Termin realizacji zamówienia: ok. 16-18 dni roboczych.
Darmowa dostawa!
This book explores how journalism is practiced around the world, and how there are multiple factors at the structural and contextual level shaping journalism practice.
Through a ground-breaking exploration of global journalism in comparative perspectives, the current book offers a diverse set of case studies on the challenges that journalists face in different situations across cultures. This includes work from leading scholars addressing four major subdomains: Journalistic Autonomy, Safety, and Freedom; (2) Mis(information), Crises, and Trust; (3) Technology, News Flow, and Audiences; and (4) Diversity, Marginalization, and Journalism Education. The organizing framework brings together voices from practitioners and scholars--who live and work in different parts of the world – into a well-integrated whole. As such, the book can benefit journalism students not just in the U.S., but elsewhere too. This volume should thus provide a helpful resource for teaching and research in the fast-moving global journalism context.
David Atkin, Professor, Department of Communication, University of Connecticut, Associate Editor, AEJMC
The volume brings together interesting perspectives from around the world on some of the most pressing issues facing journalism today. Its emphasis on empirically grounded case studies of journalistic practices in the Global South is noteworthy. While engaged with the impact of emerging technologies on newsmaking as a profession and an industry, the chapters also shed light on the evolving trajectories of print and broadcast media, which remain a significant force in the media markets of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Media scholars and practitioners everywhere will find it a valuable read.
Saif Shahin, Assistant Professor, Department of Culture Studies, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
The timeliness of this book cannot be overstated, especially in the current post-pandemic world. This book also focuses on the rising tide of state surveillance and corporate control on one hand, and media’s capitulation to state power on the other hand. Another aspect I find is the significant contextualization of practice in various nations of both the global south and so-called developed nations. The book also offers great insights about journalism practice and the learning of journalism in various national contexts. Compiling such a volume is a humongous task, and I applaud the editor for this project.
Ujjwal K Chowdhury, Strategic Adviser & Professor, Daffodil International University, Dhaka, Vice President, Global Media Education Council
Ch. 1: Introduction
Part 1: Journalistic Autonomy, Safety, and Freedom
Ch. 2: The causes and consequences of media freedom
Ch. 3: The political economy of television news in Pakistan.
Ch. 4: Safety, reactions & organizational support: Estonian journalists' experiences with hostility
Part 2: Mis(information), Crises, and Trust
Ch. 5: Protracted transition: lingering effects of communism as an inhibiting factor for journalists in Bulgaria and Romania.
Ch. 6: Freedom of press and national interests: Russian information aggression in Ukrainian information space
Ch. 7: Misinformation, the Pandemic, and Mass Media: The India Story
Ch. 8: When politics and the pandemic went up the hill, and the Malaysian media came
tumbling down.
Part 3: Technology, News Flow, and Audiences
Ch. 9: Artificial Intelligence skepticism in news production: the case of South Africa's mainstream news organizations
Ch. 10: Election interference strategies among foreign news outlets and audience engagement on Social Media during the U.S. 2020 election.
Ch. 11: Understanding Continuity and Mapping Digitalisation in the 21st Century: An Empirical Analysis on Indian Print Media.
Ch. 12: From authoritarianism to privatization and social media: The evolution of Colombian television.
Ch. 13: Global connectivity: Paradigms of China’s international journalism since 1949.
Ch. 14: Anatomy of Rapid Growth of Online Newspapers and its Impact on Online Journalism in Bangladesh.
Ch. 15: College students’ perceptions about community journalism and how journalists can regain their trust
Ch. 16: Concluding thoughts.
Dhiman Chattopadhyay is Associate Professor of Communication, Journalism, and Media, and Director of Ethnic Studies at Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania, USA. Prior to joining academia, he was a journalist for two decades.