Chapter 1: Diversity of Online News Media: Source and Frame Analyses
Chapter 2: Constructing Collective Memory in the Digital Era: An Analysis of News Stories on the Former President’s Death
Chapter 3: Relationships between Online Users’ Perceived Journalistic Roles and News Engagement: The Moderating Role of Credibility
Chapter 4: A Functional Analysis of the 2007 South Korean Presidential Campaign Blogs
Chapter 5: The Influence of Blog Posting on Issue Involvement and Political Participation
Chapter 6: YouTube Videos as a Means of Grassroots Mobilization in Korea’s Candlelight Movements: "Learning from YouTube" Revisited
Chapter 7: Who Talks Politics?: An Empirical Study of Online and Offline Casual Political Communication
Chapter 8: The Internet and Social Media: Integrated Consequences for Political Discussion for Korean College Students
Chapter 9: Why Does the Press Still Matter? Explaining the Conditional Effects of Online Mobilization of Protest on Newspaper Market Structures in Asia
Chapter 10: Digital Revolution or Digital Dominance? Regime Type, Internet Control, and Political Activism in East Asia
Chapter 11: Does SNS make Gender Differences in Political Participation? South Korean Case Study
Chapter 12: Revisiting the Cultural Logic of Politics in the Digital Age: Internet Use, Personalization of Political Action, and Asian Values
Chapter 13: Determinants of Unaffiliated Citizen Protests: The Korean Candlelight Protests of 2016-2017
Chapter 14: A Matter of Trust and Utility? Perceptions of Online Political Content, Protest, and Political Participation in South Korea
Chapter 15: Same Despair but Different Hope: Youth Activism in East Asia and Contentious Politics
Chapter 16: #MeToo in South Korea: A Comparative Analysis of Feminist Perspectives in a Cultural Context