplayer Video Games pp. 237-246

- Alexander Mirowski and Brian P. Harper
- Reducing Extrinsic Burdens on Players of Digital Games: An Integrated Framework pp. 247-259

- Harry Agius and Damon Daylamani-Zad
2019, volume 7, articles 3
- Selective Exposure in a Changing Political and Media Environment pp. 1-3

- María Luisa Humanes
- A Third Wave of Selective Exposure Research? The Challenges Posed by Hyperpartisan News on Social Media pp. 4-7

- Matthew Barnidge and Cynthia Peacock
- From Selective Exposure to Selective Information Processing: A Motivated Reasoning Approach pp. 8-11

- Lindita Camaj
- Picture Power? The Contribution of Visuals and Text to Partisan Selective Exposure pp. 12-31

- Thomas E. Powell, Toni G. L. A. van der Meer and Carlos Brenes Peralta
- Discussion Network Activation: An Expanded Approach to Selective Exposure pp. 32-41

- Benjamin A. Lyons
- Partisan Selective Exposure in Times of Political and Technological Upheaval: A Social Media Field Experiment pp. 42-53

- Cornelia Mothes and Jakob Ohme
- Civic Organizations and Digital Technologies in an Age of Distrust pp. 54-56

- Eric Gordon
- The Practice of Civic Tech: Tensions in the Adoption and Use of New Technologies in Community Based Organizations pp. 57-68

- Eric Gordon and Rogelio Alejandro Lopez
- “This Is Shared Work:” Negotiating Boundaries in a Social Service Intermediary Organization pp. 69-78

- Mariam Asad and Christopher A. Le Dantec
- Citizen Journalism and Public Participation in the Era of New Media in Indonesia: From Street to Tweet pp. 79-90

- Iswandi Syahputra and Rajab Ritonga
- AMEND: Open Source and Data-Driven Oversight of Water Quality in New England pp. 91-103

- Nathan Edward Sanders
- ‘Removing Barriers’ and ‘Creating Distance’: Exploring the Logics of Efficiency and Trust in Civic Technology pp. 104-113

- Eric Corbett and Christopher A. Le Dantec
- Public Discussion in Russian Social Media: An Introduction pp. 114-118

- Olessia Koltsova and Svetlana S. Bodrunova
- Beyond Left and Right: Real-World Political Polarization in Twitter Discussions on Inter-Ethnic Conflicts pp. 119-132

- Svetlana S. Bodrunova, Ivan Blekanov, Anna Smoliarova and Anna Litvinenko
- Public Deliberation in Russia: Deliberative Quality, Rationality and Interactivity of the Online Media Discussions pp. 133-144

- Olga Filatova, Yury Kabanov and Yuri Misnikov
- Redefining Media Agendas: Topic Problematization in Online Reader Comments pp. 145-156

- Olessia Koltsova and Oleg Nagornyy
- Newsworthiness and the Public’s Response in Russian Social Media: A Comparison of State and Private News Organizations pp. 157-166

- Darja Judina and Konstantin Platonov
- Making Sense of Emotions and Affective Investments in War: RT and the Syrian Conflict on YouTube pp. 167-178

- Precious N. Chatterje-Doody and Rhys Crilley
2019, volume 7, articles 2
- Critical Perspectives on Digital Literacies: Creating a Path Forward pp. 1-3

- Hiller A. Spires
- An Approach to Digital Literacy through the Integration of Media and Information Literacy pp. 4-13

- Marcus Leaning
- Assembling “Digital Literacies”: Contingent Pasts, Possible Futures pp. 14-24

- T. Philip Nichols and Amy Stornaiuolo
- Digital Literacies or Digital Competence: Conceptualizations in Nordic Curricula pp. 25-35

- Anna-Lena Godhe
- Multidimensional Approaches to Examining Digital Literacies in the Contemporary Global Society pp. 36-46

- Kewman M. Lee, Sohee Park, Bong Gee Jang and Byeong-Young Cho
- Expanding and Embedding Digital Literacies: Transformative Agency in Education pp. 47-58

- Andreas Lund, Anniken Furberg and Greta Björk Gudmundsdottir
- The Social Impact of Digital Youth Work: What Are We Looking For? pp. 59-68

- Alicja Pawluczuk, Gemma Webster, Colin Smith and Hazel Hall
- Reimagining Digital Literacies from a Feminist Perspective in a Postcolonial Context pp. 69-81

