Politics and Governance of Blame
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portes grátis
Politics and Governance of Blame
Dimova, Dr Gergana; Hinterleitner, Markus; Rhodes, Prof R. A. W.; Flinders, Prof Matthew; Weaver, Prof R. Kent
Oxford University Press
07/2024
800
Dura
9780198896388
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Gergana Dimova, Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, R. Kent Weaver, R. A. W. Rhodes: Introduction: The Politics of Blame in an Era of Uncertainty
1: Gergana Dimova,Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, R. Kent Weaver, R. A. W. Rhodes: The State of the Field Maps, Gaps and Traps
Part 1. UNDERSTANDING BLAME
2: Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, Kent Weaver: Politicians as Blame Seekers
3: Georg Wenzelburger, Pascal D. Koenig: Who is Talking? How Source Credibility Affects Presentational Blame Avoidance Strategies
4: John Boswell, R. A. W. Rhodes: The Blame Game and Backstage Politics
Part 2. BLAME AND DISCIPLINARY DIFFERENCE
5: Sten Hansson: Blame Avoidance and Critical Language Awareness: An Approach from Critical Discourse Studies
6: Andrew Alaszewski: An Anthropological Account of Naming, Shaming and Blaming
7: Steve Guglielmo, Lesley Lavery: Political Blame and Praise: How Politicians' Behavior Shapes and Responds to Constituents' Moral Evaluations
Part 3. BLAME AND CREDIT
8: Maryna Rabinovych, Zuzana Reptova: Blame Games and Claiming Credit: The Role of Proxies in Peace and War
9: Richard Shaw: Caught in the Middle? Blame Games, Claiming Credit and Ministerial Advisers
10: Pascal Koenig, Pascal Koenig: Credit Claiming: Motives, Obstacles and Effects on Voters
Part 4. BLAME AND GOVERNANCE
11: Denis Grube: The Blame Threshold: Civil Service Leaders and the Politics of Blame
12: Markus Hinterleitner: Governmental Blame Avoidance in the European Union
13: Christopher Cooper, Thomas Elston, Anna Bilous: Shifting the Deckchairs: How Blame Avoiders Cope with the Loss of a Scapegoat
Part 5. BLAME AND EXPERTISE
14: Paul Copeland, Sandra L. Resodihardjo: When Experts and Public Office Holders Break the Rules
15: Joram Feitsma, Thomas Schillemans: The Subtle Art of Not Pointing the Finger
16: Erica Consterdine: 'Everyone's Quick to Blame the Alien': Migrant Blame Games
Part 6. BLAME AND INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS
17: Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Omer Yair: Blame Avoidance in Polarized Societies: Challenges and Research Agenda
18: Minou de Ruiter, Sanneke Kuipers: Confront or Concede? Blame Games as a Test of Cultural Bias in Different Political Systems
19: Heinkelmann-Wild, Berthold Rittberger, Bernhard Zangl, Lisa Kriegmair: Varieties of European Blame Games: On Scapegoats, Renegades and Diffusion Games
Part 7. BLAME AND THE COVID-CRISIS
20: Leong Ching, Michael Howlett, Mehrdad Safaei: Attributions of Blame and Credit in Policy-Making: Evidence from UK Leadership Tweets During the Swings of the COVID-19 Pandemic
21: Steven Kettell, Peter Kerr: Storytelling and Statecraft: Continuity and Change in Framing the UK Government's Management of Covid-19
22: Gianfranco Baldini, Andrea Pritoni: Blame Avoidance during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Presentational Strategies by Two Italian governments
Part 8. BLAME AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
23: Ruairidh J Brown: Escape Blame or Make Friends? China's Pandemic Dilemma
24: Aleksandra Raspopina: Post-Truth Blame Games in Public Diplomacy and Media
25: Laurence Whitehead: Blaming, Naming and the Democratic Game: Understanding Shaming Statecraft
Part 9. BLAME AND DEMOCRACY
26: Mari-Liis Jakobson: Populist Blame Games
