Extent: | Online-Ressource |
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Series: | |
Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Type of publication (narrower categories): | Hochschulschrift |
Language: | English |
Thesis: | Zugl.: Zurich, Univ., Diss., 2013 |
Notes: | Lizenzpflichtig Cover; 1. Introduction; 1.1. The Financial Sector and the Media; 1.2. State of the Art; 1.3. Research Questions; Is the Attribution of Responsibility in the Media Affected by Institutional Factors?; Is there a Pattern to Redress Legitimacy?; 1.4. Thesis Outline; 2. Responsibility of Non-Elected Policy Actors in Times of Crisis; 2.1. Is the Attribution of Responsibility in the Media Affected by Institutional Factors?; 2.1.1. New Forms of Governance; 2.1.2. The Democratic Chain of Delegation; 2.1.3. Independent Regulatory Agencies and their Sources of Legitimacy 2.1.4. The Supervisory Architecture - Fragmented Responsibilities 2.1.5. The Accountability in the Media; Responsibility - a Prerequisite for Accountability; The Concept of Accountability; The Media as a Forum for Responsibility Attribution; 2.2. Synthesis of the Theoretical Concepts; 2.2.1. Elected and Non-Elected Policy Actors in the Media; 2.2.2. The Supervisory Architecture in the Media; 2.2.3. The Media System; Majoritarian vs. Consensus Democracy; Political Orientation of the Press; Journalism Cultures; 2.2.4. Hypotheses; Position in the Democratic Chain of Delegation Theoretical Framework Part I 2.3. From Explaining a Legitimacy Deficit to the Redress of Legitimacy; 2.4. Regulatory Communication and Legitimacy; 2.5. Is there a Pattern to Redress Legitimacy?; 2.5.1. The Strategies of Regulatory Communication; 2.5.2. Constructing Legitimacy within Regulatory Communication; 2.5.3. Synthesis of the Theoretical Concepts; 2.5.4. Addressee of Blame in the Media; 2.5.5. Institutional Context; The Supervisory Architecture - Fragmented Responsibilities; The Media System; Sensitivity to Accountability Issues; 2.5.6. Hypotheses; Supervisory Architecture Theoretical Framework Part II 3. Case selection and Methods; 3.1. The Study Design; 3.2. Case selection; 3.2.1. Country Selection; 3.2.2. Time Period of Analysis; 3.3. Data Collection; 3.3.1. Media Analysis; Building the Sample; Codebook; Reliability of the Media Analysis; Validity of the Media Analysis; 3.3.2. Analysis of Press Releases; Sample Building; Switzerland; Germany; The United Kingdom; Codebook; Reliability of the Press Release Analysis; Validity of the Press Release Analysis; 3.4. Data Analysis; 3.4.1. Media Analysis; Measurement of Concepts 3.4.2. Press Release Analysis Measurement of Concepts; 3.5. The Three Countries under Scrutiny; 3.5.1. Switzerland; The Political System; The Media System; The Financial Sector and the Supervisory Architecture; 3.5.2. Germany; The Political System; The Media System; The Financial Sector and the Supervisory Architecture; 3.5.3. The United Kingdom; The Political System; The Media System; The Financial Sector and the Supervisory Architecture; 4. How do Institutional Features of Non-elected Policy Actors affect their Legitimacy?; 4.1. The General Attribution Structure 4.2. The Position in the Democratic Chain of Delegation |
ISBN: | 978-3-8452-5495-1 ; 978-3-8487-1449-0 ; 978-3-8487-1449-0 |
Other identifiers: | 10.5771/9783845254951 [DOI] |
Source: | ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011679383