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The future of objectivity
The future of objectivity

... masked by the fact of active political engagement and contestation. News could be criticised for systematically favouring some perspectives and excluding or marginalising others (trades union or left-Labour views in the Glasgow Media Group’s classic (1995) studies, for example). The question of what ...
Orientalism in reporting religion: Approaches to
Orientalism in reporting religion: Approaches to

... of Islam are very much more prevalent than any others, and that such images correspond, not to what Islam “is” (given that Islam is not a natural fact but a composite structure created to a certain extent by Muslims and the West in the ways I have tried to describe), but to what prominent sectors of ...
FORM, STYLE AND JOURNALISTIC STRATEGIES Marcel
FORM, STYLE AND JOURNALISTIC STRATEGIES Marcel

... media.3 We could add that we have to do the same to understand society. Nevertheless, until recently, form and style did not receive the attention they deserved in media history. Media history used an institutional framework for a long time. It focused on the organizational, political, technological ...
State of Investigative Journalism in Pakistan
State of Investigative Journalism in Pakistan

... model of the press. According to this model, the press should make government accountable by publishing information about matters of public interest even if such information reveals abuses or crimes perpetrated by those in authority. From this perspective, investigative journalism is one of the most ...
Yellow Journalism
Yellow Journalism

... • Hearst instructed his reporters to travel to Cuba and write stories designed to tug at the heartstrings of Americans. • Stories talked about female prisoners, executions, rebels fighting, and starving women and children. • These filled the pages of American newspapers. ...
The Problem of Realist Events in American
The Problem of Realist Events in American

... events especially for the young (Nordenson, 2008). The “relentless rise in the number of news outlets, the frequency of news reports, and the media’s clamor for every scrap of new information”, says former New York Times editor Jack Rosenthal, has immersed society “in a flood” that creates “a kind o ...
and save the article to your computer
and save the article to your computer

... help of hyperlinks the reader can disclose the content by his/her own scenario. Another transmedia project was also done by New York Times in 2012. The name of this story “Snow Fall. The Avalanche at Tunnel Creek” became institution and was awarded Pulitzer Prize [6]. This was an investigation by a ...
Chapter 2. Journalism and democracy: the concept of free press In a
Chapter 2. Journalism and democracy: the concept of free press In a

... The ideas of the Enlightenment had an important influence in American countries independence movements and later became the foundations of their governments and laws, especially in the U.S. "Americans in the 18th century used the printed word to engage debate" (Copeland, 2006, 183). The concepts of ...
Participation, Remediation, Bricolage: Considering
Participation, Remediation, Bricolage: Considering

... “technological change is fundamentally reshaping the relationships between and among news organizations, journalists and their many publics, including audiences, competitors, news sources, sponsors and those who seek to regulate or control the press.” Using examples such as the role of online inform ...
Who Controls the Public Sphere in an Era of Algorithms? Questions
Who Controls the Public Sphere in an Era of Algorithms? Questions

... In addition, scholars have challenged the notion of public interest journalism by arguing that different journalistic periods have been tied to different “imaginings” of the audience and, in turn, different ideas about the role that journalism should play in holding power to account. x Ethnographic ...
Journalism and Anthropology
Journalism and Anthropology

... (which I’ll consider here as a part of the article even if it could be a journalistic genre by itself), not lingering on the video or radio production in both categories (not for a lack of interest, but mostly for a matter of time and unity of the work). For the article, I’ll focus mostly on the fea ...
Agenda Setting and Framing - School of Journalism and Mass
Agenda Setting and Framing - School of Journalism and Mass

... – Increases when consistent with personal orientation  Interpersonal discussion – Reduces media dependence for agenda development ...
Between facts and news: Journalism, common sense knowledge
Between facts and news: Journalism, common sense knowledge

... 1992: 122). The uses of television may provide us with a starting-point for understanding how families develop and negotiate rules or principles governing areas of behaviour (Morley, 1992; 142). An audience is not viewed as an aggregate of viewers of a specific program. The operations of coding and ...
Yellow Journalism - IH Social Studies
Yellow Journalism - IH Social Studies

... drawn  by  Richard  F.  Outcault.  This  cartoon  became  so  popular  that  William  Randolph   Hearst,  owner  of  the  New  York  Journal,  offered  the  artist  a  considerable  amount  of  money   to  join  his  newspaper.  Joseph  Pulitzer  then  had  to  employ  a  new  artist,  George  Luks, ...
Media and Antisocial Behavior
Media and Antisocial Behavior