27: Leighton Andrews: Rethinking the Politics of Blame Avoidance under Populism: Strategic Lying, Bullshit, Boosterism and Scapegoating
28: Anthony Kevins, Barbara Vis: Blame, Public Consultations and the Impact of Gender
29: Christopher Hood: Reflections on Twenty Years of the Blame Game and Risk Game
1: Gergana Dimova,Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, R. Kent Weaver, R. A. W. Rhodes: The State of the Field Maps, Gaps and Traps
Part 1. UNDERSTANDING BLAME
2: Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, Kent Weaver: Politicians as Blame Seekers
3: Georg Wenzelburger, Pascal D. Koenig: Who is Talking? How Source Credibility Affects Presentational Blame Avoidance Strategies
4: John Boswell, R. A. W. Rhodes: The Blame Game and Backstage Politics
Part 2. BLAME AND DISCIPLINARY DIFFERENCE
5: Sten Hansson: Blame Avoidance and Critical Language Awareness: An Approach from Critical Discourse Studies
6: Andrew Alaszewski: An Anthropological Account of Naming, Shaming and Blaming
7: Steve Guglielmo, Lesley Lavery: Political Blame and Praise: How Politicians' Behavior Shapes and Responds to Constituents' Moral Evaluations
Part 3. BLAME AND CREDIT
8: Maryna Rabinovych, Zuzana Reptova: Blame Games and Claiming Credit: The Role of Proxies in Peace and War
9: Richard Shaw: Caught in the Middle? Blame Games, Claiming Credit and Ministerial Advisers
10: Pascal Koenig, Pascal Koenig: Credit Claiming: Motives, Obstacles and Effects on Voters
Part 4. BLAME AND GOVERNANCE
11: Denis Grube: The Blame Threshold: Civil Service Leaders and the Politics of Blame
12: Markus Hinterleitner: Governmental Blame Avoidance in the European Union
13: Christopher Cooper, Thomas Elston, Anna Bilous: Shifting the Deckchairs: How Blame Avoiders Cope with the Loss of a Scapegoat
Part 5. BLAME AND EXPERTISE
14: Paul Copeland, Sandra L. Resodihardjo: When Experts and Public Office Holders Break the Rules
15: Joram Feitsma, Thomas Schillemans: The Subtle Art of Not Pointing the Finger
16: Erica Consterdine: 'Everyone's Quick to Blame the Alien': Migrant Blame Games
Part 6. BLAME AND INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS
17: Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Omer Yair: Blame Avoidance in Polarized Societies: Challenges and Research Agenda
18: Minou de Ruiter, Sanneke Kuipers: Confront or Concede? Blame Games as a Test of Cultural Bias in Different Political Systems
19: Heinkelmann-Wild, Berthold Rittberger, Bernhard Zangl, Lisa Kriegmair: Varieties of European Blame Games: On Scapegoats, Renegades and Diffusion Games
Part 7. BLAME AND THE COVID-CRISIS
20: Leong Ching, Michael Howlett, Mehrdad Safaei: Attributions of Blame and Credit in Policy-Making: Evidence from UK Leadership Tweets During the Swings of the COVID-19 Pandemic
21: Steven Kettell, Peter Kerr: Storytelling and Statecraft: Continuity and Change in Framing the UK Government's Management of Covid-19
22: Gianfranco Baldini, Andrea Pritoni: Blame Avoidance during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Presentational Strategies by Two Italian governments
Part 8. BLAME AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
23: Ruairidh J Brown: Escape Blame or Make Friends? China's Pandemic Dilemma
24: Aleksandra Raspopina: Post-Truth Blame Games in Public Diplomacy and Media
25: Laurence Whitehead: Blaming, Naming and the Democratic Game: Understanding Shaming Statecraft
Part 9. BLAME AND DEMOCRACY
26: Mari-Liis Jakobson: Populist Blame Games
27: Leighton Andrews: Rethinking the Politics of Blame Avoidance under Populism: Strategic Lying, Bullshit, Boosterism and Scapegoating
