Acceptance of democracy and public relations: Attitudes in a transitional country |
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Authors: | Candace White Iveta Imre |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Advertising and Public Relations, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, United States;2. School of Journalism and Electronic Media, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, United States |
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Abstract: | The study explores the relationship between acceptance of democracy and opinions about public communication used by the private sector in television newscasts in Croatia, a country transitioning to democracy. A survey administered to students at a large University in Zagreb found inconsistent responses to the items that measured acceptance of democracy, indicating that young Croatians in the study may still be in a political “gray zone” and may not have a full understanding of the precepts of democracy. However, there was a positive correlation between opinions about public relations media practices and acceptance of democracy. The study suggests that it is not enough to use a theoretical framework of global public relations that characterizes a country as a democracy or not, but rather to recognize that democratization is a process. Many people in transitional societies may be closer on the continuum to traditional communist points of view than to newer democratic views; such understanding can help provide a theoretical understanding of transitional public relations. |
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Keywords: | Global public relations Transitional public relations Transitional democracies |
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