The Internet and Democracy Building in Lusophone African Countries

Capa
Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 28/11/2014 - 198 páginas
This timely book fills an important gap in the literature on the influence of the Internet and new media in Portuguese speaking African countries. Based on extensive field work throughout the region, the author examines the influence of the Internet in the transition to democracy in Africa, and asks whether there are new possibilities for popular activism to emerge from evolving communication environments and media systems.

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Acerca do autor (2014)

Susana Salgado (Ph.D. 2007, University of Lisbon) is a researcher and professor of political communication and media and politics. Her main research interests are political communication, comparative media studies, media and democratization, media and elections, and politics and the Internet. Over the last few years her comparative research projects have been broad in geographical scope, and include different projects on Europe, Portugal and Brazil and an extensive analysis of the role of the media in African democratization processes in comparative perspective. Her publications include three single-authored books and several book chapters and journal articles in peer-reviewed publications on these topics. Susana is a member of the Network of European Political Communication Scholars (Nepocs), which is a network for furthering research and teaching in comparative political communication. She is also member of the management committee of COST Action IS1308: Populist Political Communication in Europe's New Media Environment: Comprehending the Challenge of Mediated Political Populism for Democratic Politics, as well as vice-chair of the working group: Populist Actors as Communicators.

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