28: Anthony Kevins, Barbara Vis: Blame, Public Consultations and the Impact of Gender
29: Christopher Hood: Reflections on Twenty Years of the Blame Game and Risk Game
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Gergana Dimova, Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, R. Kent Weaver, R. A. W. Rhodes: Introduction: The Politics of Blame in an Era of Uncertainty
1: Gergana Dimova,Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, R. Kent Weaver, R. A. W. Rhodes: The State of the Field Maps, Gaps and Traps
Part 1. UNDERSTANDING BLAME
2: Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, Kent Weaver: Politicians as Blame Seekers
3: Georg Wenzelburger, Pascal D. Koenig: Who is Talking? How Source Credibility Affects Presentational Blame Avoidance Strategies
4: John Boswell, R. A. W. Rhodes: The Blame Game and Backstage Politics
Part 2. BLAME AND DISCIPLINARY DIFFERENCE
5: Sten Hansson: Blame Avoidance and Critical Language Awareness: An Approach from Critical Discourse Studies
6: Andrew Alaszewski: An Anthropological Account of Naming, Shaming and Blaming
7: Steve Guglielmo, Lesley Lavery: Political Blame and Praise: How Politicians' Behavior Shapes and Responds to Constituents' Moral Evaluations
Part 3. BLAME AND CREDIT
8: Maryna Rabinovych, Zuzana Reptova: Blame Games and Claiming Credit: The Role of Proxies in Peace and War
9: Richard Shaw: Caught in the Middle? Blame Games, Claiming Credit and Ministerial Advisers
10: Pascal Koenig, Pascal Koenig: Credit Claiming: Motives, Obstacles and Effects on Voters
Part 4. BLAME AND GOVERNANCE
11: Denis Grube: The Blame Threshold: Civil Service Leaders and the Politics of Blame
12: Markus Hinterleitner: Governmental Blame Avoidance in the European Union
13: Christopher Cooper, Thomas Elston, Anna Bilous: Shifting the Deckchairs: How Blame Avoiders Cope with the Loss of a Scapegoat
Part 5. BLAME AND EXPERTISE
14: Paul Copeland, Sandra L. Resodihardjo: When Experts and Public Office Holders Break the Rules
15: Joram Feitsma, Thomas Schillemans: The Subtle Art of Not Pointing the Finger
16: Erica Consterdine: 'Everyone's Quick to Blame the Alien': Migrant Blame Games
Part 6. BLAME AND INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS
17: Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Omer Yair: Blame Avoidance in Polarized Societies: Challenges and Research Agenda
18: Minou de Ruiter, Sanneke Kuipers: Confront or Concede? Blame Games as a Test of Cultural Bias in Different Political Systems
19: Heinkelmann-Wild, Berthold Rittberger, Bernhard Zangl, Lisa Kriegmair: Varieties of European Blame Games: On Scapegoats, Renegades and Diffusion Games
Part 7. BLAME AND THE COVID-CRISIS
20: Leong Ching, Michael Howlett, Mehrdad Safaei: Attributions of Blame and Credit in Policy-Making: Evidence from UK Leadership Tweets During the Swings of the COVID-19 Pandemic
21: Steven Kettell, Peter Kerr: Storytelling and Statecraft: Continuity and Change in Framing the UK Government's Management of Covid-19
22: Gianfranco Baldini, Andrea Pritoni: Blame Avoidance during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Presentational Strategies by Two Italian governments
Part 8. BLAME AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
23: Ruairidh J Brown: Escape Blame or Make Friends? China's Pandemic Dilemma
24: Aleksandra Raspopina: Post-Truth Blame Games in Public Diplomacy and Media
25: Laurence Whitehead: Blaming, Naming and the Democratic Game: Understanding Shaming Statecraft
Part 9. BLAME AND DEMOCRACY
26: Mari-Liis Jakobson: Populist Blame Games
27: Leighton Andrews: Rethinking the Politics of Blame Avoidance under Populism: Strategic Lying, Bullshit, Boosterism and Scapegoating
