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Why Does Political Communication
Start With Volume 10? ... and Other Mysteries of the Scholarly
Infrastructure
Jarol B. Manheim
It is at times like this that I feel old.
In April, Jill Edy, who was a student in the first course
I taught after coming to George Washington University in 1987
and whose exceptional work as editor of this newsletter we
should pause to appreciate, pointed out to me a tradition
of which I had been unaware – that the outgoing Chair
of the APSA Section shares with readers in the autumn issue
her or his thoughts on current research, issues confronting
the field, or some such. This in turn prompted me to look
back at the offerings of some of my predecessors in this position
and of our counterparts in the ICA Division, whose contributions
are published in the spring issues. What I found were a number
of erudite pieces that tended to focus on particular research
interests or other professional concerns of the authors. All
have been fundamentally scholarly efforts offering excellent
insights.
Naturally I decided to offer something completely different
– a brief and doubtless idiosyncratic look backward
and forward, not at the scholarship in our sphere of interest
(at least not directly), but rather, at the infrastructure
of Political Communication as a field of study.
Central to that infrastructure are the Section/Division organizations
themselves, the journal, Political Communication, that we
jointly publish, and this newsletter. We could not live without
them. It is, I think, important that we take note from time
to time, especially in a growing field that so many have entered
quite recently, that we once did.
The ICA Political Communication Division has a longer history
than the APSA section, having developed in the mid-1970s just
as the study of political communication itself was emerging
from the hibernation imposed by the failure of early voting
studies to find the silver bullet of persuasion. With exceptions,
media and politics, as it was often termed then, tended to
be a topic of one or two weeks’ duration in courses
on elections, public opinion, political behavior, persuasion
or the like, and the opportunities to publish related research
were few. When I offered my own first full course in the field
in 1971, I was able to find only three or four topical books
suitable for assignment to students. The establishment of
the ICA division was a major step toward changing that.
But I am writing here as the APSA section chair, so I’ll
let the ICA folks relate their own history if they are so
inclined. On the APSA side, despite early interest and efforts
(including a noteworthy one by David Paletz), the impediments
placed on section development by the parent association slowed
development, and it was not until 1990 that enough petition
signatures were obtained to establish the section. I don’t
want to leave anyone out (and apologize to those whom I inadvertently
have), but my memory is that Ann Crigler, Marion Just, Russ
Neuman and Doris Graber contributed the most to that success.
As Ann tells the story, her spearheading of the petition drive
that ultimately proved successful started over a dinner discussion
with Jean Pool, who urged her to push it forward during Lucian
Pye’s APSA presidency. Pye agreed to help, and provided
valuable assistance moving the petition through the association.
The founding group was able to gather the requisite 100 signatures,
and the section became a reality. The founders also made what
has become, in my view, a crucial decision to assure future
development when they chose to name the new section not Media
and Politics, but the more inclusive Political Communication.
At about that same time, Dan Nimmo and Bob Savage, acting
from the ICA side, approached me about exploring the possibility
of establishing a journal in cooperation with the APSA section.
ICA already sponsored a journal, Political Communication Review,
which had been established in 1976 and was ably edited by
Lynda Lee Kaid and Keith Sanders at the University of Oklahoma,
but PCR operated on a shoestring and was able to publish only
a small annual issue. Dan and Bob had something grander in
mind, but felt that the division itself could not sustain
two publications. Lynda and Keith graciously agreed that,
as part of any negotiations on a larger publication, PCR would
participate in the changes.
Interestingly in light of the extraordinary cooperation we
have all experienced over the last decade plus, the ICA division
leadership of the time recognized that no journal proposal
would succeed without the support and participation of the
newly formed APSA section, but was quite concerned that the
two organizations might not be able to work together toward
a successful venture. And despite the overlap in membership,
there was some measure of distrust coming the other way as
well.
It turned out to be remarkably easy. Working with Bob Savage
and David Weaver on the ICA side, I was named chair of the
division’s publication committee. Then, under the leadership
of Doris Graber, the APSA section, too, created a publications
committee. Doris asked me to chair it. As one can imagine,
this greatly simplified the negotiations between the two political
communication organizations. Acting jointly, then, the two
committees solicited interest from publishers and advanced
a proposal that included alternating editorships, a joint
editorial board and a publisher. We also recommended the joint
publication of a newsletter with the editorship to be alternated
on a reverse pattern to the journal.
From the beginning, this all had to make economic sense,
and, given that libraries were even in those pre-Web days
cutting back on journal purchases and scholarly publishers
were suffering financially as a result, identifying a publisher
for Political Communication proved to be a bit of a challenge.
And that’s where the answer to the trivia question in
the title is found. Through one of the numerous industry mergers
of the time, Taylor & Francis, the publisher the committee
ultimately recommended, had acquired a journal related to
our field, Political Communication and Persuasion, edited
by Yonah Alexander. But T&F was considering terminating
the journal, which was then publishing its ninth volume. Their
proposal was that PCP be renamed Political Communication and
come under the joint sponsorship of the ICA and APSA groups.
But, they argued, the “renamed” (as opposed to
the “new”) journal needed to begin with Volume
10 because that would permit them to continue fulfilling essential
and existing library subscriptions rather than trying to sell
new ones into an adverse market. In candor, we all wanted
a “new” journal and this was almost a deal breaker,
but set against that was a royalty arrangement that would,
over time, greatly improve the finances of both organizations,
which in those days tended to run in the high three figures.
The committee recommended the deal, and at their respective
membership meetings in 1991, both the ICA and APSA groups
accepted the recommendation. Because neither the section nor
the division could enter into contracts on their own, however,
there followed yet another round of reviews by APSA and ICA,
which, with a bit of diplomacy on all sides, approved of the
venture. Then the real work began.
I will assume for reasons of verbal economy that everyone
reading this is familiar with the enormous contributions of
our journal and newsletter editors and our program chairs
over the dozen years since. Well beyond their own scholarly
efforts, collectively, and as our agents, they have helped
to shape and change our field, and helped it to mature. It
is easy being a section chair, at least these days –
you chair a meeting, do a few administrative and political
odds and ends, and write a piece for the newsletter. But editors
and program chairs do the real work of field building, and
no matter how often we thank them, one more time is not too
many.
The extent of their success was brought home to me recently
when I had the privilege of attending a conference sponsored
by the Communication Department at the University of Washington.
The conference brought together political scientists and communication
scholars for a discussion of communication and citizenship,
and as Ann Crigler pointed out, the remarkable thing about
it, especially given the topic, was how little it had to do
with campaigns and elections – our common point of origin.
Rather, the topics ranged from the definition and measurement
of citizen competence through citizen activism and corporate
power structures to the analysis of communication networks.
The presentations and discussion were theory-rich and data-rich,
but most of all they were innovative and interesting. It was
clear from the conference, as a microcosm, that as a scholarly
community our interests are evolving and expanding and we
are developing new methodological tools to explore aspects
of political communication that few imagined even a dozen
years ago. That, more than anything else, is the sign of a
vibrant enterprise.
It was also clear from the UW conference, as it is from the
continued success of our journal, from its diverse content,
from the degree of overlapping membership between the ICA
and APSA groups, and from the growing pattern of collaboration
across disciplines and continents, that the early disciplinary
jealousies on both sides were misplaced. Political scientists
and communication scholars will continue to have differences
of substantive interests, theories and perspectives, and methods.
But perhaps more than in most areas in either discipline,
we continue to interact with one another and to turn those
differences to advantage as we go forward.
Good for us.
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