Browsing School of Communication Studies - Te Kura Whakapāho by Author "Theunissen, P"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
-
Dialogue and two-way symmetrical communication in Public Relations theory and practice
Theunissen, P; Rahman, KA (AUT University, 2010)Dialogue is often equated to two-way symmetrical communication, and over the years the concept has been subsumed into the systems theory. Textbook authors make cursory references to “dialogue” and “conversation” while ... -
Discussion, Dialogue, Discourse| Elegy for Mediated Dialogue: Shiva the Destroyer and Reclaiming Our First Principles
Kent, ML; Theunissen, P (USC Annenberg Press, 2016)The field of public relations has embraced dialogic theory as a valuable theoretical framework for almost two decades. More recently, scholars have used dialogue as a framework to study the mediated communication via the ... -
Exploratory study into the perceptions of knowledge, knowledge sources and knowledge uses among students
Theunissen, P; Theunissen, C; Allan, M (AUT University, 2007)In 2007 an explorative, quantitative survey among students from the AUT University, Manukau Business School (MIT) and the University of Canterbury was undertaken to determine their perceptions of knowledge, knowledge sources ... -
New Zealand-based students' perceptions and use of the Internet as a communication tool and source of information
Theunissen, P; Theunissen, CA (New Zealand Communication Association, 2008)In 2007 a pilot study in the form of a quantitative survey among New Zealand-based students was undertaken to determine their use and perceptions of the Internet as a communication tool and source of information and ... -
“New Zealand’s darkest day”. The representation of national grief in the media: the case of the Christchurch earthquake
Theunissen, P; Mersham, G (CSSALL Publishers, 2011)On 22 February 2011 an earthquake registering 6.3 on the Richter scale struck the city of Christchurch, New Zealand. Buildings had collapsed, businesses were disrupted, and many lives were lost. As the death toll rose and ...