Media visibility and CSR.
Natalia Raimondo Anselmino; María Cecilia Reviglio, pp. 6-9
The public agenda, three experiential factors, and the media.
Alicia Casermeiro Pereson, pp. 10-11
Accountability through the Chilean press.
Laureano Checa, pp. 12-13
Two territories. The 2015 Argentine elections on Twitter.
Paula Clerici; Facundo Cruz; Lara Goyburu, pp. 14-16
The rebellion of discontent.
Ernesto Hernández Norzagaray, pp. 18-20
Elections in Nicaragua, the triumph of the familiar.
Jorge Vilaplana del Cerro; Inmaculada Melero López, pp. 21-23
2016 U.S. elections: News media and social media.
Pablo J. Boczkowski, pp. 24-25
Being a woman, engaging in politics, and surviving the media.
Virginia García Beaudoux, pp. 26-27
How is an alternative agenda built?
María Soledad Segura, pp. 28-29
Notes on campaign research.
Ignacio Ramírez, pp. 30-31
Agenda setting and framing: an unresolved theoretical debate.
Natalia Aruguete, pp. 36-42
The handling of sources in the coverage of the Argentine Audiovisual Law. The case of the economic press (March-October 2009).
Nadia Koziner, pp. 43-51
The media and the elections: the news agenda of the 2015 presidential campaign in Argentina.
Esteban Zunino; Manuel Ortíz Marín, pp. 52-55
The poverty of the media.
Martin A. Maldonado, pp. 56-64