User:Jerahr/Choose an Article

Article Selection
Please list articles that you're considering for your Wikipedia assignment below. Begin to critique these articles and find relevant sources.

Option 1

 * Article title
 * Issue Ownership


 * Article Evaluation
 * The article only includes a definition of issue ownership in its relation to political parties, but doesn't expand into gender. There are only two sections provided: definition and examples per county. It includes examples in two counties, but does not include non-European counties or the broader western region. Additionally, there is only article provided and only 4 references. It could also use more examples of political figures engaging in issue ownership and the repercussions faced. The page also fails to include examples of the particular traits associated with the opposing parties.


 * Sources
 * Hayes, Danny. “Candidate Qualities through a Partisan Lens: A Theory of Trait Ownership.” American journal of political science 49.4 (2005): 908–923. Web.
 * Petrocik, John R. “Issue Ownership in Presidential Elections, with a 1980 Case Study.” American journal of political science 40, no. 3 (1996): 825–850.
 * Seeberg, Henrik Bech. “Issue Ownership Attack: How a Political Party Can Counteract a Rival’s Issue Ownership.” West European politics 43, no. 4 (2020): 772–794.
 * Seeberg, Henrik Bech. “Issue Ownership Attack: How a Political Party Can Counteract a Rival’s Issue Ownership.” West European politics 43, no. 4 (2020): 772–794.
 * Seeberg, Henrik Bech. “Issue Ownership Attack: How a Political Party Can Counteract a Rival’s Issue Ownership.” West European politics 43, no. 4 (2020): 772–794.

Banda, Kevin K. “Issue Ownership, Issue Positions, and Candidate Assessment.”    Political communication 33, no. 4 (2016): 651–666.

Option 2

 * Article title
 * Ubiquitous presidency


 * Article Evaluation
 * Doesn't exist


 * Sources
 * Scacco, Joshua M., and Kevin Coe. “The Ubiquitous Presidency: Toward a New Paradigm for Studying Presidential Communication.” International journal of communication 10 (2016): 2014–2037.

Scacco, Joshua M., and Kevin Coe. “Talk This Way: The Ubiquitous Presidency and Expectations of Presidential Communication.” The American behavioral scientist (Beverly Hills) 61, no. 3 (2017): 298–314.

Option 3

 * Article title
 * Social journalism


 * Article Evaluation
 * This article only has three sections; it doesn't mention the history or where it came from doesn't include examples of successful vs unsuccessful social journalism. It does provide specific reactions from individual companies, but doesn't include how society has been affected, the public's overall opinion, or how it has changed journalism as a whole. There are also some instances of wordy or run-on sentences that could be consolidated.


 * Sources
 * Swart, Joelle, Chris Peters, and Marcel Broersma. “Shedding Light on the Dark Social: The Connective Role of News and Journalism in Social Media Communities.” New media & society 20, no. 11 (2018): 4329–4345.
 * Hess, Kristy, and Robert E. Gutsche. “Journalism and the ‘Social Sphere’: Reclaiming a Foundational Concept for Beyond Politics and the Public Sphere.” Journalism studies (London, England) 19, no. 4 (2018): 483–498.
 * Hess, Kristy, and Robert E. Gutsche. “Journalism and the ‘Social Sphere’: Reclaiming a Foundational Concept for Beyond Politics and the Public Sphere.” Journalism studies (London, England) 19, no. 4 (2018): 483–498.

Option 4

 * Article title
 * Article Evaluation
 * Sources
 * Sources
 * Sources

Option 5

 * Article title
 * Article Evaluation
 * Sources
 * Sources
 * Sources