Do the media set the parliamentary agenda? A comparative study in seven countries. Vliegenthart, R., Walgrave, S., Baumgartner, F. R., Bevan, S., Breunig, C., Brouard, S., Bonafont, L. C., Grossman, E., Jennings, W., Mortensen, P. B., Palau, A. M., Sciarini, P., & Tresch, A. European Journal of Political Research, 55(2):283--301, May, 2016.
Do the media set the parliamentary agenda? A comparative study in seven countries [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
A growing body of work has examined the relationship between media and politics from an agenda-setting perspective: Is attention for issues initiated by political elites with the media following suit, or is the reverse relation stronger? A long series of single-country studies has suggested a number of general agenda-setting patterns but these have never been confirmed in a comparative approach. In a comparative, longitudinal design including comparable media and politics evidence for seven European countries (Belgium, Denmark, France, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom), this study highlights a number of generic patterns. Additionally, it shows how the political system matters. Overall, the media are a stronger inspirer of political action in countries with single-party governments compared to those with multiple-party governments for opposition parties. But, government parties are more reactive to media under multiparty governments.
@article{vliegenthart_media_2016-1,
	title = {Do the media set the parliamentary agenda? {A} comparative study in seven countries},
	volume = {55},
	copyright = {© 2016 European Consortium for Political Research},
	issn = {1475-6765},
	shorttitle = {Do the media set the parliamentary agenda?},
	url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.proxy.lib.sfu.ca/doi/10.1111/1475-6765.12134/abstract},
	doi = {10.1111/1475-6765.12134},
	abstract = {A growing body of work has examined the relationship between media and politics from an agenda-setting perspective: Is attention for issues initiated by political elites with the media following suit, or is the reverse relation stronger? A long series of single-country studies has suggested a number of general agenda-setting patterns but these have never been confirmed in a comparative approach. In a comparative, longitudinal design including comparable media and politics evidence for seven European countries (Belgium, Denmark, France, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom), this study highlights a number of generic patterns. Additionally, it shows how the political system matters. Overall, the media are a stronger inspirer of political action in countries with single-party governments compared to those with multiple-party governments for opposition parties. But, government parties are more reactive to media under multiparty governments.},
	language = {en},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2016-04-16},
	journal = {European Journal of Political Research},
	author = {Vliegenthart, Rens and Walgrave, Stefaan and Baumgartner, Frank R. and Bevan, Shaun and Breunig, Christian and Brouard, Sylvain and Bonafont, Laura Chaqués and Grossman, Emiliano and Jennings, Will and Mortensen, Peter B. and Palau, Anna M. and Sciarini, Pascal and Tresch, Anke},
	month = may,
	year = {2016},
	keywords = {Agenda-setting, comparative research, Media, parliamentary questions, political systems},
	pages = {283--301},
	file = {Full Text PDF:files/54416/Vliegenthart et al. - 2016 - Do the media set the parliamentary agenda A compa.pdf:application/pdf;Snapshot:files/54417/abstract.html:text/html}
}

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