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Foreign correspondents. --- Foreign news. --- Journalism --- Technological innovations.
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Over the last 30 years 24-hour television news channels have reshaped the practice and culture of journalism. But the arrival of new content and social media platforms over recent years has challenged their power and authority, with fast-changing technologies accelerating the speed of news delivery and reshaping audience behaviour. Following on from The Rise of 24-Hour News Television: Global Perspectives (Cushion and Lewis, 2010), this volume explores new challenges and pressures facing television news channels, and considers the future of 24-hour news. Featuring a wide range of industry and academic perspectives, including the heads of some of the major international news channels (BBC Global News, Al Jazeera and Sky News, among others) as well as leading academics from around the world, contributors reflect on how well rolling television news is reinventing itself for digital platforms and the rapidly changing expectations of audiences. Overall, the 24 chapters in this volume deliver fresh insights into how 24-hour news channels have redefined rolling news journalism ? or potentially could do ? in order to remain relevant and effective in supplying continuous news for 21st-century audiences
Television broadcasting of news. --- Broadcast journalism. --- Journalism --- Téléjournaux --- Presse audiovisuelle --- Télévision --- Émissions de nouvelles --- Television broadcasting of news --- Broadcast journalism --- Press and journalism --- Téléjournaux --- Presse audiovisuelle. --- Émissions de nouvelles. --- Télévision --- Émissions de nouvelles.
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More journalists are being killed, attacked and intimidated than at any time in history.Reporting Dangerously: Journalist Killings, Intimidation and Security examines the statistics and looks at the trends in journalist killings and intimidation around the world. It identifies what factors have led to this rise and positions these in historical and global contexts. This important study also provides case studies and first-hand accounts from journalists working in some of the most dangerous places in the world today and seeks to understand the different pressures they must confront. It also examines industry and political responses to these trends and pressures as well as the latest international initiatives aimed at challenging cultures of impunity and keeping journalists safe. Throughout, the authors argue that journalism contributes a vital if often neglected role in the formation and conduct of civil societies. This is why reporting from ‘uncivil’ places matters and this is why journalists are often positioned in harm’s way. The responsibility to report in a globalizing world of crises and human insecurity, and the responsibility to try and keep journalists safe while they do so, it is argued, belongs to us all. Simon Cottle is Professor of Media and Communications in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK and Director of the Communications, Human Security and Atrocity in Global Context Research Group. He is the author and editor of many books includingHumanitarianism, Communications, and Change (2015) and Global Crisis Reporting (2009) and is Series Editor of the Global Crises and the Media Series for Peter Lang publishing. Richard Sambrook is Professor of Journalism in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK and Director of the Centre for Journalism which undertakes postgraduate vocational training. He is a former Director of Global News at the BBC where he worked as a journalist for 30 years as a producer, editor and manager. Nick Mosdell is Deputy Director MA International Public Relations and Global Communications Management in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK. He teaches Research Methods modules to Masters students and has written research methods textbooks. He has also contributed to a variety of research-based publications, including media and military relations, and has been involved in data analysis for the International News Safety Institute (INSI) since 2006.
Culture --- Communication. --- Journalism. --- Cultural and Media Studies. --- Media and Communication. --- Media Studies. --- Cultural Theory. --- Study and teaching. --- Journalists --- War --- War correspondents. --- Violence against. --- Press coverage. --- Correspondents, War --- War in the press --- Columnists --- Commentators --- Reporters and reporting --- Embedded war correspondents --- Authors --- Culture-Study and teaching. --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- Culture—Study and teaching. --- Writing (Authorship) --- Literature --- Publicity --- Fake news
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More journalists are being killed, attacked and intimidated than at any time in history.Reporting Dangerously: Journalist Killings, Intimidation and Security examines the statistics and looks at the trends in journalist killings and intimidation around the world. It identifies what factors have led to this rise and positions these in historical and global contexts. This important study also provides case studies and first-hand accounts from journalists working in some of the most dangerous places in the world today and seeks to understand the different pressures they must confront. It also examines industry and political responses to these trends and pressures as well as the latest international initiatives aimed at challenging cultures of impunity and keeping journalists safe. Throughout, the authors argue that journalism contributes a vital if often neglected role in the formation and conduct of civil societies. This is why reporting from ‘uncivil’ places matters and this is why journalists are often positioned in harm’s way. The responsibility to report in a globalizing world of crises and human insecurity, and the responsibility to try and keep journalists safe while they do so, it is argued, belongs to us all. Simon Cottle is Professor of Media and Communications in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK and Director of the Communications, Human Security and Atrocity in Global Context Research Group. He is the author and editor of many books includingHumanitarianism, Communications, and Change (2015) and Global Crisis Reporting (2009) and is Series Editor of the Global Crises and the Media Series for Peter Lang publishing. Richard Sambrook is Professor of Journalism in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK and Director of the Centre for Journalism which undertakes postgraduate vocational training. He is a former Director of Global News at the BBC where he worked as a journalist for 30 years as a producer, editor and manager. Nick Mosdell is Deputy Director MA International Public Relations and Global Communications Management in the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, UK. He teaches Research Methods modules to Masters students and has written research methods textbooks. He has also contributed to a variety of research-based publications, including media and military relations, and has been involved in data analysis for the International News Safety Institute (INSI) since 2006.
Journalism --- Sociology of culture --- Didactics of the arts --- Mass communications --- time series analysis --- communicatie --- cultuur --- journalisten --- culturele antropologie
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