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Book part
Publication date: 22 April 2013

The World of News Since the End of the News of the World

John Harrison

This chapter examines the changes proposed to the current media ethics and regulation regime in Australia following a government inquiry by former Federal Court judge Ray…

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Abstract

This chapter examines the changes proposed to the current media ethics and regulation regime in Australia following a government inquiry by former Federal Court judge Ray Finkelstein. The inquiry was prompted by The News of the World phone hacking scandal in the United Kingdom, which resulted in that publication being closed down by its publisher, News International, and principal shareholder Rupert Murdoch. While finding no evidence of similar misbehaviour by journalists and proprietors in Australia, Finkelstein recommended the establishment of a statutory News Media Council, and the inclusion of online media outlets in this new regulatory regime. This chapter argues that such a regime is unlikely to come into effect, given that it will be opposed by media proprietors and working journalists alike, as well the Federal Opposition, and the taxpayer funded ABC, and that a government with low levels of political capital is unlikely to risk much of that capital in a fight with the media industries in an election year.

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Ethics, Values and Civil Society
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-2096(2013)0000009009
ISBN: 978-1-78190-768-9

Keywords

  • Media ethics
  • media regulation
  • Rupert Murdoch
  • News of the World
  • phone hacking scandal
  • Finkelstein Inquiry

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Article
Publication date: 13 November 2019

A high-speed world with fake news: brand managers take warning

Mark Peterson

In an increasingly dangerous era for brands because of the emergence of fake news on the internet, brand managers need to know what is happening with fake news. This study…

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Abstract

Purpose

In an increasingly dangerous era for brands because of the emergence of fake news on the internet, brand managers need to know what is happening with fake news. This study aims to present perspectives on how to cope in an era of fake news.

Design/methodology/approach

The author provides a general review of fake news and what its sudden rise means for brand managers.

Findings

The study highlights the importance of context for news and the role of institutions, such as businesses and governments. The study calls brand managers to slow down in the high-speed world of the infosphere to preserve the integrity of their brands.

Research limitations/implications

The study is limited by its time frame as the internet continues to evolve. However, for times when fake news presents a threat to brands and other institutions, the study is relevant.

Practical implications

Brand managers need to slow down their activity levels just as savvy readers need to slow down their own reading on the internet. By doing this, brand managers will be better able to defend their brands in an era characterized by volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity (VUCA).

Social implications

The study suggests that resistance to fake news and its pernicious effects can be improved by taking an approach to processing content on the internet characterized by the scientific method. In this way, a context for news can be derived and fake news can be identified. In this way, societal trust can be improved.

Originality/value

This study is original because it analyzes the implications of fake news for brand managers and presents the most workable steps for identifying fake news.

Details

Journal of Product & Brand Management, vol. 29 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/JPBM-12-2018-2163
ISSN: 1061-0421

Keywords

  • VUCA
  • Technology
  • Brand management
  • Fake news
  • Disinformation
  • News literacy

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Article
Publication date: 1 March 1999

Dumbing down: the only way is up

Robin Hunt

Analyses the “dumbing down” syndrome highlighting main quotes from BBC online, Kirkus Reviews and an interview between Roan Hoag of Amazon.xom and Pete Hamill whose book …

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Abstract

Analyses the “dumbing down” syndrome highlighting main quotes from BBC online, Kirkus Reviews and an interview between Roan Hoag of Amazon.xom and Pete Hamill whose book “News is a Verb” which attempts to unmask US journalism’s dumbing down. Looks at various tabloid‐style choices of sensational headlines giving examples of these. Concludes that unlike the technology world, newspaper and broadcasting world is full of dreamers staring only at their own reflection!.

Details

Aslib Proceedings, vol. 51 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000006961
ISSN: 0001-253X

Keywords

  • Media
  • Newspaper publishing
  • Journal publishing

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Book part
Publication date: 11 November 2019

Millennials Usher a Post-Digital Era: Theorizing how Generation Y Engages with Digital Media

Deb Aikat

Dubbed as the “first digital generation,” the millennials (or Generation Y) have been ensconced in digital technologies throughout their lives. As a demographic cohort, the…

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Abstract

Dubbed as the “first digital generation,” the millennials (or Generation Y) have been ensconced in digital technologies throughout their lives. As a demographic cohort, the eldest members of Generation Y were the first to reach adulthood by 2001, which heralded the third millennium, and were, therefore, called the millennials.

This research study theorizes that the millennials are ushering an emerging post-digital era that is redefining how we live, work, and play. By situating media consumption within a cross-disciplinary context of mediated engagement, this study analyzed how millennials consume media based on a 2019 meta-analytical research analysis of 22 cross-disciplinary studies, published between 2015 and 2019.

This research study analyzes how millennials curate and engage with digital media and information content in the midst of incessant evolutions of their identity, media use, and digital life. This study explicates six theoretical insights into how millennials consume information and engage with media. In their pursuit of easy access to media, the millennials get most of their information and media content from social media.

In theorizing how millennials engage with digital media, this study explicates important conceptual trends such as incidental news exposure (INE), which refers to people stumbling upon news stories they otherwise would not have purposefully seen or sought. INE spawns “bumpers” who involuntarily bump into news items, as opposed to “seekers” who actively search or seek news content. This leads to the news-finds-me mindset among some passive news consumers who rely and expect other active news consumers to share important news and information.

