Taking sides: the press and the 2006 Presidential elections
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5007/%25xAbstract
Media behavior has become a central element in the study of elections today. Presidential elections, as disputes that are more personalized and have greater visibility, are privileged occasions for the study of journalistic coverage, for the purposes of understanding and evaluating their political implications. This article analyzes news reporting on the major candidates in the 2006 presidential dispute that appeared in the three major Brazilian daily newspapers enjoying nationwide circulation. Through the analysis of data collected by the Doxa Laboratory (Laboratory for Research on Political Communication and Public Opinion, part of the Instituto Universitário de Pesquisa do Rio de Janeiro) between February 1 and October 1, 2006, we obtain a general sense of the positions that each news daily took in relation to the different candidates during crucial moments of the campaign. Keywords: criteria of “newsworthiness”; political journalism; media and democracy.Downloads
Published
2007-07-01
Issue
Section
Thematic Dossier
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The articles and other work published in Política & Sociedade, a journal associated to the Graduate Program in Sociology at UFSC, are the property of the journal. A new publication of the same text, whether by the initiative of the author or third parties, must indicate that it was previously published in this journal, citing the edition and date of publication.
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