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1

Aggarwal, S. K. Media credibility. New Delhi, India: Mittal Publications, 1989.

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2

Aggarwal, S. K. Media credibility. New Delhi, India: Mittal Publications, 1989.

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3

Yes, credibility: La precaria credibilità del sistema dei media. Rome, Italy]: UCSI UniSOB CDG, 2010.

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4

J, Metzger Miriam, and Hartsell Ethan, eds. Kids and credibility: An empirical examination of youth, digital media use, and information credibility. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 2010.

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5

Zhongguo chuan mei gong xin li diao cha: Investigation on Chinese media credibility. Nanjing Shi: Nanjing shi fan da xue chu ban she, 2010.

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6

Online credibility and digital ethos: Evaluating computer-mediated communication. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference, 2013.

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7

Association, World Media, ed. Media credibility and social responsibility: Proceedings of the seventh World Media Conference, November 19-22, 1984, Tokyo, Japan. Washington, D.C. (3600 New York Ave., NE, Washington 20002): World Media Association, 1985.

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8

Zhuan xing qi de Zhongguo chuan mei gong xin li: Study on the transition of media credibility in China. Nanjing Shi: Nanjing shi fan da xue chu ban she, 2013.

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9

Social media strategies for professionals and their firms: The guide to establishing credibility and accelerating relationships. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2010.

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10

Golden, Michelle, and Michelle Golden. Social media strategies for professionals and their firms: The guide to establishing credibility and accelerating relationships. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2010.

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11

The zen of social media marketing: An easier way to build credibility, generate buzz, and increase revenue. Dallas, Tex: Benbella Books, 2010.

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12

Hyder, Shama. The zen of social media marketing: An easier way to build credibility, generate buzz, and increase revenue. 2nd ed. Dallas, Tex: Benbella Books, 2012.

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13

Marketing shortcuts for the self-employed: Leverage resources, establish online credibility, and crush your competition. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2011.

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14

Zhongguo da zhong mei jie de chuan bo xiao guo yu gong xin li yan jiu: Ji chu li lun, ping ce fang fa yu shi zheng fen xi = Study on communication effects and credibility of Chinese mass media : the foundational theory, measuring methods and empirical analyses. Beijing Shi: Jing ji ke xue chu ban she, 2009.

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15

Wong-She, Nadine. Designing a new media future: It could be argued that the design sector has missed opportunities in the new media market.Is it possible to create a tool that would raise the design sector's profile and increase its credibility? : MA Design Studies 2002. London: Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design, 2002.

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16

Dennis, Everette E. The politics of media credibility. [12p], 1986.

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17

Flanagin, Andrew J., Elisia Choi, Ethan Hartsell, Alex Markov, and Ryan Medders. Kids and Credibility: An Empirical Examination of Youth, Digital Media Use, and Information Credibility. MIT Press, 2010.

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18

Flanagin, Andrew J., Ethan Hartsell, Alex Markov, Ryan Medders, and Miriam J. Metzger. Kids and Credibility: An Empirical Examination of Youth, Digital Media Use, and Information Credibility. MIT Press, 2010.

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19

Flanagin, Andrew, and Miriam J. Metzger. Digital Media and Perceptions of Source Credibility in Political Communication. Edited by Kate Kenski and Kathleen Hall Jamieson. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199793471.013.65.

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The rich research heritage on source credibility is fundamentally linked to processes of political communication and the provision of political information. Networked digital technologies, however, have recently complicated the assessment of source credibility by modifying people’s ability to determine source expertise and trustworthiness, which are the foundations upon which credibility evaluations have traditionally rested. This chapter explores source credibility in online contexts by examining the credibility of digital versus traditional channels, the nature of political information conveyed by social media, and the dynamics of political information online. In addition, this chapter considers related research concerns, including the link between credibility and selective exposure, the potential for group polarization, and the role of social media in seeking and delivering credible political information. These concerns suggest challenges and opportunities as information consumers navigate the contemporary information environment in search of the knowledge to make them informed members of a politically engaged citizenry.
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20

(Editor), Miriam J. Metzger, and Andrew J. Flanagin (Editor), eds. Digital Media, Youth, and Credibility (John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning). The MIT Press, 2007.

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21

(Editor), Miriam J. Metzger, and Andrew J. Flanagin (Editor), eds. Digital Media, Youth, and Credibility (John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Series on Digital Media and Learning). The MIT Press, 2007.

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22

Martin, Gail. Essential Social Media Marketing Handbook: A New Roadmap for Maximizing Your Brand, Influence, and Credibility. Red Wheel/Weiser, 2017.

