Presidential Politics and Communication
General data
Course ID: | 4219-RS271 |
Erasmus code / ISCED: |
08.9
|
Course title: | Presidential Politics and Communication |
Name in Polish: | Presidential Politics and Communication (Prezydencka polityka i komunikacja) |
Organizational unit: | American Studies Center |
Course groups: |
(in Polish) Proseminaria badawcze na studiach II stopnia All classes - weekday programme - 2nd cycle |
ECTS credit allocation (and other scores): |
8.00
|
Language: | English |
Type of course: | elective courses |
Mode: | Classroom |
Short description: |
This graduate course (drawing primarily from the academic disciplines of Political Science and Communication) will examine public communication strategies of recent U.S. presidents, paying particular attention to the administrations of Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Presidential efforts to set and frame the political agenda through both direct public communication and via the mass media are some of the most important tools of presidential governance. This course will look at White House communication strategies relating to defining U.S. domestic and foreign policies, as well as shaping public perceptions regarding the president's own character and policy performance. |
Full description: |
This graduate course (drawing primarily from the academic disciplines of Political Science and Communication) will examine public communication strategies of recent U.S. presidents, paying particular attention to the administrations of Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Presidential efforts to set and frame the political agenda through both direct public communication and via the mass media are some of the most important tools of presidential governance. This course will look at White House communication strategies relating to defining U.S. domestic and foreign policies, as well as shaping public perceptions regarding the president's own character and policy performance. Accordingly, students will read (and view) a variety of scholarly and popular press sources – book chapters, articles, and media reports in various formats. The course will contain a high level of direct student engagement with the material, including class presentations of readings and extensive discussion of course articles and news content. Written Evaluation & Oral Presentation Assignment At some point over the course of the semester, you will each be required to turn in a written evaluation of roughly four pages (double-spaced) summarizing and evaluating a chapter relevant to a given week’s theme. The selections on which students will present are from the required readings listed in the syllabus. About half the written assignment (roughly two pages) will be a summary of the main points of the chapter or article. You should concentrate on the most important findings; you cannot cover everything of importance in a few pages. The other half of the assignment (roughly two pages) will be your critique of the material. You are to discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the argument(s) presented. You may draw on other readings from the course to support your analysis if you wish, but this is not part of the assignment. Do not use outside reading for this assignment, this is not a research paper. Any necessary citations should be in Chicago/Turabian style. When referring to chapters in edited volumes refer to the author or authors of the chapter, not the editor of the volume. Papers are due in hard copy (doubled-spaced with a single staple and no cover page) at the start of class on the day listed. During your presentation, you will summarize (no more than five minutes) your paper on the readings, including your analysis of those readings. The presentations usually will take place at the start of class. Because this course focuses on ongoing political developments, it may be necessary to delay some presentations in rare instances. In such cases, the papers will remain due on the day listed, but the presentations may be postponed to the next class period. For edited volumes, you should start the citation with the author of the chapter and the title of the chapter before you provide the details on the book itself. For example: Quirk, Paul J. “Presidential Competence.” In The Presidency and the Political System, Michael Nelson, ed. