The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to public relations:
Public relations practice of managing the spread of information between an individual or an organization (such as a business, government agency, or a nonprofit organization) and the public.
Nature of public relations
Public relations can be described as all of the following:
- Academic discipline – branch of knowledge that is taught and researched at the college or university level. Disciplines are defined (in part), and recognized by the academic journals in which research is published, and the learned societies and academic departments or faculties to which their practitioners belong.
- Communication – activity of conveying information
- Marketing – process which creates, communicates, and delivers value to the customer, and maintains the relationship with customers.
Essence of public relations
- To create and sustain "shared meaning" or "common understanding" - NB this may be and usually is different from "shared beliefs"
- Propaganda: the general propagation of information for a specific purpose
- Psychological warfare:
- Public relations: techniques used to influence the publics' perception of an organization
- Publicity: PR techniques used to promote a specific product or brand
- Spin (public relations)
- Spin: both the objective of a PR campaign and the act of obtaining that objective
Public relations methods and approaches
- Airborne leaflet propaganda
- Astroturfing and Astroturf PR: fake grassroots
- Atrocity story
- Bandwagon effect
- Big lie
- Black propaganda
- Buzzword
- Card stacking
- Code word
- Communist propaganda
- Corporate image
- Corporate propaganda
- Cult of personality
- Demonization
- Disinformation: providing false information
- Dog-whistle politics
- Doublespeak
- Enterperience: fusing entertainment and experience together
- Euphemisms, as done deliberately to advance a cause or position (see also Political correctness)
- Factoid
- Fedspeak
- Front organization
- Glittering generality
- Homophobic propaganda
- Indoctrination
- Information warfare: the practice of disseminating information in an attempt to advance your agenda relative to a competing viewpoint
- Junk science
- Lesser of two evils principle
- Loaded language
- Marketing: commercial and business techniques
- Media bias
- Media manipulation: the attempt to influence broadcast media decisions in an attempt to present your view to a mass audience
- Misuse of statistics
- News management: PR techniques concerned with the news media
- News propaganda
- Newspeak
- Plain folks
- Propaganda film
- Public service announcement
- Revolutionary propaganda
- Self propaganda
- Social marketing: techniques used in behavioral change, such as health promotion
- Sound science
- Rebuttal: a type of news management technique
- Rhetoric
- Slogan
- Transfer (propaganda)
- Video news release
- Weasel Word
- White propaganda
- Yellow journalism
Theory of public relations
- Agenda-setting theory
- Framing (social sciences)
- Propaganda model: a model developed by Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman to explain how propaganda functions in democracies
History of public relations
Historical uses of propaganda
By country
Miscellany
World War II
- American propaganda during World War II
- British propaganda during World War II
- Propaganda in the Republic of China
- Soviet propaganda during World War II
- Walt Disney's World War II Propaganda Production
Britain
Nazi Germany
People
- Norman Baillie-Stewart (Radio broadcaster, 1939-1942)
- Robert Henry Best (Radio broadcaster, 1942)
- Elsa Bruckmann (Propagandist to industrialists)
- Hugo Bruckmann
- Franz Burri (Disseminator of Nazi propaganda in Switzerland)
- Otto Dietrich (Press chief)
- Constance Drexel (Radio broadcaster)
- Hermann Esser (First Nazi Chief of Propaganda)
- Arnold Fanck (Film director)
- Paul Ferdonnet (Radio broadcaster)
- Walter Frentz (Photographer and film producer)
- Hans Fritzsche (Holder of various posts in the Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda)
- Walther Funk (State Secretary for the Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, 1933–1938)
- Hermann Gauch
- Herbert Gerdes
- Karl Gerland
- Mildred Gillars
- Joseph Goebbels
- Hans F. K. Günther
- Eugen Hadamovsky
- Ernst Hanfstaengl
- Karl Hanke
- Thea von Harbou
- Veit Harlan
- Fritz Hippler
- Heinrich Hoffmann
- Raymond Davies Hughes
- Emil Jannings
- William Joyce
- Fred W. Kaltenbach (Radio broadcaster)
- Emil Kirdorf
- Fritz Julius Kuhn
- Johann von Leers
- Wolfgang Liebeneiner
- Lord Haw-Haw
- Horst von Möllendorff
- Martin James Monti
- Werner Naumann
- Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann
- Wilfred von Oven
- Leni Riefenstahl
- Alfred Rosenberg
- Fritz Rössler
- Gregor Schwartz-Bostunitsch
- Albert Speer
- Julius Streicher
- Eberhard Taubert
Organisations
- Charlie and his Orchestra
- Department of Film
- Gaubildstelle (Office of Slides)
- Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda (Reichsministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda or Propagandaministerium, or RNVP)
Campaigns and events
Media
- The Eternal Jew (Fritz Hippler, 1940)
- Triumph of the Will (Leni Riefenstahl, 1935)
Films
Public relations organizations
- Ad Council
- Bureau of International Information Programs
- Institute for Propaganda Analysis
- Ministry of propaganda
- United States Information Agency
- Shared values initiative - Council of American Muslims for Understanding
Public relations media
- "Al Fateh"
- America's Army, video game produced by the U.S. government with the stated aim of encouraging players to become interested in joining the U.S. Army.
Works about public relations and propaganda
Books
Film
See also
- List of cognitive biases – Systematic patterns of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment
- List of common misconceptions
- List of fallacies – List of faulty argument types
- List of memory biases – Systematic patterns of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment
- Straight and Crooked Thinking – Book by Robert H. Thouless (book)
External links
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