Abstract
The next presidential election campaign on television is likely to feature many spot commercials for the candidates, short news clips of candidates in on-site appearances staged for television, unanswered addresses to the nation or news conferences by the incumbent, relatively limited opportunities for the principal candidates to address the electorate, and, until the last moment, uncertainty about whether the candidates will appear face-to-face in debates. This use of television in presidential campaigns may have negative effects, including unfairly favoring wealthy interests and incumbents, encouraging political factionalism, and placing pressures on broadcasters that threaten First Amendment principles. The public would be better served by permitting broadcasters to present the two leading candidates without having to provide equal time to all other candidates; by giving the principal candidates television time during the campaign to address the electorate; by the adoption of party rules requiring that candidates participate in televised presidential debates; and by encouraging the use of new communications technologies to provide additional political information to the voters.
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Each issue of the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, guest edited by scholars and experts in the field, presents more than 200 pages of timely, in-depth research on a significant topic of interest to its readership which includes academics, researchers, policymakers, and professionals.
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journal article
Assessing the Role of Local Television News in Elections: Stimulating Involvement or IndifferenceYale Law & Policy Review
Vol. 11, No. 2 [1993]
, pp. 433-457 [25 pages]
Published By: Yale Law & Policy Review, Inc.
//www.jstor.org/stable/40239408
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Founded in 1982, the Yale Law & Policy Review is a semi-annual publication featuring scholarly articles written by law professors and other professionals as well as timely policy proposals and legal analyses composed by judges, elected officials, policymakers, and practitioners. YLPR publishes at least one such Policy Essay per Issue in addition to article-length works, occasional academic Essays, and student Notes and Comments or Book Reviews.
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The Yale Law & Policy Review is published twice each academic year by students of the Yale Law School. YLPR provides a forum for engaging with various contemporary legal and policy issues. Views expressed in YLPR are those of the authors and do not reflect the views of the members. YLPR publishes solicited and unsolicited articles, book reviews, and student-written pieces.
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Yale Law & Policy Review © 1993 Yale Law & Policy Review, Inc.
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