Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A common critique of critical political economy (often from the cultural studies approach) is that, like Marx, it fetishizes capitalism and is deterministic technologically and/or economically. [1] Christian Fuchs and Vincent Mosco in their book Marx and the Political Economy of the Media compile the effects of media communication in a ...
Nick Dyer-Witheford (born 1951) is an American author and associate professor at the University of Western Ontario in the Faculty of Information and Media Studies. [1] His area of study primarily focuses on the rise of technology and the internet, as well as their continuous impact on modern society.
The Journal of Political Economy is a monthly peer-reviewed academic journal published by the University of Chicago Press. Established by James Laurence Laughlin in 1892, it covers both theoretical and empirical economics . [ 1 ]
The Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC), the national association of journalism and mass communication scholars and media professionals to which Tankard devoted much of his professional life, posthumously honored him as the 2006 recipient of the Eleanor Blum Distinguished Service to Research Award. [2]
James Richard O'Connor (April 20, 1930 – November 12, 2017) [1] was an American political economist and professor of sociology. He was born April 20, 1930, in Boston, Massachusetts, and died November 12, 2017, in Santa Cruz, California. Together with Barbara Laurence he founded the journal Capitalism Nature Socialism in 1988. [2]
Stephen Barber – noted for his work on political strategy and political economy, author of Political Strategy; Line Bareiro – Paraguayan political scientist, civil rights activist and feminist [61] Joel Barkan – (1941-2014) was an American political scientist with an expertise in political development in Africa. [62] [63]
James Carey focuses heavily on the significant changes that the telegraph has made to society, in relation to the diminishing constraints of space on communication. The insignificance of geography subsequently enabled communities to move away from the local and towards the national, and international or global.
James Ralph Beniger (December 16, 1946 [1] – April 12, 2010) was an American historian and sociologist and Professor of Communications and Sociology at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California, particularly known for his early work on the history of quantitative graphics in statistics, [2] [3] and his later work on the technological and economic origins ...