Following the first two Institute for Public Relations (IPR)/Peppercomm COVID-19 studies, which focused on initial understanding of the organizational responses and employee perceptions of the pandemic, the third installment is a collection of qualitative assessments from the perspectives of comm
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This abstract, summarized by IPR and provided by the IPR Behavioral Insights Research Center, is based on a research paper written by Alistair Raymond Bryce Soutter, Ph.D.; Timothy C. Bates, Ph.D.; and Rene Mottus, Ph.D. at the U
This blog post summarizes research published in the latest issue of the PR Journal.
The field of public relation has been criticized for failing to address diversity in education and practice. Traditionally, White women dom
In partnership with PR News, “Lessons Earned”is a series featuring IPR Trustees sharing a difficult lesson.
I was petrified and excited. After becoming leader of the communications and outr
Social distancing and self-isolation aren’t just keeping families apart; they are also separating politicians from constituents and others trying to shape public policy.
Over 70% of 245 government affairs executives surveyed in a new Public Affairs Council poll believe that, even after the COVID-19 pandemic
In partnership with Ragan’s PR Daily, “How We Did It” is a series featuring IPR Trustees discussing a success in their public relations career.
When I was trying to climb the corporate ladder in Silicon Valley
On May 29, 2020, President Donald Trump tweeted “Revoke 230!” to his more than 80 million Twitter followers. The tweet is a curious one because rather than focusing on a general political message it speaks directly to a section of the Communications Decency Act, specifically Title 47 United States Code section
In partnership with PR News, “Lessons Earned” is a series featuring IPR Trustees discussing a hard-fought lesson or triumph that helped to mold or change their career.
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