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- W2324961285 abstract "David H. Weaver and Lars Willnat (Eds.). The Global Journalist in 21st Century. New York: Routledge, 2012. 585 pp.The Global Journalist in 21st Century is a quantitative researcher's dream. It is filled with page upon page of survey and other data that examine what in almost three dozen countries look like, think about, and worry over, and those individuals complete their day-to-day responsibilities as various internal and external forces weigh upon them. For what it is worth, many in democratically ori- ented nations admit to a left-center to left political affiliation and believe their owners are right-center to right on political scale.Journalists from places as different as China and Chile or Singapore and Slovenia took part in surveys, and they were responding in almost every case to researchers native to that country. The surveys were conducted by telephone, mail, online, or in-person.One of intriguing results is that in many countries, question of is a journalist remains undefined, if it is discussed at all. As a result, it also is a challenge to determine a true total number of men and women who practice craft. But that might not necessarily be a bad thing. The September/October 2013 issue of Columbia Journalism Review asks provocative question What is journalism for? New York University journalism professor Jay Rosen suggests such a question is 100 times better than more commonly seen, 'who is a journalist?' which is nothing but an invitation to class war (p. 28). For their part, Weaver and Willnat state that identi- fying and then comparing from country to country has become more diffi- cult because has been a blurring of boundaries between journalism and other forms of communication, and between and those formerly known as media audiences (p. 529).Some of most interesting nuggets of information I found about journalism in various countries follow:* Chinese TV regard themselves more as 'mouthpieces of party and government' than their colleagues from newspapers, news Web sites, and maga- zines (p. 19).* Japanese agree that the watchdog is considered an important media function, [but] only about one-third of (them) believe they actually fulfill this role (p. 57).* Danish journalists find that organizational conditions do play too big a in actual news selection while relevance has too little priority (p. 164).* In Britain, there is deep concern about how much of journalism industry will in years ahead be economically able to hire young at all, let alone nurture them into becoming watchdogs (p. 230).* Attacks on in Russia have led to at least three hundred deaths, yet the popularity of being a journalist has not declined (pp. 278-279).* American believe that over the last 30 years, autonomy of reporters at U.S. news organizations has eroded steadily (p. 355).The final chapter compares findings about U. …" @default.
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- W2324961285 date "2013-11-25" @default.
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- W2324961285 title "Book Review: The Global Journalist in the 21st Century, by David H. Weaver and Lars Willnat (Eds.)" @default.
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