Browsing Department of Information Science and Media Studies by Author "Iversen, Magnus Hoem"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
-
How Rally-Round-the-Flag Effects Shape Trust in the News Media: Evidence from Panel Waves before and during the COVID-19 Pandemic Crisis
Knudsen, Erik; Nordø, Åsta Dyrnes; Iversen, Magnus Hoem (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2023)In this study, we extend the literature on the rally ‘round the flag phenomenon, that is, that international crises tend to cause an increase in citizens’ approval of political institutions. We advance this literature and ... -
How the public understands news media trust: An open-ended approach
Knudsen, Erik; Dahlberg, Stefan; Iversen, Magnus Hoem; Johannesson, Mikael Poul; Nygaard, Silje (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)Despite the central role that ordinary citizens play as ‘trustors’ (i.e. the actor that places trust) in the literature on news media trust, prior quantitative studies have paid little attention to how ordinary citizens ... -
Overtramp eller valgkamp? Det norske forbudet mot politisk fjernsynsreklame - en undersøkelse av argumenter, forskning og reklamefilmer.
Iversen, Magnus Hoem (Master thesis, 2012-02-01)Denne oppgaven er en redegjørelse og enundersøkelse av de argumentene som har blittfremført for eller mot et forbud mot politiskfjernsynsreklame i Norge. For å finne frem tildisse argumentene har jeg både undersøkt ... -
Political advertising as a resource for citizenship. The reception of audiovisual rhetoric
Iversen, Magnus Hoem (Doctoral thesis, 2018-12-14)This thesis explores the reception of audiovisual rhetoric in the form of political advertising. I argue that political ads can function as a resource for citizens. The ads allow people to enact a receptive rhetorical ... -
Utspørrerne. Journalistisk strategi og forskjellsbehandling i stortingsvalget 2013
Vatnøy, Eirik; Iversen, Magnus Hoem; Svennevig, Jan (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2016)Political interviews during election campaigns are an important source of information on political parties and programs for citizens. The kind of information the interviews produce is highly dependent on the interaction ...