- Maha Bali
- Video Production in Elementary Teacher Education as a Critical Digital Literacy Practice pp. 82-99

- Diane Watt
- Digital Literacy Through Digital Citizenship: Online Civic Participation and Public Opinion Evaluation of Youth Minorities in Southeast Asia pp. 100-114

- Audrey Yue, Elmie Nekmat and Annisa R. Beta
- Digital Literacies Learning in Contexts of Development: A Critical Review of Six IDRC-Funded Interventions 2016–2018 pp. 115-127

- Michelle Schira Hagerman
- Empowering English Language Learners through Digital Literacies: Research, Complexities, and Implications pp. 128-136

- Chang Yuan, Lili Wang and Jessica Eagle
- They Need More Than Technology-Equipped Schools: Teachers’ Practice of Fostering Students’ Digital Protective Skills pp. 137-147

- Priscila Berger and Jens Wolling
- Self-Efficacy in Multimodal Narrative Educational Activities: Explorative Study in a Multicultural and Multilingual Italian Primary School pp. 148-159

- Monica Banzato and Francesca Coin
- (Un)Healthy Behavior? The Relationship between Media Literacy, Nutritional Behavior, and Self-Representation on Instagram pp. 160-168

- Claudia Riesmeyer, Julia Hauswald and Marina Mergen
- Introduction to “Refugee Crises Disclosed: Intersections between Media, Communication and Forced Migration Processes” pp. 169-172

- Vasiliki Tsagkroni and Amanda Alencar
- Social Media and Forced Migration: The Subversion and Subjugation of Political Life pp. 173-183

- Jay Marlowe
- Prospects of Refugee Integration in the Netherlands: Social Capital, Information Practices and Digital Media pp. 184-194

- Amanda Alencar and Vasilki Tsagkroni
- Refugee Organizations’ Public Communication: Conceptualizing and Exploring New Avenues for an Underdeveloped Research Subject pp. 195-206

- David Ongenaert
- “We Demand Better Ways to Communicate”: Pre-Digital Media Practices in Refugee Camps pp. 207-217

- Philipp Seuferling
- Citizenship Islands: The Ongoing Emergency in the Mediterranean Sea pp. 218-229

- Alessandra Von Burg
- In the Bullseye of Vigilantes: Mediated Vulnerabilities of Kyrgyz Labour Migrants in Russia pp. 230-241

- Rashid Gabdulhakov
- Urban & Online: Social Media Use among Adolescents and Sense of Belonging to a Super-Diverse City pp. 242-253

- Anne K. van Eldik, Julia Kneer and Jeroen Jansz
- Board Games as Interview Tools: Creating a Safe Space for Unaccompanied Refugee Children pp. 254-263

- Annamária Neag
- With a Little Help from My Friends: Peer Coaching for Refugee Adolescents and the Role of Social Media pp. 264-274

- Julia Kneer, Anne K. van Eldik, Jeroen Jansz, Susanne Eischeid and Melek Usta
- Narratives of the Refugee Crisis: A Comparative Study of Mainstream-Media and Twitter pp. 275-288

- Adina Nerghes and Ju-Sung Lee
- Business Support for Refugee Integration in Europe: Conceptualizing the Link with Organizational Identification pp. 289-299

- Yijing Wang and Vidhi Chaudhri
- Social Navigation and the Refugee Crisis: Traversing “Archipelagos” of Uncertainty pp. 300-302

- Melissa Wall
2019, volume 7, articles 1
- Introduction to Communicating on/with Minorities pp. 1-3

- Leen d’Haenens and Willem Joris
- Representation of Women in the News: Balancing between Career and Family Life pp. 4-12

- Hanne Vandenberghe
- Managing Super-Diversity on Television: The Representation of Ethnic Minorities in Flemish Non-Fiction Programmes pp. 13-21

- Koen Panis, Steve Paulussen and Alexander Dhoest
- ICT Use and Digital Inclusion among Roma/Gitano Adolescents pp. 22-31

- Maialen Garmendia and Inaki Karrera
- Risk and Culture of Health Portrayal in a U.S. Cross-Cultural TV Adaptation, a Pilot Study pp. 32-42

- Darien Perez Ryan and Patrick E. Jamieson
- Unpacking Attitudes on Immigrants and Refugees: A Focus on Household Composition and News Media Consumption pp. 43-55