28: Anthony Kevins, Barbara Vis: Blame, Public Consultations and the Impact of Gender
29: Christopher Hood: Reflections on Twenty Years of the Blame Game and Risk Game
1: Gergana Dimova,Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, R. Kent Weaver, R. A. W. Rhodes: The State of the Field Maps, Gaps and Traps
Part 1. UNDERSTANDING BLAME
2: Matthew Flinders, Markus Hinterleitner, Kent Weaver: Politicians as Blame Seekers
3: Georg Wenzelburger, Pascal D. Koenig: Who is Talking? How Source Credibility Affects Presentational Blame Avoidance Strategies
4: John Boswell, R. A. W. Rhodes: The Blame Game and Backstage Politics
Part 2. BLAME AND DISCIPLINARY DIFFERENCE
5: Sten Hansson: Blame Avoidance and Critical Language Awareness: An Approach from Critical Discourse Studies
6: Andrew Alaszewski: An Anthropological Account of Naming, Shaming and Blaming
7: Steve Guglielmo, Lesley Lavery: Political Blame and Praise: How Politicians' Behavior Shapes and Responds to Constituents' Moral Evaluations
Part 3. BLAME AND CREDIT
8: Maryna Rabinovych, Zuzana Reptova: Blame Games and Claiming Credit: The Role of Proxies in Peace and War
9: Richard Shaw: Caught in the Middle? Blame Games, Claiming Credit and Ministerial Advisers
10: Pascal Koenig, Pascal Koenig: Credit Claiming: Motives, Obstacles and Effects on Voters
Part 4. BLAME AND GOVERNANCE
11: Denis Grube: The Blame Threshold: Civil Service Leaders and the Politics of Blame
12: Markus Hinterleitner: Governmental Blame Avoidance in the European Union
13: Christopher Cooper, Thomas Elston, Anna Bilous: Shifting the Deckchairs: How Blame Avoiders Cope with the Loss of a Scapegoat
Part 5. BLAME AND EXPERTISE
14: Paul Copeland, Sandra L. Resodihardjo: When Experts and Public Office Holders Break the Rules
15: Joram Feitsma, Thomas Schillemans: The Subtle Art of Not Pointing the Finger
16: Erica Consterdine: 'Everyone's Quick to Blame the Alien': Migrant Blame Games
Part 6. BLAME AND INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS
17: Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Omer Yair: Blame Avoidance in Polarized Societies: Challenges and Research Agenda
18: Minou de Ruiter, Sanneke Kuipers: Confront or Concede? Blame Games as a Test of Cultural Bias in Different Political Systems
19: Heinkelmann-Wild, Berthold Rittberger, Bernhard Zangl, Lisa Kriegmair: Varieties of European Blame Games: On Scapegoats, Renegades and Diffusion Games
Part 7. BLAME AND THE COVID-CRISIS
20: Leong Ching, Michael Howlett, Mehrdad Safaei: Attributions of Blame and Credit in Policy-Making: Evidence from UK Leadership Tweets During the Swings of the COVID-19 Pandemic
21: Steven Kettell, Peter Kerr: Storytelling and Statecraft: Continuity and Change in Framing the UK Government's Management of Covid-19
22: Gianfranco Baldini, Andrea Pritoni: Blame Avoidance during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Presentational Strategies by Two Italian governments
Part 8. BLAME AND INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
23: Ruairidh J Brown: Escape Blame or Make Friends? China's Pandemic Dilemma
24: Aleksandra Raspopina: Post-Truth Blame Games in Public Diplomacy and Media
25: Laurence Whitehead: Blaming, Naming and the Democratic Game: Understanding Shaming Statecraft
Part 9. BLAME AND DEMOCRACY
26: Mari-Liis Jakobson: Populist Blame Games
27: Leighton Andrews: Rethinking the Politics of Blame Avoidance under Populism: Strategic Lying, Bullshit, Boosterism and Scapegoating
28: Anthony Kevins, Barbara Vis: Blame, Public Consultations and the Impact of Gender
29: Christopher Hood: Reflections on Twenty Years of the Blame Game and Risk Game
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.