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: CQ Press/Sage, 2021. Research Paper Assignments Paper Proposal Due: Start of Class, Week 4 Annotated Bibliography Due: Start of Class, Week 7 Complete Paper Due: Start of Class, Week 11 Revised Final Paper: Start of class, Week 14 The primary writing assignment in this course is the research paper. The paper's suggested length is roughly 15 pages. As always, the paper should be thoughtful and well-written. It should demonstrate research and analysis well beyond the materials assigned in class and should be properly documented with footnotes or endnotes and a bibliography (the Turabian/Chicago style will be required for this assignment). You should start thinking about and working on this project right away. Please feel free to come by my office, email, or connect via Zoom during office hours to discuss your projects as you proceed. Early tasks: Paper Proposal The first part of the research project involves the submission of a topic description so that I can approve your topics and make some suggestions early on concerning materials and areas that might be worth considering as you proceed. The topic description should describe the paper in general terms; do not consider it as anything approaching a first draft. The outline should be no more than a page or two. As part of the paper proposal, you are required to submit (in proper citation format) a list of eight scholarly sources you plan to use in your paper. The more information you provide, the more I will be able to advise you on what other angles and sources to consider. Topics are not limited to the issues that have been or will be covered in class. One place to start looking for areas of interest outside the assigned readings are the references of some of the readings you found most interesting. You might also look ahead to readings yet to come in the course for topic ideas. Annotated Bibliography An annotated bibliography, the second assignment related to your term paper, involves the list of sources you plan to use, with two or three sentences about the relevant/important findings found in those books, articles, and other sources you intend to use. For this assignment you will be expected to provide citations and this one-paragraph summary for at least 12 sources. COURSE SCHEDULE Week 1: The Constitutional Presidency U.S. Constitution, Article Two. URL: https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/preamble/ The Federalist, Numbers 51 and 68. URL: https://guides.loc.gov/federalist-papers/full-text Nelson, Chapters 1-2 Week 2: Presidential Power Neustadt, Richard. 1990. Presidential Power. New York: Free Press. Chapters 1-3. [online] Nelson, Chapters 3, 4 Week 3: Presidents as Communicators-in-Chief, Part 1 Kernell, Samuel. 2006. Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential Leadership. Washington: CQ Press. (4th edition), Chapter 1 [online]. Dickerson, John. 2018. “The Hardest Job in the World.” The Atlantic, May 2018. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/05/a-broken-office/556883/ Nelson, Chapter 17 WEEK 4 -- PAPER PROPOSAL DUE (at start of class) Week 4: Presidents as Communicators-in-Chief, Part 2 Entman, Robert. 2004. Projections of Power. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Chapters 1, 5 [online] Glazier, Rebecca A., and Amber E. Boydstun. 2012. “The President, the Press, and the War: A Tale of Two Framing Agendas.” Political Communication 29(4):428-446. https://doi.org/10.1080/10584609.2012.721870 Nelson, Chapter 19 Week 5: Presidential Administrations and Communication Challenges Nelson: Chapter 5 Potter, Rachel Augustine. 2017. “Slow-Rolling, Fast-Tracking, and the Pace of Bureaucratic Decisions in Rulemaking.” Journal of Politics 79(3): 841-55. Osnos, Evan. 2018. “Trump vs. the ‘Deep State.’” The New Yorker, May 21. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/21/trump-vs-the-deep-state Week 6: Presidents and Congress: Dueling Communication Centers Nelson: Chapters 12 Howell, William G., and Jon C. Pevehouse. 2005. “Presidents, Congress, and the Use of Force.” International Organization 59(1):209-232. doi:10.1017/S0020818305050034 Azari, Julia R, and Jennifer K. Smith. 2012. “Unwritten Rules: Informal Institutions in Established Democracies.” Perspectives on Politics 10(1): 37-55. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592711004890 WEEK 7 – ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY DUE (at start of class) Week 7: Presidents and the Judiciary Nelson: 16 Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew, and Paul M. Collins Jr. 2015. “Presidential Rhetoric and Supreme Court Decisions.