Abstract
The number of journals in the field of communication is increasing. Above all, new, and more specialized journals geared to an international market, and therefore published in English, have appeared. In contrast to those journals, most national journals are still published in languages not accessible to the majority of communication scholars. How could national journals position themselves to survive? Our case study of 48 years of the leading German communication journal ‘Publizistik’ provides first insights into possible USPs of national communication journals.
Keywords: national communication journals; international communication journals; internationalization; ‘Publizistik’
Published Online: 2006-11-27
Published in Print: 2006-12-01
© Walter de Gruyter
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Design effects in people-meter panel research
- Between Al-Jazeera and CNN: Indicators of media use by Belgian ethnic minority youth
- Are national communication journals still necessary? A case study and some suggestions
- Using ‘new’ data sources for ‘old’ newspaper research: Developing guidelines for data collection
- Revisiting analyses of media-war relationships in times of contingency and fluidity
- Book Reviews
- Contributors
- Contents volume 31 (2006)
Schlagwörter für diesen Artikel
national communication journals;
international communication journals;
internationalization;
‘Publizistik’
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Design effects in people-meter panel research
- Between Al-Jazeera and CNN: Indicators of media use by Belgian ethnic minority youth
- Are national communication journals still necessary? A case study and some suggestions
- Using ‘new’ data sources for ‘old’ newspaper research: Developing guidelines for data collection
- Revisiting analyses of media-war relationships in times of contingency and fluidity
- Book Reviews
- Contributors
- Contents volume 31 (2006)