Hurry - Only 3 left in stock!
|
Acknowledgments
1. Exploring the Worlds of Journalism: An Introduction, by Thomas
Hanitzsch, Folker Hanusch, Jyotika Ramaprasad, and Arnold S. de
Beer
2. Journalistic Culture in a Global Context: A Conceptual Roadmap,
by Thomas Hanitzsch, Laura Ahva, Martin Oller Alonso, Jesus
Arroyave, Liesbeth Hermans, Jan Fredrik Hovden, Sallie Hughes,
Beate Josephi, Jyotika Ramaprasad, Ivor Shapiro, and Tim Vos
3. Surveying Journalists Around the World: A Methodological
Framework, by Corinna Lauerer and Thomas Hanitzsch
4. Profiles of Journalists: Demographic and Employment Patterns, by
Beate Josephi, Folker Hanusch, Martin Oller Alonso, Ivor Shapiro,
Kenneth Andresen, Arnold de Beer, Abit Hoxha, Sonia Virgínia
Moreira, Kevin Rafter, Terje Skjerdal, Sergio Splendore, and Edson
C. Tandoc, Jr.
5. Perceived Influences: Journalists’ Awareness of Pressures on
Their Work, by Thomas Hanitzsch, Jyotika Ramaprasad, Jesus
Arroyave, Rosa Berganza, Liesbeth Hermans, Jan Fredrik Hovden,
Filip Lab, Corinna Lauerer, Alice Tejkalová, and Tim P. Vos
6. Editorial Autonomy: Journalists’ Perceptions of Their Freedom,
by Basyouni Hamada, Sallie Hughes, Thomas Hanitzsch, James
Hollings, Corinna Lauerer, Jesus Arroyave, Verica Rupar, and Sergio
Splendore
7. Role Orientations: Journalists’ Views on Their Place in Society,
by Thomas Hanitzsch, Tim Vos, Olivier Standaert, Folker Hanusch,
Jan Fredrik Hovden, Liesbeth Hermans, and Jyotika Ramaprasad
8. Ethical Considerations: Journalists’ Perceptions of Professional
Practice, by Jyotika Ramaprasad, Thomas Hanitzsch, Epp Lauk,
Halliki Harro-Loit, Jan Fredrik Hovden, Jari Väliverronen, and
Stephanie Craft
9. Trust: Journalists’ Confidence in Public Institutions, by Arjen
van Dalen, Rosa Berganza, Thomas Hanitzsch, Adriana Amado, Beatriz
Herrero, Beate Josephi, Sonja Seizova, Morten Skovsgaard, and Nina
Steindl
10. Transformations: Journalists’ Reflections on Changes in News
Work, by Folker Hanusch, Edson C. Tandoc, Jr., Dimitra
Dimitrakopoulou, Nurhaya Muchtar, Kevin Rafter, Mireya Márquez
Ramírez, Verica Rupar, and Vittoria Sacco
11. Modeling Journalistic Cultures: A Global Approach, by Folker
Hanusch and Thomas Hanitzsch
Appendix 1: Additional Tables
Appendix 2: Questionnaire
Appendix 3: Institutions Funding the Study
References
Editors and Contributors
Index
Thomas Hanitzsch is chair and professor of communication in the
Department of Communication and Media at LMU Munich. His
publications include The Handbook of Journalism Studies (second
edition, 2019).
Folker Hanusch is professor of journalism in the Department of
Communication at the University of Vienna, where he heads the
Journalism Studies Center, and adjunct professor at Queensland
University of Technology. He is editor in chief of Journalism
Studies.
Jyotika Ramaprasad is professor in the School of Communication at
the University of Miami. Her books include Contemporary BRICS
Journalism: Non-Western Media in Transition (2017).
Arnold S. de Beer is professor of journalism at Stellenbosch
University. His publications include Global Journalism: Topical
Issues and Media Systems (2009).
This will be a touchstone work for decades to come. It is not an
overstatement to say that this book is entirely unique; it’s
special because of the detailed discussion of national and regional
contexts. Worlds of Journalism contributes to the truly global and
international perspective of journalism, avoiding normativity and
emphasizing diversity using a unique and comprehensive dataset.
*Henrik Örnebring, author of Newsworkers: A Comparative European
Perspective*
This book provides a kaleidoscopic overview of journalism around
the world. Its organization and execution provides a model for
comparative research, and its findings raise important questions
that are sure to orient future scholarship. Already well-regarded
by colleagues, this publication solidifies the Worlds of Journalism
project as a leading effort to make sense of the complex realities
that journalists around the world confront today.
*Matthew Powers, University of Washington*
One of the key elements of this anthology is an effort to make
journalism studies truly global and comparative. This book succeeds
on multiple fronts: it provides a comprehensive analysis of the
various and competing strands of research in journalism studies,
empirically covers the vast geography of journalism practices, and
gives us a blueprint of how to analyze and understand such
practices. I recommend this book for its scope and theoretical
execution. It is a must-read for all journalism scholars.
*Shakuntala Rao, author of Indian Journalism in a New
Era*
Worlds of Journalism is ample proof of the diversity of
journalistic cultures around the globe and an excellent example of
a truly collaborative study. It provides fascinating insights into
the attitudes and values of media personnel beyond the western
world. The book is a must-read in journalism research.
*Barbara Pfetsch, editor of Political Communication Cultures in
Western Europe: Attitudes of Political Actors and Journalists in
Nine Countries*
[An] exceptionally fine book.
*Journal of Mass Communication*
A tactfully coherent discussion of its findings, drawing on an
extensive amount of data to question normative expectations of
journalism culture and highlight rich differences in perspectives
from around the world.
*International Journal of Communication*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |