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 * Heisey, D. R. (1986). Reagan and Mitterrand respond to international crisis: Creating versus transcending appearances. The Western Journal of Speech Communication, 50, 325-335.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1988). The force of narrative: Portrait of Bishop B. F. Hoover. Brethren in Christ History and Life, XI (3), 229-328.




 * Heisey, D. R. (1988). President Ronald Reagan's apologia on the Iran- Contra affair. In H. R. Ryan (Ed.), Oratorical Encounters: Selected Studies and Sources of Twentieth-century Political Accusations and Apologies (pp. 281–305). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.




 * Heisey, D. R. (1990). Reagan's use of peace/war symbols justifying military intervention. In T. L. Brensinger & E. M. Sider (Eds.), Within the perfection of Christ: Essays on peace and the nature of the church (pp. 191–208). Grantham, PA: Brethren in Christ Historical Society.




 * Heisey, D. R. (1991). Defining peace communication. In R. Troester & C. E. Kelley (Eds.), Peacemaking through communication (pp. 19–21). Annandale, VA: Speech Communication Association.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1993). The rhetoric of Anatoly Sobchak: Rule of law vs. nomenklatura? The Southern Communication Journal, 59 (1), 60-72.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1992). Critical methods and ideology: An international perspective. Systems Practice, 5 (2), 215-223. Also published in S.H. & K. Samuelson (Eds.), Vol. II Advances in general systems theory and philosophy (pp. 100–105). Proceedings of the 35th annual meeting of the International Society for Systems Practice, Ostersund, Sweden, June 14–20, 1991.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1992). Horace Bushnell's rhetorical training. The Journal of Communication and Religion, 15 (2), 55-69.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1993). Contemporary Chinese cultural characteristics: A communication perspective. Paper presented at the International Colloquium on Contemporary Chinese Culture, sponsored by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Hainan University, Haikou, China.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1993). The strategy of narrative and metaphor in interventionist rhetoric: International case studies. In D. Zarefsky (Ed.), Rhetorical movement: Essays in honor of Leland M. Griffin pp. 186–209, 253-256). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1994). On preaching: A review essay. In Sider, E. M. (Ed.), preaching the word: Sermons by Brethren in Christ ministers (pp. 155–166). Grantham, PA: Brethren in Christ Historical Society.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1996). Cultural influences in political communication (in Chinese). Journalism and Communication (in Chinese), 3(4), 52-61.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1997). Cultural influences in political communication. In A.Gonzalez & D. V. Tanno (Eds.), Politics, communication, and culture (pp. 9–26). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1998). A comparative analysis of rhetorical theory in China and the U.S. In K. S. Sitaram & M. H. Prosser (Eds.), Civic Discourse: Multiculturalism, Cultural Diversity and Global Communication (pp. 325–338). Stamford, CT: Ablex.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1998). Introduction: Communication and culture influencing each other. In D. R. Heisey & W. Gong (eds.),Communication and culture: China and the world entering the 21st Century. (pp. xvii-xxxvii). Amsterdam: Editions Rodopi.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1998). Reflections on religious speech communication. The Journal of Communication and Religion, 21(2), 85-107.


 * Heisey, D. R. (1999). China’s rhetoric of socialization in international civic discourse. In R. Kluver & J. H. Powers (Eds.), Civic discourse, civil society, and the Chinese world (pp. 221–236). Stamford, CT: Ablex.


 * Heisey, D.R. (Ed.) (2000). Chinese perspectives in rhetoric and Communication. Stamford, CT: Ablex.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2000). Global communication and human understanding. In G. M. Chen & W. J. Starosta (Eds.), Communication and global society. (pp. 193–214). Boston, MA: Peter Lang. Contemporary Chinese cultural characteristics: A communication Perspective. Paper presented at the International Colloquium on Contemporary Chinese Culture, sponsored by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and Hainan University, Haikou, China.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2000). Introduction: Chinese perspectives coming of age in the West and serving as a balance in theory and practice. In D.R. Heisey, Chinese Perspectives in Rhetoric and Communication (pp. xi-xx), Stamford, CT: Ablex.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2001). A bit of history. In 10th Anniversary Celebration of The Guangdongn Daily-Kent State University Exchange Program. CDROM.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2001). Sources of Chinese conflict management in international affairs. In G.M. Chen & R. Ma, (Eds.). Chinese conflict management and resolution. Westport, CT: Ablex.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2002). Communication and culture: Advances in communication and culture. Intercultural Communication Studies, XI: 2, 1-20.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2002). Sources of Chinese conflict management in international affairs. In G. M. Chen & R. Ma (Eds.), Chinese conflict management and resolution. (pp. 205–221). Westport, CT: Ablex.




 * Heisey, D. R. (2003). Introduction. In E. Morris Sider (Ed.), Windows to the church: Selections from twenty-five years of Brethren in Christ History and Life. (pp. 1–5). Grantham, PA: The Brethren in Christ Historical Society.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2004). China's President Hu Jintao's rhetoric of socialization. Intercultural Communication Studies, XIII:3 (Winter), 1-7.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2004). Healing body and soul: The life and times of Dr. W. O. Baker, 1827-1916. Grantham, PA: The Brethren in Christ Historical Society.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2005). Examining the successes and problems of China’s Policy on minority nationalities. Intercultural Communication Studies 14 (2): 23-37.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2006). Cultural orientations as expressed in the public statements of political leaders. China Media Research, 2 (1). 79-84.


 * Heisey, D. R. (2009). Responses to questions about Michael H. Prosser. In P. Zhang, Investigations into the Influence of an Intercultural Communication Founder—Michael H. Prosser and His Contemporary Scholars. Unpublished Master’s thesis. Shanghai: Shanghai International Studies University.


 * Shahghasemi, E., Heisey, D. R., & Mirani, G. (October 1, 2011). How do Iranians and U.S. Citizens perceive each other: A systematic review. Journal of Intercultural Communication, 27


 * Shahghasemi, E., & Heisey, D. R. (January 1, 2009). The Cross-Cultural Schemata of Iranian-American People Toward Each Other: A Qualitative Approach. Intercultural Communication Studies, 18, 1, 143-160.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2010). Blog xxx


 * Heisey, D. R. (2011[2001]). A dialogue proposal for intercultural communication. Intercultural Communication Studies. XX. 2.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2011). Iranian perspectives on communication in an age of globalization. Intercultural Communication Studies.xx. 1.
 * Heisey, D.R. (2011: xxx). Iranian communication studies perspective: D. Ray Heisey, Ph.D.’s interview questions for Ehsan Shahghasemeni of the University of Tehran. www.michaelprosser.com. Post 188.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2011) Iranian Perspectives on communication in an age of globalization. Intercultural Communication Studies. XX.1.


 * Heisey, D.R. (2011).The Persian Jewel: Damavand College, Tehran. Journal of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (in Asia). V. 1.


 * Heisey, D. R., Brockett, M. A., & Phipps, K. S. (1990). Contextual dimensions in the rhetoric of the Arab-Israeli conflict following Camp David. World Communication, 19 (1), 113-123.


 * Heisey, D. R., Calkins, K. & Jones, D. (1972). Excerpts from the analysis of the Ohio Grand Jury report. In R. M. O'Neil et al., No heroes no villains: New perspectives on Kent State and Jackson State (pp. 139–144). Jossey-Bass Inc., Publishers.


 * Heisey, D. R., & Ericsson, E. (1991). Principles of equality in the Swedish educational system. International Education, 20 (2), 31-41. Also published in Pedagogical Bulletin No. 14, Department of Education, University of Lund, Sweden.


 * Heisey, D. R. & Gong, W. (Eds.) (1998). Communication and culture: China and the world entering the 21st Century. Amsterdam: Editions Rodopi.


 * Heisey, D. R., & K. S. Phipps (1993). The Hart and Biden apologies: The failure of apologetic rhetoric. The Journal of Communication Studies, 11 (2), 53-65.


 * Heisey, D. R., & Trebing, J. D. (1983). A comparison of the rhetorical visions and strategies of the Shah's white revolution and the Ayatollah's Islamic revolution. Communication Monographs, 50,158-174.


 * Heisey, D. R., & Trebing, J. D. (1986). Authority and legitimacy: A rhetorical case study of the Iranian revolution. Communication Monographs, 53, 295-310.


 * Heisey, D. R., Yu, Z., & Yan, J. (1998-9). Persuasive strategies of the University Green Camp expedition to Bai Ma (White Horse) Snow Mountain, China, 1996. Intercultural Communication Studies, VIII-2 (Spring), 131-140.

MP
CONFERENCE: Leading to a special issue of CRIME MEDIA CULTURE Special Issue: Moral panics in the contemporary world
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 * Opening plenary, part 3: 4 of 9, Discussion with Stan Cohen and Jock Young, chaired by Julian Petley
 * Opening plenary, part 3: 4 of 9, Discussion with Stan Cohen and Jock Young, chaired by Julian Petley


 * Plenary session #2, part 1: 5 of 9, Sean Hier: A Productive Alliance: Linking the Sociologies of Moral Panic and Moral Regulation


 * Plenary session #2, part 3: 7 of 9, Discussion with Sean Hier and Chas Critcher, chaired by Julian Petley


 * Panel Discussion: 9 of 9, 'Video Nasties' panel discussion with Julian Petley and Xavier Mendik, chaired by Chas Critcher

Conference
Guest editors, Jason Hughes, Amanda Rohloff, Matthew David, and Julian Petley, end their foreword to the journal by saying, "Future researchers must seek to steer a course between, on the one hand, developing unreflective, 'orthodox' accounts of moral panic which merely reproduce aspects of a concept that, accordingly, risks becoming outmoded, and on the other, overextending or stretching the concept so much that it becomes, ultimately, a catch-all term which encapsulates everything and nothing about the inter-relationship between the media, social problems, social policy and public opinion in the contemporary world.
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Journal

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 * Opening address: 1 of 9, Chris Jenks.
 * This paper seeks to situate the concept of a ‘moral panic’ within a set of historical and social changes and thus to demonstrate that its impact and subsequent acceptability within the vocabulary of sociology were in part due to the conditions of its emergence.
 * This paper seeks to situate the concept of a ‘moral panic’ within a set of historical and social changes and thus to demonstrate that its impact and subsequent acceptability within the vocabulary of sociology were in part due to the conditions of its emergence.


 * Opening plenary, part 1: 2 of 9, Stanley Cohen. The Political Agenda of Moral Panic Theory: Constructing a Sociology of Importance.
 * [The paper] concentrates on the implications of two related claims about what this battle meant: first, that moral panics are inherently normative and can be categorized as good and bad moral panics (the ones that we study are invariably bad); second, that students of moral panics have to take sides in this normative battle.
 * [The paper] concentrates on the implications of two related claims about what this battle meant: first, that moral panics are inherently normative and can be categorized as good and bad moral panics (the ones that we study are invariably bad); second, that students of moral panics have to take sides in this normative battle.


 * Opening plenary, part 2: 3 of 9, Moral Panic and the Sociological Imagination.
 * There is a tendency in these neo-liberal times to view moral panics as simple mistakes in rationality generated perhaps by the mass media or rumour. In this process any link between the individual and the social structure, between historical period and social conflict, is lost. In particular the peculiar ‘rational irrationality’ of moral panics is obfuscated, the link between social structure and individual belief diminished, and attempts to utilize moral panics to stymie social change and transformative politics obscured.
 * There is a tendency in these neo-liberal times to view moral panics as simple mistakes in rationality generated perhaps by the mass media or rumour. In this process any link between the individual and the social structure, between historical period and social conflict, is lost. In particular the peculiar ‘rational irrationality’ of moral panics is obfuscated, the link between social structure and individual belief diminished, and attempts to utilize moral panics to stymie social change and transformative politics obscured.


 * Plenary session #2, part 2: 6 of 9, Chas Critcher: For a Political Economy of Moral Panics and Moral Regulation
 * It is argued that moral panics and moral regulation analysis should be informed by the adherence of political economy to the importance of historical change, seeing society as a totality, insisting on morality as a focus and position, and through a sustained commitment to praxis.
 * It is argued that moral panics and moral regulation analysis should be informed by the adherence of political economy to the importance of historical change, seeing society as a totality, insisting on morality as a focus and position, and through a sustained commitment to praxis.


 * Plenary session #3: 8 of 9, Catharine Lumby: Between Heat and Light: The Opportunity in Moral Panics
 * [This paper] examines the way that conservative politicians and media commentators have appropriated the accusation that they are fuelling moral panic as proof that they are actively engaged in a fight for morality.
 * [This paper] examines the way that conservative politicians and media commentators have appropriated the accusation that they are fuelling moral panic as proof that they are actively engaged in a fight for morality.


 * This article reports the results of a study designed to examine whether a social psychological approach to moral panic can (a) theorize the content as well as process of moral panic, and (b) understand both the cause and the impact of this response. This approach was tested in relation to the topic of asylum seekers.
 * This article reports the results of a study designed to examine whether a social psychological approach to moral panic can (a) theorize the content as well as process of moral panic, and (b) understand both the cause and the impact of this response. This approach was tested in relation to the topic of asylum seekers.


 * ... case study – in which news reporting on benefit fraud in Sweden and the United Kingdom... suggest that there is a close relationship between moral panic discourse and moral regulation discourse. Using different strategies to construct social relations and deviant subjectivities through moralizing articulations, momentary outbursts of moral panics, and the more common, routine, forms of moral regulation, draw and depend upon each other to organize consensus and the management of risks in processes of discursive legitimization.
 * ... case study – in which news reporting on benefit fraud in Sweden and the United Kingdom... suggest that there is a close relationship between moral panic discourse and moral regulation discourse. Using different strategies to construct social relations and deviant subjectivities through moralizing articulations, momentary outbursts of moral panics, and the more common, routine, forms of moral regulation, draw and depend upon each other to organize consensus and the management of risks in processes of discursive legitimization.