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 45(4):633-52. Anderson, Richard J., David Cottrell, and Charles R. Shipan. 2019. “The Power to Appoint: Presidential Nominations and Change on the Supreme Court.” Journal of Politics 81(3): 1057-68. https://doi.org/10.1086/703382 Week 8: Communicating Presidential Identity, Part 1 Farnsworth, Stephen J. 2018. Presidential Communication and Character: White House News Management from Clinton and Cable to Twitter and Trump. New York: Routledge. Chapter 1 [online] Nelson: 6, 9 Week 9: Communicating Presidential Identity, Part 2 Farnsworth, Chapters 5,6 [online] Goldgeier, James, and Elizabeth Saunders. “The Unconstrained Presidency: Checks and Balances Eroded Long Before Trump.” Foreign Affairs 97(5). Dimock, Michael, and John Gramlich. 2021. “How America Changed During Donald Trump’s Presidency.” Pew Research Center, January 29, 2021. URL: https://www.pewresearch.org/2021/01/29/how-america-changed-during-donald-trumps-presidency/ Week 10: Public Opinion and the Presidency, Part 1 Glynn, Carroll J., et al. 2014. Public Opinion. New York: Routledge. Third Edition. Chapter 1 [online]. Baum, Matthew A., and Tim Groeling. 2010. “Reality Asserts Itself: Public Opinion on Iraq and the Elasticity of Reality.” International Organization 64(3): 443-79. Canes-Wrone, Brandice, and Jason P. Kelly. 2013. “The Obama Presidency, Public Position-Taking, and Mass Opinion.” Polity 45(1): 85-104. https://doi.org/10.1057/pol.2012.27 WEEK 11 – COMPLETE PAPER DUE (at start of class) Week 11: Public Opinion and the Presidency, Part 2 Donovan, Kathleen, Paul M. Kellstedt, Ellen M. Key, and Matthew J. Lebo. 2020. “Motivated Reasoning, Public Opinion, and Presidential Approval.” Political Behavior 42:1201-21. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11109-019-09539-8 Nyhan, Brendan. 2015. “Scandal Potential: How Political Context and News Congestion Affect the President's Vulnerability to Media Scandal.” British Journal of Political Science 45(2):435-466. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123413000458 Nelson: 10-11 Week 12: New Presidential Communication Venues Osmundsen, Mathias, Alexander Bor, Peter Bjerregaard Vahlstrup, Anja Bechmann, and Michael Beng Petersen. 2021. “Partisan Polarization Is the Primary Psychological Motivation behind Political Fake News Sharing on Twitter.” American Political Science Review 115(3):999-1015. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000290 Week 13: Presidential Nominations: Candidate Communications Nelson: 7 Cohen, Marty, David Karol, Hans Noel, and John Zaller. 2016. “Party Versus Faction in the Reformed Presidential Nominating System.” PS: Political Science and Politics 49(4): 701-708. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096516001682 Mason, Lilliana, Julie Wronski, and John V. Kane. 2021. “Activating Animus: The Uniquely Social Roots of Trump Support.” American Political Science Review 115(4):1508-1516. https:/doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000563 WEEK 14 – REVISED COMPLETE PAPER DUE (at start of class) Week 14: Presidential Elections: Candidate Communications Nelson 8 Bankert, Alexa. 2020. “Negative and Positive Partisanship in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Elections.” Political Behavior 43(4):1467-1485. Igielnik, Ruth, Scott Keeter, and Hannah Hartig (2021). “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory.” Pew Research Center, June 30. https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/06/30/behind-bidens-2020-victory/ Week 15: Summing Up: Presidential Communication and Accountability Nelson: 18, 20 Graham, Matthew H., and Milan W. Svolik. 2020. “Democracy in America? Partisanship, Polarization, and the Robustness of Support for Democracy in the United States.” American Political Science Review 114(2):392-409. doi:10.1017/S0003055420000052 Lieberman, Robert C., Suzanne Mettler, Thomas B. Pepinsky, Kenneth M. Roberts, and Richard Valelly. 2018. “The Trump Presidency and American Democracy: A Historical and Comparative Analysis.” Perspectives on Politics 17(2):470-479. doi:10.1017/S1537592718003286 |
Bibliography: |
REQUIRED TEXT Nelson, Michael, ed. The Presidency and the Political System. (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage/CQ Press, 2021). Twelfth Edition. Nearly every week, this course will also include several required readings from online sources that are listed in the syllabus. Because this course will pay considerable attention to ongoing political developments over the course of the semester, you are also required to read regularly a prominent news source that devotes significant attention to U.S. politics. Reading scholarly articles can sometimes be challenging. These questions might help guide your reading of the assigned articles: Experimental/statistical studies: • What is the authors’ main hypothesis? • What is the mechanism (cognitive, emotional, etc.) that they believe would generate such an outcome? • What is their general approach to testing their theory? • What are their key results? • How are those results similar to/different from others we have read? Conceptual articles: • What are the authors’ main hypothesis or argument? • What are the key claims or concepts in their argument? • What are the mechanisms they think generate the outcomes we observe? • How is their argument similar to/different from others we have read? NOTE: Other than the Nelson text, course materials will be available online. Nelson, Michael, ed. The Presidency and the Political System. (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage/CQ Press, 2021). Twelfth Edition. Azari, Julia R, and Jennifer K. Smith. 2012. “Unwritten Rules: Informal Institutions in Established Democracies.” Perspectives on Politics 10(1): 37-55. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592711004890 Anderson, Richard J., David Cottrell, and Charles R. Shipan. 2019. “The Power to Appoint: Presidential Nominations and Change on the Supreme Court.” Journal of Politics 81(3): 1057-68. https://doi.org/10.1086/703382 Bankert, Alexa. 2020. “Negative and Positive Partisanship in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Elections.” Political Behavior 43(4):1467-1485. Baum, Matthew A., and Tim Groeling. 2010. “Reality Asserts Itself: Public Opinion on Iraq and the Elasticity of Reality.” International Organization 64(3): 443-79. Canes-Wrone, Brandice, and Jason P. Kelly. 2013. “The Obama Presidency, Public Position-Taking, and Mass Opinion.” Polity 45(1): 85-104. https://doi.org/10.1057/pol.2012.27 Cohen, Marty, David Karol, Hans Noel, and John Zaller. 2016. “Party Versus Faction in the Reformed Presidential Nominating System.” PS: Political Science and Politics 49(4): 701-708. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096516001682 Dickerson, John. 2018. “The Hardest Job in the World.” The Atlantic, May 2018. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/05/a-broken-office/556883/ Dimock, Michael, and John Gramlich. 2021. “How America Changed During Donald Trump’s Presidency.” Pew Research Center, January 29, 2021. URL: https://www.pewresearch.org/2021/01/29/how-america-changed-during-donald-trumps-presidency/ Donovan, Kathleen, Paul M. Kellstedt, Ellen M. Key, and Matthew J. Lebo. 2020. “Motivated Reasoning, Public Opinion, and Presidential Approval.” Political Behavior 42:1201-21. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11109-019-09539-8 Entman, Robert. 2004. Projections of Power. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Chapters 1, 5 Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew, and Paul M. Collins Jr. 2015. “Presidential Rhetoric and Supreme Court Decisions.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 45(4):633-52. Farnsworth, Stephen J. 2018. Presidential Communication and Character: White House News Management from Clinton and Cable to Twitter and Trump. New York: Routledge. Chapters 1,5,6 The Federalist, Numbers 51 and 68. URL: https://guides.loc.gov/federalist-papers/full-text Glazier, Rebecca A. & Amber E. Boydstun. 2012. “The President, the Press, and the War: A Tale of Two Framing Agendas.” Political Communication 29(4):428-446. https://doi.org/10.1080/10584609.2012.721870 Glynn, Carroll J., et al. 2014. Public Opinion. New York: Routledge. Third Edition. Chapters 1, 2 Goldgeier, James, and Elizabeth Saunders. “The Unconstrained Presidency: Checks and Balances Eroded Long Before Trump.” Foreign Affairs 97(5). Graham, Matthew H., and Milan W. Svolik. 2020. “Democracy in America? Partisanship, Polarization, and the Robustness of Support for Democracy in the United States.” American Political Science Review 114(2):392-409. doi:10.1017/S0003055420000052 Howell, William G., and Jon C. Pevehouse. 2005. “Presidents, Congress, and the Use of Force.” International Organization 59(1):209-232. doi:10.1017/S0020818305050034 Igielnik, Ruth, Scott Keeter, and Hannah Hartig (2021). “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory.” Pew Research Center, June 30. https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/06/30/behind-bidens-2020-victory/ Kernell, Samuel. 2006. Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential Leadership. Washington: CQ Press. (4th edition), Chapter 1. Lieberman, Robert C., Suzanne Mettler, Thomas B. Pepinsky, Kenneth M. Roberts, and Richard Valelly. 2018. “The Trump Presidency and American Democracy: A Historical and Comparative Analysis.” Perspectives on Politics 17(2):470-479. doi:10.1017/S1537592718003286 Mason, Lilliana, Julie Wronski, and John V. Kane. 2021. “Activating Animus: The Uniquely Social Roots of Trump Support.” American Political Science Review 115(4):1508-1516. https:/doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000563 Neustadt, Richard. 1990. Presidential Power. New York: Free Press. Chapters 1-3. Nyhan, Brendan. 2015. “Scandal Potential: How Political Context and News Congestion Affect the President's Vulnerability to Media Scandal.” British Journal of Political Science 45(2):435-466. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123413000458 Osmundsen, Mathias, Alexander Bor, Peter Bjerregaard Vahlstrup, Anja Bechmann, and Michael Beng Petersen. 2021. “Partisan Polarization Is the Primary Psychological Motivation behind Political Fake News Sharing on Twitter.” American Political Science Review 115(3):999-1015. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000290 Osnos, Evan. 2018. “Trump vs. the ‘Deep State.’” The New Yorker, May 21. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/21/trump-vs-the-deep-state Potter, Rachel Augustine. 2017. “Slow-Rolling, Fast-Tracking, and the Pace of Bureaucratic Decisions in Rulemaking.” Journal of Politics 79(3): 841-55. U.S. Constitution, Article Two. URL: https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/preamble/ |
Learning outcomes: |
KNOWLEDGE - knowledge of the historical trajectory of American presidency and presidential communication - knowledge of the main currents and authors in American presidency and presidential communication - knowledge regarding political communication and political science concepts relevant to the course SKILLS: - ability to discuss and understand sources from American presidency and presidential communication - ability to summarize and analyze arguments in writing and in class discussion - ability to prepare short written assignments in American political thought, using various sources and formulating a thesis SOCIAL COMPETENCES: - ability to discuss and argue in class, to cooperate with other students during in-class assignments - Openness to various phenomena and ideas; recognition of and respect for cultural difference |
Assessment methods and assessment criteria: |
There will be several graded assignments in this class: (1) a combined written evaluation (roughly four pages) and brief oral presentation (roughly five minutes) analyzing a specific required readings (assignments to be made during the second class); (2) a series of assignments relating to the research/analytical paper. A course on presidential politics and communication offers a wide range of potential topics for your roughly 15-page research and analytical paper. The paper topic must be approved in advance. Pick something that interests you, and feel free to discuss your ideas with me as they develop. When you turn in the paper, make sure you used a normal sized typeface (12-point, Times New Roman), and that the paper is double-spaced and properly documented with footnotes or endnotes and a bibliography. No fancy binders or covers please. Late papers will be penalized at a rate of ten points per day. A paper not turned in at the start of class on the day it is due is a late paper. Plagiarism is unacceptable. Students who cheat will fail the course and face other severe penalties. Grades will be determined as follows: Written Evaluation/Presentation 20 percent of final grade Paper: Proposal 10 percent of final grade Paper: Annotated Bibliography 10 percent of final grade Paper: Complete Research Paper 20 percent of final grade Paper Revised Research Paper 40 percent of final grade Class participation will be used as a tie-breaker in cases of borderline grades. |
Classes in period "Summer semester 2023/24" (in progress)
Time span: | 2024-02-19 - 2024-06-16 |
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Type of class: |
Seminar, 45 hours
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Coordinators: | Stephen Farnsworth | |
Group instructors: | Stephen Farnsworth | |
Students list: | (inaccessible to you) | |
Examination: |
Course -
Grading
Seminar - Grading |
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