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23

Golden, Michelle, and Bruce W. Marcus. Social Media Strategies for Professionals and Their Firms: The Guide to Establishing Credibility and Accelerating Relationships. Wiley & Sons, Limited, John, 2010.

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24

The essential social media marketing handbook: A new roadmap for maximizing your brand, influence, and credibility. Weiser, 2017.

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25

Golden, Michelle, and Bruce W. Marcus. Social Media Strategies for Professionals and Their Firms: The Guide to Establishing Credibility and Accelerating Relationships. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2010.

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26

Golden, Michelle, and Bruce W. Marcus. Social Media Strategies for Professionals and Their Firms: The Guide to Establishing Credibility and Accelerating Relationships. Wiley & Sons, Limited, John, 2010.

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27

Hyder, Shama. The zen of social media marketing: An easier way to build credibility, generate buzz, and increase revenue. 2013.

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28

The zen of social media marketing: An easier way to build credibility, generate buzz, and increase revenue. 4th ed. 2016.

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29

Benkler, Yochai, Robert Faris, and Hal Roberts. Mainstream Media Failure Modes and Self-Healing in a Propaganda-Rich Environment. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190923624.003.0006.

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This chapter examines how mainstream media operated in a propaganda-rich environment by focusing on its failure and recovery modes. In particular, this chapter analyzes two central attributes of mainstream media and professional journalism that shaped election coverage, and in some cases made them particularly susceptible to being manipulated into spreading right-wing propaganda: balance and the scoop culture. The chapter first considers how internal dynamics of news reporting led mainstream media to emphasize the email investigation over substantive discussion of politics. The chapter then shows how Breitbart exploited the hunger for scoops, along with the public performance of objectivity and critical remove of mainstream journalism, to utilize the credibility of the New York Times, and later other major publications, to propagate and accredit the “Clinton corruption” frame. Finally, the chapter describes the failures and corrective mechanisms surrounding the recipients of President Donald Trump’s Fake News Awards for 2017.
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30

Solberg, Rorie. Covering the Courts. Edited by Lee Epstein and Stefanie A. Lindquist. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199579891.013.28.

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Scholarly examination of the media coverage of the Supreme Court occurs for both intrinsic and instrumental purposes. Scholarly study of media coverage of the Court examines the content, frame, and magnitude of the coverage. Pushing further, these examinations provide critical information about the relationship between media coverage and the institutional credibility of the Court. Studies of media coverage are also instrumental as they provide metrics useful in the explication of judicial behavior. Despite the usefulness of the work explored here, the knowledge gained may be expiring. As social networks usurp traditional and online media sources as the conduit for information, our focus on the relationship of the mass media, its coverage of the Court, and various questions of judicial legitimacy or public knowledge may be expiring.
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31

Benkler, Yochai, Robert Faris, and Hal Roberts. The Architecture of Our Discontent. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190923624.003.0002.

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This chapter presents the book’s macrolevel findings about the architecture of political communication and the news media ecosystem in the United States from 2015 to 2018. Two million stories published during the 2016 presidential election campaign are analyzed, along with another 1.9 million stories about Donald Trump’s presidency during his first year. The chapter examines patterns of interlinking between online media sources to understand the relations of authority and credibility among publishers, as well as the media sharing practices of Twitter and Facebook users to elucidate social media attention patterns. The data and mapping reveal not only a profoundly polarized media landscape but stark asymmetry: the right is more insular, skewed towards the extreme, and set apart from the more integrated media ecosystem of the center, center-left, and left.
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32

Rice, Ronald E., and Ryan Fuller. Theoretical Perspectives in the Study of Communication and the Internet. Edited by William H. Dutton. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199589074.013.0017.

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This chapter exposes the prominence of different theoretical perspectives on the Internet. A broad scope of primary and secondary theories has been increasingly used to understand the social and communicative aspects of the Internet and the increasingly specialized areas being developed by Internet researchers, such as around social media. The chapters published in the first half of the period (2000–04) are compared to those in the second period of the sample (2005–09). It is observed that the media attributes, the public sphere, and community have been the most popular theory themes. There are also opportunities for further theoretical development in the areas of credibility/trust, participatory media/users, relational management, and cultural differences.
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33

Gerstlé, Jacques. Political Communication. Edited by Robert Elgie, Emiliano Grossman, and Amy G. Mazur. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199669691.013.18.

