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Brutalité de la police --- Police brutality --- Police dans les mass média --- Police in mass media --- Politie in de massamedia --- Politiebrutaliteit --- Police in mass media. --- Police brutality. --- #SBIB:309H1025 --- #SBIB:309H402 --- #SBIB:309H512 --- Brutality by police --- Excessive force used by police --- Excessive use of force by police --- Police use of excessive force --- Use of excessive force by police --- Police misconduct --- Mass media --- Mediaboodschappen met een informatieve functie --- Media en publiekgroepen: gebruik van de boodschap, effecten van de media, ... --- Verbale communicatie: inhoudsanalyse: onderzoekingen --- Media en publiekgroepen: gebruik van de boodschap, effecten van de media, .. --- Media en publiekgroepen: gebruik van de boodschap, effecten van de media, . --- Police violence --- Violence --- Media en publiekgroepen: gebruik van de boodschap, effecten van de media,
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When police brutality becomes front page news, it triggers an intense interaction between the media, the public, and the police. This text demonstrates how these news events provide the raw material for examining underlying problems in society.
Police in mass media. --- Police brutality. --- True Crime. --- Social services & welfare, criminology. --- Brutality by police --- Excessive force used by police --- Excessive use of force by police --- Police use of excessive force --- Police violence --- Use of excessive force by police --- Police misconduct --- Violence --- Mass media
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"Twenty years ago, when The Politics of Force was first published, the issue of police brutality was rarely covered in the news. This book was inspired by events following the Los Angeles Police Department's brutal treatment of Rodney King, a Black motorist whose beating by LAPD officers was captured from the balcony of a nearby resident, George Holliday, who happened to have a video camera (this, of course, was in the era before digital phones). First aired by a local television station, scenes from that videotape were shown repeatedly on national news outlets for weeks, giving rise to an unprecedented public reaction. "When George Holliday's video surfaced," one Black journalist observed, "it signaled to a lot of citizens just how bad police violence visited upon marginalized communities actually was" (Smith 2015). The officers' subsequent trial and acquittal, and the uprising in Los Angeles that followed, kept the issues of race and policing in the news for many weeks. That tumult was eventually replaced by relative silence on the issue, occasionally punctuated by news coverage of other violent police-citizen encounters, such as the brutal NYPD assault on Haitian immigrant Abner Louima in 1997 and the death of Guinean immigrant Amadou Diallo in 1999, hit with 19 bullets fired by NYPD officers. But as is the case with other policy problems not championed by elites, coverage of police brutality was limited, sporadic, and largely tied to the occasional incident that became a major news story. Then, in the summer of 2014, 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Though what exactly lead up to Brown's death may have been unclear, the aftermath was captured on a bystander' cell phone video. It showed Brown's body left uncovered and unattended, face-down in the street, while neighbors grew agitated and police seemed to mill casually about. Suddenly, the issue again became national news. Brown's death and the intense social media activity and protest it evoked within and beyond Ferguson prompted another, more prolonged and more searing national argument about police brutality"--
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"This book brings together a diverse, international array of contributors to explore the topics of news "quality" in the online age and the relationships between news organizations and enormously influential digital platforms such as Facebook, Google, and Twitter. Covering topics ranging from internet incivility, crowdsourcing, and YouTube politics to regulations, algorithms, and AI, this book draws the key distinction between the news that facilitates democracy from news that undermines it. For students and scholars as well as journalists, policymakers, and media commentators, this important work engages a wide range of methodological and theoretical perspectives to define the key concept of "quality" in the news media"-- Provided by publisher.
Social media and journalism. --- Online journalism --- Objectivity. --- Political aspects.
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GOVERNMENT AND THE PRESS--USA --- PRESS AND POLITICS--USA --- persvrijheid --- perswetenschappen --- Etat et presse --- Presse et politique --- 092.2 --- nieuwsberichtgeving --- Government and the press --- Journalism --- Press and politics --- journalistiek --- politiek --- Verenigde Staten --- 690 Media, mediarecht --- Politics and the press --- Press --- Advertising, Political --- Writing (Authorship) --- Literature --- Publicity --- Fake news --- Press and government --- Press policy --- State and the press --- Freedom of the press --- History --- Objectivity --- Political aspects --- Government policy --- Mass communications --- Political sociology --- United States --- Presse --- Histoire --- Objectivité --- 21st century --- United States of America
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