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[ecrea] Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 6.3
Fri Oct 27 11:48:11 GMT 2017
Intellect is delighted to announce that the latest issue of the*/Journal
of Applied Journalism & Media Studies /*
<http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/intellect/ajms/2017/00000006/00000003>is
now available.
This special issue of /JAJMS/ aims to open a critical dialogue about the
concept of inclusive journalism and the practice that sheds light on
voices traditionally left out in news coverage.
Articles within this issue include (partial list):
*Inclusive journalism: How to shed light on voices traditionally left
out in news coverage*
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24661/>
Authors: Verica Rupar
Page Start: 417
This note introduces the concept of inclusive journalism in a bid to
encourage a critical dialogue of the press’s ability to challenge
hegemonic notions of inequality under the rubric of social diversity.
Over the last century journalism’s authority in fast processing of
information has moved from the privileged position of reporting life to
the more privileged position of reporting life that matters. Its
capacity to separate individual lives from the life of society has
enabled it to turn persons into representative of the groups. By forming
and un-forming groups and by constructing a sense of who we are in
relation to others, the journalistic sector of the media participates in
the larger process of inclusion and exclusion.
*Translation in the newsroom: Losing voices in multilingual newsflows*
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24664/>
Authors: Daniel Perrin, Maureen Ehrensberger-Dow and Marta Zampa
Page Start: 463
The information, events and voices that receive media attention are
highly dependent on their linguistic form – when the language is
accessible to journalists, the news is more likely to enter public
discourse. If the voices are in languages other than that of the region
the journalist is writing for, then translation strategies can influence
not only the news style but also the selection and perspectivation of
the information presented. In this article, the authors discuss how
working between languages inside the newsroom can endanger the flow of
accurate information. Among other stakeholders, we focus on journalists
as key gatekeepers in global and local newsflows who need to cope with
cross-linguistic communication in their processes of news production.
Initial analyses show that translation matters in the newsroom, but it
is far from being part of systematic professional socialization or
subject to quality measures.
*How diverse are Egypt’s media: A look at the post-revolution
presidential elections*
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24666/>
Authors: Rasha Abdulla
Page Start: 507
This article examines media diversity and inclusiveness of the coverage
in Egypt through a content analysis of Egyptian media during the first
Presidential elections following the 25 January revolution of 2011.
Diversity is defined as the inclusiveness of different groups in terms
of race, ethnicity, religion, nationality, age, income-based
discrimination, gender and any other factors that make individuals or
groups different from, but equal to, each other. The author used
quantitative content analysis of four popular state and private
newspapers and a critical analysis of the main television news bulletin
and several talk shows. Overall, the coders analysed a total of 5308
stories that were published on the elections in the four newspapers.
They also analysed the main news bulletin and three talk shows on state
and private satellite channels. Analysis started a week before and ended
a week after each round of the Presidential elections for a total of 32
monitoring days. The research addressed diversity both in terms of the
agents featured in the media and the topics mentioned/discussed. The
results indicate that, even though the journalistic standards were
sometimes reasonable, coverage ignored important issues of substance and
all issues related to inclusiveness and diversity as they relate to
women, children, the elderly, religious minorities and ethnic
minorities. The study concludes that diversity issues are still largely
ignored in the Egyptian media.
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