CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
A political campaign is an organized effort which seeks to influence
the decision making process within a specific group Amuchie. (2012). In democracies, political campaigns often refer to electoral campaigns, wherein representatives are chosen or referendums are decided. In modern politics, the most high profile
political campaigns are focused on candidates for head
of state or head of government,
often a president
or prime minister.
Amuchie. (2012)
Modern political campaigns have set
new standards for how successful campaigns are conducted day-to-day. The
campaign is conducted in what would seem to the public like pseudo-military
style, with a strict chain of command, zero tolerance for certain prohibited
actions, and an extended daily schedule that starts early and ends much later
than most "day jobs". Prohibited
actions may include, but are not limited to: lying about numbers
generated (e.g. phone calls made, doors knocked, volunteers recruited, etc.) -
this is increasingly an issue in offices that are wirelessly connected, without
direct oversight; going outside the chain of command (e.g. talking to a
superior's superior who happens to be a friend in order to get special favors
or report information); non-press-shop members talking to the press; blogging (considered another form of "talking to the
press", which can interfere with message discipline);
and being arrested (or otherwise becoming a potential easy target for opponent
smear campaigns) Robert J. Dinkin (1989).
The daily schedule of a political campaign is hyperextended, and often
has no definite beginning or end, only a series of tasks to be completed by
certain benchmark times, or, most often, "COB" ("Close
of Business"). COB for political campaigns
is generally defined as "the time at night at which your supervisor is
required to report his/her numbers" (or shortly beforehand), so that your
numbers reporting (generally the last action a political campaigner takes
before COB) can be factored into theirs Richard Jensen (1999). For example, a
field organizer may have collected 9 new committed volunteers for an event
during the day; he will be required to report this at 8:45pm to his regional
field director, so that the regional can report that all field organizers in
the region recruited 52 total volunteers for said event; which needs to be
reported to the deputy state field director by 9:00, so that THEY can speak to
the state field director at 9:15 and report that 827 volunteers have been
recruited for events around the state; and so on, up the chain of command.
Once each of these reporting
sequences is finished, organizers at all levels may do paperwork, send emails,
call friends, and do other things which are not effective to do during business
hours or "voter contact time".
Political campaigns are generally about contacting voters and volunteers at the
nuts-and-bolts level; and so dependent on state law, local peculiarities and
the preferences of campaign organizers and volunteers, a certain block of time
(usually ending at 8pm or 9pm) is set aside each night for
"voter/volunteer contact" Richard Jensen (1999). (Violation of this
block of time to conduct other activities often cannot happen or needs a strong
justification, such as attending an important meeting.) Only a very small
fraction of campaign workers (such as people who deal with vendors) do the bulk
of their work during traditional business hours Richard Jensen (1999).
1.2
STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
The role of mass media in every society is often to
educate, inform and enlighten. It is assumed that, where those roles are
adequately carried out, elections are bound to be free and fair. However, in
Nigeria, several elections have been married. The question is how the Nigeria
mass media has influence the Nigerian populace during political campaign. How
come electoral processes have not been successful, is the mass media system not
commensurate to other media systems elsewhere? This and many others are
questions that this study hopes to identify.
1.3 AIM AND OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The purpose of this report is therefore to A
political campaign is an
organized effort which seeks to influence the decision making process within a
specific group. In democracies,
political campaigns often refer to electoral campaigns, wherein representatives are chosen or referendums are decided. In modern politics, the most high profile
political campaigns are focused on candidates for head
of state or head of government,
often a president
or prime minister.
provide the role of mass media in political campaign. This
study will analyze the role of mass media in the 2007 elections, highlighting
the ways in which the key election stakeholders utilized mass media during the
election. The task of this study is divided into six sections. Following this
introduction is the second section that explores the meaning, attributes, and
classifications of mass media.
1.4 SCOPE OF THE STUDY
This project research focused specifically
on the influence of Nigeria mass media on political campaign ( A study of the
2007 general election).
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE
The significance of this
report are as follows:
·
The
study indicated that mass media in electioneering aid credibility
·
The
study indicated that mass media can be used as tools to connect with voters and
constituents
·
To
show that mass media has become a major election information sharing platform
globally.
·
It
indicated that mass media act as a tool for improving the efficiency of
election observation
·
It
enhanced transparency in the electoral process and made INEC more accountable
to the public in the conduct of elections.
1.6 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
This
and many others are questions that this study hopes to identify.
·
Has mass media help in mobilizing the Nigerian
populace?
·
Is 2007 electoral processes successful?
·
Is the mass media system not commensurate to
other media systems elsewhere?
Department | Mass Communication |
Project ID Code | MAS0062 |
Chapters | 5 Chapters |
No of Pages | 17 pages |
Reference | YES |
Format | Microsoft Word |
Price | ₦4000, $15 |
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Contact Us On | +2347043069458 |