... • The Media Task Force Report: Violence in the Media (1969). ...
a professional - Brazilian Journalism Research
a professional - Brazilian Journalism Research

... What kind of professional is a journalist? What kind of individual is he at work, what kind of collectivity in a society? When the scientific community started looking at this question again in France more than 25 years ago (it had already been raised on a legal level in 1935 when the law on the sta ...
Food Risk and Crisis Communication in Taiwan
Food Risk and Crisis Communication in Taiwan

... Frame chosen: Events or conflicts as starting points to dig out more policy or administration-related flaws News sources: Not relying on governments as single sources (balanced by non-government experts or organizations), but lay public not priority source consideration Refusal to be government loud ...
Blogging down a dictatorship: Human rights, citizen journalists and
Blogging down a dictatorship: Human rights, citizen journalists and

... had a severe and debilitating impact on not only the principle of communicative democracy, but also the entire social, political and economic fabric of the country (Moyo, 2003, 2009, 2010; Moyo and Chuma, 2010; Ranger, 2003). Although the causes of the crisis are multifaceted, the predominant view i ...
Issues in Journalism
Issues in Journalism

... — Remain free of associations and activities that may compromise integrity or damage credibility. — Refuse gifts, favors, fees, free travel and special treatment, and shun secondary employment, political involvement, public office and service in community organizations if they compromise journalisti ...
this Article - European Journal of Language and
this Article - European Journal of Language and

... according to him, there are cases when politicians do give statements of interest which should be quoted. According to him quoting Facebook status updates should not be completely eliminated, but it should not become the main pillar of journalistic reporting. Jeta Xharra2, the editor in chief of the ...
Chapter 2 Mass Communication Effects: How Society & Media Interact
Chapter 2 Mass Communication Effects: How Society & Media Interact

... Views the political campaign as a competition for the hearts and minds of voters. A candidate’s response to an attack is as important as the attack itself. ...
Journalism Ethics - WJEC
Journalism Ethics - WJEC

... students to showcase what they have learned about ethics. There is a problem with focusing on substance (media content) as a barometer of ethical fitness. There is need to interrogate the method of news gathering and news values. Do journalists use ethical instruments to collect their stories? Some ...
History of Journalism
History of Journalism

... The Press Both press and print can be traced back to the Latin premere, 'to press'. Journalists and the newspaper industry have been known as the press, in reference to printing presses, since the late 18th century. Another name for journalists, used since the 1830s or 1840s, is the fourth estate. ...
Journalistic identity in contemporary Indonesia
Journalistic identity in contemporary Indonesia

... Technological skill was linked to both the quality of the journalistic product and the speed with which it could be produced. Regardless of medium (print, radio or television), technology's greatest impact was seen as providing the ability for journalists to rapidly produce engaging, accessible stor ...
Case Study - Prime Research
Case Study - Prime Research

... general economy stories. The media analysis confirmed over time that while the client generated more thorough, “high quality” feature stories and exclusives, the competitor tended to appear more often in round-up stories which are, by nature, less focused, shorter and of lesser impact. The client wa ...
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Philanthrojournalism

Philanthrojournalism (also known as not-for-profit journalism (NPJ), non-profit journalism or think tank journalism) is the practice of journalism as a non-profit organization. Like all non-profit organizations, NPJs depend on private donations or foundation grants to pay for operational expenses. This branch of journalism is not to be confused with other types of nonprofit news media organizations in the non-investigative field. Although they have existed for decades, the proliferation of the world-wide-web and internet have helped create a booming industry of non-profit investigative centers. Their existence has sparked widespread debate over their ability to remain neutral, especially when their revenue depends on ideologically-skewed funding organizations or donors. In times of a large decline in newspaper revenue and crises in the newspaper industries, other scholars have also argued whether this is, in fact, a sustainable initiative. Still others have claimed their support for philanthrojournalism, and its ability to maintain high quality, and be less constrained by advertisers.Though there is limited research on philanthrojournalistic organizations, a few studies shed some light on their advantages and limitations. Organizations with a national-level scope are more identifiable, as they compare to mainstream commercial news organizations. According to journalism.org, these organizations fall into two main categories: group sites, part of formal families organized by a single funder and associated sites, those that share content but operate independently.
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