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An exploration of PR Week UK's framing of specialist PR identities (1985–2010).

Authors :
Garsten, Nicky
Cronin, Bruce
Howard, Jane
Source :
Public Relations Review. Nov2024, Vol. 50 Issue 4, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

A trend of increased specialisation in public relations has been widely asserted but little substantiated. Specifically, there is no longitudinal study of the development of specialist coverage in the principal trade journal of the industry, PR Week. Neither has there been an exploration of the perspectives of PR Week UK's senior managers on specialist-practitioner identities. This article seeks to fill these gaps. This examination of specialist coverage in PR Week 1985–2010 finds a punctuated process of constructing specialist practitioner identities within an institutional subsystem. We examine over 220 editions of PR Week, in the UK, over a 26-year period. We calculate that there was indeed a statistically significant trend of published regular specialist pages. We analysed editorial announcements about regular specialist pages and interviewed three former senior managers from PR Week. We considered page titles as both content and discourse. We also adapted Bucher et al.'s (2016) framing strategies. In doing so, we revised one of Bucher et al.'s strategies, re-terming the 'self-casting' strategy as a media casting strategy in the context of a trade publication's framing of a profession's boundaries. Building on the scholarship of Edwards and Pieczka (2013), we suggest that the trade media play an institutional role in boundary setting. A trade publication's role in the promotion of jurisdictions was, and has not been, previously ascribed by Abbott (1988) or Waisbord (2019). We newly find that when PR Week introduced specialist pages, the publication's executive actively sought to bring sector-specialist practitioners, with waning identification with the profession, back into the PR fold. Like a sheepdog, PR Week played a proactive institutional role in the professional reframing of public relations around specialisms. Yet the boundaries that PR Week defended were fuzzy given that over 95% of the regular specialist pages titles did not include the name 'PR'. We also argue, that in establishing the specialist pages PR Week executives not only championed PR's legitimacy, but also sought to protect the magazine's market and to enhance the title's journalistic brand. • Discovery of a punctuated trend of regular specialist pages in the first longitudinal study of PR Week (1985-2010). • Identification of the active institutional role of a trade publication in fuzzy boundary setting of a new profession • The specific commercial and branding considerations of a trade magazine are best understood when analysing B-2-B coverage. • Bucher et al 's framing strategies are adapted to the media's framing of professional boundaries, with 'self-casting' re-termed as media casting • The names of page titles are important. They justify content and discourse analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03638111
Volume :
50
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Public Relations Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179372196
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pubrev.2024.102468