0000000000406631

AUTHOR

ØYvind Ihlen

0000-0002-5001-3796

showing 3 related works from this author

Lobbying, the public interest, and democracy: Communication perspectives

2020

Public AdministrationPolitical sciencePolitical economymedia_common.quotation_subjectPolitical Science and International RelationsDemocracyPublic interestmedia_commonJournal of Public Affairs
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Beyond the Cultural Turn: A Critical Perspective on Culture-Discourse within Public Relations

2017

International audience; In 1992, Sriramesh and White (1992) pointed to the importance of culture for public relations. Two decades later, public relations scholars had answered their call in force (e.g., Bardhan & Weaver, 2011; Carayol & Frame, 2012; Edwards & Hodges, 2011; Sriramesh & Vercic, 2012). Sriramesh and other PR scholars have criticized much previous public relations research for its focus on the work of Hofstede and cultural characteristics that are apparently common across countries (Sriramesh, 2009), rather than approaches which present culture as a social phenomenon on the level of the social group (Frame, 2012), or as a communication resource or tool-kit (Swidler, 1986). Sri…

Cultural appropriationValue (ethics)stereotypesbusiness.industry[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesmedia_common.quotation_subjectculture discoursePublic relationsCultural turnSocial constructionism[SHS.INFO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesculturePublic RelationsCritical intercultural theoryOriginalityCultural determinismcultural turnHofstede's cultural dimensions theorySociologyIdeologybusinesssocial discourseCultural determinismCultural appropriationmedia_common
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Trade Unions and Lobbying: Fighting Private Interests While Defending the Public Interest?

2020

Although framing theory has been extensively studied in strategic communication comparatively, little is known about how trade unions, as a specific type of organization, use framing strategies to achieve their organizational goals. Trade unions frequently aim to present themselves as cause groups, campaigning for broader societal benefits and values. A key communicative challenge for them is to argue that the interest of their members equates to the public interest. How do trade unions communicatively construct links between union interests and the public interest? How is this strategy reconciled with the more conflict-oriented framing found in much traditional union discourse? This study …

lobbausammattiliitotyleinen etuqualitative analysislobbying campaignscomparative case studytrade unionstrategic communicationframing theorypublic interestviestintä
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