In addition to publishing several dozen journal articles, Semetko has written or edited a number of books in comparative politics and political communication. In 1999, she coauthored the book On message: Communicating the campaign with Pippa Norris, John Curtice, David Sanders, and Margaret Scammell. The book uses the 1997 United Kingdom general election as a case to study the role of campaigning and political media in election outcomes. The book used a variety of methodologies to study that campaign, prompting Shanto Iyengar to write: "At last, a genuinely multi-method study of political campaigning". In 1991, Semetko coauthored the comparative study of the 1984 United States presidential election and the 1983 United Kingdom general election, The Formation of Campaign Agendas: A Comparative Analysis of Party and Media Roles in Recent American and British Elections. Doris Graber reviewed this book as "a path-breaking, major work", with Ann N. Crigler writing in the American Political Science Review that it is "a well-researched and clearly written piece of scholarship that advances knowledge about the transactional relationships between the institutions of the press and politics". Among her other books, Semetko was also a co-editor, with Margaret Scammell, of The Sage Handbook of Political Communication. Semetko received the 1992 Robert M. Worcester Prize which is given by the World Association for Public Opinion Research to the best article in the International Journal of Public Opinion Research, for an article that she coauthored with Joanne Bay Brzinski, David Weaver, and Lars Willnat. Her article with Kees Aarts, titled "The Divided Electorate: Effects of Media Use on Political Involvement" and published in The Journal of Politics, received the 2003 Kaid-Sanders Award for Best Political Communication Article of the Year from the Political Communication section of the American Political Science Association. In 2019, a citation analysis by the political scientists Hannah June Kim and Bernard Grofman listed Semetko among the top 40 most cited women working as a political scientist at an American university.
Academic positions
From 2003 to 2013, Semetko was the Director of the Claus M. Halle Institute for Global Learning. At the end of her tenure as Director, then-Provost Earl Lewis wrote that the "Halle Institute's visibility, its programs and partnership, affiliated faculty and publications, have grown significantly under Dr. Semetko's creative leadership", citing the examples of her creation of an Emory-Nanjing Visiting Scholars Program and expanding various opportunities for Halle Institute scholars to conduct research abroad. Semetko has also been the Vice-Provost for International Affairs at Emory University, and the Director of the Office of International Affairs there. In 2011, Semetko was elected as a lifetime member to the Council on Foreign Relations. Semetko has also been a visiting scholar and a Fulbright scholar at the Indian Institutes of Technology.
Selected works
On message: Communicating the campaign, with Pippa Norris, John Curtice, David Sanders, and Margaret Scammell
"Framing European politics: A content analysis of press and television news", Journal of Communication, with Patti Valkenburg
"The Divided Electorate: Effects of Media Use on Political Involvement", The Journal of Politics, with Kees Aarts
Co-editor, The Sage Handbook of Political Communication
Selected awards
Samuel H. Beer Best Dissertation Prize
Robert M. Worcester prize, World Association for Public Opinion Research