- David De Coninck, Koen Matthijs, Marlies Debrael, Rozane De Cock and Leen d'Haenens
- Immigrant Children and the Internet in Spain: Uses, Opportunities, and Risks pp. 56-65

- Miguel Angel Casado, Carmelo Garitaonandia, Gorka Moreno and Estefania Jimenez
- Diversity in Western Countries: Journalism Culture, Migration Integration Policy and Public Opinion pp. 66-76

- Stefan Mertens, Olivier Standaert, Leen d'Haenens and Rozane De Cock
- Immigrant, Nationalist and Proud: A Twitter Analysis of Indian Diaspora Supporters for Brexit and Trump pp. 77-89

- Eviane Cheng Leidig
- We Live Here, and We Are Queer!: Young Gay Connected Migrants’ Transnational Ties and Integration in the Netherlands pp. 90-101

- Jeffrey Patterson and Koen Leurs
- The Cancer’s Margins Project: Access to Knowledge and Its Mobilization by LGBQ/T Cancer Patients pp. 102-113

- Evan T. Taylor, Mary K. Bryson, Lorna Boschman, Tae Hart, Jacqueline Gahagan, Genevieve Rail and Janice Ristock
- Advancing Engaged Scholarship in the Media Field pp. 114-116

- John V. Pavlik
- Optimizing Content with A/B Headline Testing: Changing Newsroom Practices pp. 117-127

- Nick Hagar and Nicholas Diakopoulos
- Does Fear of Isolation Disappear Online? Attention-Seeking Motivators in Online Political Engagement pp. 128-138

- KyuJin Shim and Klive (Soo-Kwang) Oh
- Social Television Viewing with Second Screen Platforms: Antecedents and Consequences pp. 139-152

- Miao Guo
- Audience-Centric Engagement, Collaboration Culture and Platform Counterbalancing: A Longitudinal Study of Ongoing Sensemaking of Emerging Technologies pp. 153-165

- Sherwin Chua and Oscar Westlund
- Invisible Locative Media: Key Considerations at the Nexus of Place and Digital Journalism pp. 166-178

- Ivar John Erdal, Kjetil Vaage Øie, Brett Oppegaard and Oscar Westlund
- Insularized Connectedness: Mobile Chat Applications and News Production pp. 179-188

- Colin Agur
- Conducting Research on the World’s Changing Mediascape: Principles and Practices pp. 189-192

- John V. Pavlik, Everette E. Dennis, Rachel Davis Mersey and Justin Gengler
- Journalism and Social Media: Redistribution of Power? pp. 193-197

- Marcel Broersma and Scott A. Eldridge
- Political Journalists and Their Social Media Audiences: New Power Relations pp. 198-212

- Axel Bruns and Christian Nuernbergk
- Exploring Political Journalism Homophily on Twitter: A Comparative Analysis of US and UK Elections in 2016 and 2017 pp. 213-224

- Kelly Fincham
- Mapping Political Discussions on Twitter: Where the Elites Remain Elites pp. 225-234

- Chrysi Dagoula
- The Role of Journalism on YouTube: Audience Engagement with ‘Superbug’ Reporting pp. 235-247

- Monika Djerf-Pierre, Mia Lindgren and Mikayla Alexis Budinski
- Crossing the Line between News and the Business of News: Exploring Journalists’ Use of Twitter pp. 248-258

- Stephen Jukes
- The Dislocation of News Journalism: A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Epistemologies of Digital Journalism pp. 259-270

- Mats Ekström and Oscar Westlund
- Disintermediation in Social Networks: Conceptualizing Political Actors’ Construction of Publics on Twitter pp. 271-285

- Scott A. Eldridge, Lucía García-Carretero and Marcel Broersma
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On this page- 2019, volume 7
-
Articles 4
Articles 3 Articles 2 Articles 1
Other years2025, volume 13
2024, volume 12
2023, volume 11
2022, volume 10
2021, volume 9
2020, volume 8
2018, volume 6
2017, volume 5
2016, volume 4
2015, volume 3
2014, volume 2
2013, volume 1
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On this page- 2019, volume 7
-
Articles 4
Articles 3 Articles 2 Articles 1
Other years2025, volume 13
2024, volume 12
2023, volume 11
2022, volume 10
2021, volume 9
2020, volume 8
2018, volume 6
2017, volume 5
2016, volume 4
2015, volume 3
2014, volume 2
2013, volume 1
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