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Campaigning Online

The Internet in U. S. Elections

Campaigning Online( )
Author: Bimber, Bruce
Davis, Richard Harding
ISBN:978-0-19-515156-5
Publication Date:Oct 2003
Publisher:Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $101.77AUD $142.95
Book Description:

Campaigning Online provides an authoratitive new portrait of the role of campaign web sites in American elections. How do candidates use the Internet to gain or reinforce voter support? Are voters influenced by what they see on candidate's web sites? Do they learn anything? Are their votes influenced? The authors answer these questions using a wealth of new data and evidence about the 2000 election drawn from national and state-wide surveys, laboratory experiments, interviews with...
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Book Details
Pages:240
Detailed Subjects: Computers / Internet / General
Political Science / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):23.4 x 15.6 x 1.63 cm
Book Weight:0.35 Kilograms
Author Biography
Bimber, Bruce (Author)
Author and journalist Richard Harding Davis was born in Philadelphia on April 18, 1864. After studying at Lehigh and Johns Hopkins universities, he became a reporter and in 1890, he was the managing editor of Harper's Weekly. On assignments, he toured many areas of the world and recorded his impressions of the American West, Europe, and South America in a series of books. As a foreign correspondent, he covered every war from the Greco-Turkish to World War I and published several books recording his experiences.

In 1896, he became part of William Randolph Hearst's unproven plot to start the Spanish-American War in order to boost newspaper sales when Hearst sent him and illustrator Frederick Remington to cover the Cuban rebellion against Spanish rule. In Cuba, Davis wrote several articles that sparked U.S. interest in the struggles of the Cuban people, but he resigned when Hearst changed the facts in one of his stories. Davis was aboard the New York during the bombing of Mantanzas, which gave the New York Herald a scoop on the war. As a result, the U.S. Navy prohibited reporters from being aboard any U.S. ships for the rest of the Cuban conflict.

Davis was captured by the German Army in 1914 and was threatened with execution as a spy. He eventually convinced them he was a reporter and was released. He is considered one of the most influential reporters of the yellow journalist era. He died in Mount Kisco, New York on April 11, 1916.

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