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This chapter provides a panorama of the community of scholars in France who work on political communication broadly understood and situates that body of work in the fundamentally interdisciplinary international field of political communication. The study of political communication in France, largely conducted by political scientists, has had to struggle to have its scientific credibility acknowledged both inside and outside France, arguably more so than other disciplines. While the scientific community, dominated by US-based scholars and often using the electoral persuasion paradigm, has become increasingly institutionalized at the international level, French scholars have been quite resistant to this international work. Recently, the electoral persuasion paradigm has been embraced to a certain degree and the emerging French research agenda includes experimental approaches, some critical sociology, and, as with all countries, a focus on new media. There has been little evidence of the ‘French touch,’ however, in the international political communication community.
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34

Bhatia, Sunil. Traveling Transnational Identities. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199964727.003.0005.

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This chapter describes how the transnationally oriented elite and upper-class urban Indian youth are negotiating their everyday experiences with globalization. It shows how the college-age elite youth psychologically imagine themselves as being world-class citizens not just by going abroad but also by reimagining new forms of Indianness through their active participation in specific cultural practices of watching American media, shopping at exclusive malls, and constructing emancipatory narratives of globalization. The transnational urban youth’s narratives are hybrid and are organized around an Indianness that is mobile, multicultural, connected to consumption practices, and crosses borders easily. Being a global Indian means displaying a kind of transnational cultural difference that has the right currency and credibility and that can be transported to other countries, where it is accepted as legitimate, valid, and as having a world-class standing. Selected parts of Indian culture can be adopted in their travels and study-abroad stints.
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35

Wei, Ran, and Ven-hwei Lo. News in their Pockets. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197523728.001.0001.

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This book explores the societal, technological, and user-related factors in understanding why and how digitally savvy college students in Asia’s most mobile cities—Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taipei—seek news via the mobile phone, how they evaluate mobile news for credibility and usefulness, and the consequences of this practice: becoming engaged with mobile news, which then teaches them about current affairs. The analyses are situated at the intersection of technological advances from 3G to 4G and marked differences in political and media systems across the four cities, which jointly shape Asia’s new generations of citizens. Technologically, the deeply diffused mobile phone motivates civic-minded millennials and centennials in Asia to access news with their phones and engage with the news for civic learning. However, sociopolitical factors impede potential positive outcomes of mobile news consumption. Cross-societal comparisons of survey data collected from two time periods reveal new insights into the interplay of technology and society in consuming mobile news.
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36

Wenzel, Andrea. Community-Centered Journalism. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043307.001.0001.

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In A Case for Community-Centered Journalism: Solutions, Engagement, Trust, Andrea Wenzel maps out a process model for building trust—not just in journalism, but between different sectors of communities. She details how, in many communities, residents gauge trust in news not only based on factors like accuracy and credibility, but also based on how these are intertwined with the perceived motives of news media, and whether outlets are seen to represent communities respectfully. For this reason, Wenzel contends that more local journalism alone is not enough. Rather, she argues that a different kind of local journalism is needed—a community-centered journalism that is solutions-oriented and that engages and shares power with community stakeholders. Through a series of case studies across the U.S., in urban, suburban, and rural communities, Wenzel uses a communication infrastructure theory framework to explore how local journalism interventions attempt to strengthen relationships between residents, community organizations, and local media. She examines the boundary challenges to dominant journalistic practices and norms that arise from place-based interventions to build relationships of trust. Mindful of dynamics of race, class, place, and power, Wenzel recommends a process that is portable – rather than scalable -- that centers on community stakeholders, and is shaped as much by local assets as by needs. She argues that if they shift away from a model that puts journalists at the center and marginalized communities on the periphery, engaged journalism and solutions journalism have the potential to strengthen not just journalism, but the communication health of communities.
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37

Oberlin, Kathleen C. Creating the Creation Museum. NYU Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479881642.001.0001.

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The typical story about creationist social movements centers on battles in the classroom or in the courtroom—like the Scopes Trial in 1925. But there is a new setting: a museum. “Prepare to Believe” is the slogan that greets visitors throughout the Creation Museum located in Petersburg, Kentucky. It carries the message that the organization Answers in Genesis (AiG) uses to welcome fellow believers as well as skeptics since opening in 2007. The Creation Museum seeks to persuade visitors that if one views both the Bible (a close, literal reading) and nature (observational, real world data) as sources of authority, then the earth appears to be much younger than conventionally understood in mainstream society. This book argues that the impact of the Creation Museum does not depend on the accuracy or credibility of its scientific claims, as many scholars, media critics, and political pundits would suggest. Instead, what AiG goes after by creating a physical site like the Creation Museum is the ability to foster plausibility politics—broadening what the audience perceives as possible and amplifying the stakes as the ideas reach more people. Destabilizing the belief that only one type of secular institution may make claims about the age of the earth and human origins, the Creation Museum is a threat to this singular positioning. In doing so, AiG repositions itself to produce longstanding effects on the public’s perception of who may make scientific claims. Creating the Creation Museum is a story about how a group endures.
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