Details

Mediated Millennials
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S2050-206020190000019002
ISBN: 978-1-83909-078-3

Keywords

  • Post-digital era
  • Generation Y media engagement
  • media consumption by Generation Y or millennials
  • millennials’
  • media consumption
  • millennials’
  • media engagement
  • digital media engagement

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Book part
Publication date: 8 April 2010

Evil monsters and cunning perverts: Representing and regulating the dangerous paedophile

Anneke Meyer

Purpose – The crime of child sex offending or child sexual abuse is a serious social problem. Since the 1990s, it has been popularly conceptualised as a ‘paedophile…

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Abstract

Purpose – The crime of child sex offending or child sexual abuse is a serious social problem. Since the 1990s, it has been popularly conceptualised as a ‘paedophile threat’ and has become one of the most high-profile crimes of our times. This chapter examines the social construction of paedophiles in UK newspapers and its impact on official regulation of child sex offenders.

Methodology/approach – Discourse analysis is used to establish how newspaper language produces common discourses around child sex offenders. Documentary research of government legislation and law enforcement helps analyse the ways in which official regulation is informed by media discourses.

Findings – Newspaper discourses around child sex offenders construct the paedophile as a distinct and dangerous category of person. This media figure informs government legislation and law enforcement in several ways. For example, discourses around paedophiles necessitate and legitimate punitive legal trends regarding child sex offenders and facilitate the conceptualisation of specific laws.

The conceptual shift towards understanding child sexual abuse through the figure of the paedophile has several detrimental consequences. This chapter offers a critique of contemporary media and governmental/legal discourses, pointing to misrepresentation, sensationalism, demonisation and insufficient child protection.

Value – This research indicates that discourses and conceptual shifts around child sex offenders are driven by the media but have come to be accepted and perpetuated by the government and the law. This dynamic not only illustrates the power of the media to set agendas but raises questions regarding the adequacy of official governance informed by media discourses.

Details

Popular Culture, Crime and Social Control
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1521-6136(2010)0000014012
ISBN: 978-1-84950-733-2

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Article
Publication date: 1 August 1939

The Library World Volume 42 Issue 2

SEPTEMBER is the month when, Summer being irrevocably over, our minds turn to library activities for the winter. At the time of writing the international situation is…

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Abstract

SEPTEMBER is the month when, Summer being irrevocably over, our minds turn to library activities for the winter. At the time of writing the international situation is however so uncertain that few have the power to concentrate on schemes or on any work other than that of the moment. There is an immediate placidity which may be deceptive, and this is superficial even so far as libraries are concerned. In almost every town members of library staffs are pledged to the hilt to various forms of national service—A.R.P. being the main occupation of senior men and Territorial and other military services occupying the younger. We know of librarians who have been ear‐marked as food‐controllers, fuel controllers, zone controllers of communication centres and one, grimly enough, is to be registrar of civilian deaths. Then every town is doing something to preserve its library treasures, we hope. In this connexion the valuable little ninepenny pamphlet issued by the British Museum on libraries and museums in war should be studied. In most libraries the destruction of the stock would not be disastrous in any extreme way. We do not deny that it would be rather costly in labour and time to build it up again. There would, however, be great loss if all the Local Collections were to disappear and if the accession books and catalogues were destroyed.

Details

New Library World, vol. 42 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009223
ISSN: 0307-4803

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Article
Publication date: 1 February 2001

Free Books for Schools

Andy Agar

Newspapers face a huge challenge over the next ten years as the pressure on our ability to reach younger readers increases. Our youth segments have less need to pick up a…

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Abstract

Newspapers face a huge challenge over the next ten years as the pressure on our ability to reach younger readers increases. Our youth segments have less need to pick up a newspaper and as a category we must address the issue of youth readership very quickly if this position is to be turned around. The Sun and The News of the World remain best placed in the category, with the youngest age profiles of any tabloids, but measures have still been taken to talk to this younger audience.

Details

International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children, vol. 3 no. 1
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb027667
ISSN: 1464-6676

Keywords

  • What's the rationale behind the UK's consumer promotion?

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Article
Publication date: 1 October 2003

Media’s social construction of environmental issues: focus on global warming – a comparative study

Jaclyn Marisa Dispensa and Robert J. Brulle

Global warming has been a well recognized environmental issue in the United States for the past ten years, even though scientists had identified it as a potential problem…

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Global warming has been a well recognized environmental issue in the United States for the past ten years, even though scientists had identified it as a potential problem years before in 1896. We find debate about the issue in the United States media coverage while controversy among the majority of scientists is rare. The role that media plays in constructing the norms and ideas in society is researched to understand how they socially construct global warming and other environmental issues. To identify if the U.S. Media presents a biased view of global warming, the following are discussed (1) the theoretical perspective of media and the environment; (2) scientific overview and history of global warming; (3) media coverage of global warming, and (4) research findings from the content analysis of three countries’ newspaper articles and two international scientific journals produced in 2000 with comparison of these countries economies, industries, and environments. In conclusion, our research demonstrates that the U.S. with differing industries, predominantly dominated by the fossil fuel industry, in comparison to New Zealand and Finland has a significant impact on the media coverage of global warming. The U.S’s media states that global warming is controversial and theoretical, yet the other two countries portray the story that is commonly found in the international scientific journals. Therefore, media, acting as one driving force, is providing citizens with piecemeal information that is necessary to assess the social, environmental and political conditions of the country and world.

Details

International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, vol. 23 no. 10
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/01443330310790327
ISSN: 0144-333X

Keywords

  • Global warming
  • USA
  • Environmental health and safety

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Article
Publication date: 2 January 2014

Media coverage of accounting: the NRL salary cap crisis

Paul Andon and Clinton Free

Arguing that the print media act as a claims-making forum for the social construction and contestation of crises, the aim of this paper is to explore how the print media…

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Abstract

Purpose

Arguing that the print media act as a claims-making forum for the social construction and contestation of crises, the aim of this paper is to explore how the print media mediated two audits commissioned following a high-profile salary cap breach in the National Rugby League (NRL) in Australia.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper draws upon critical discourse analysis to examine the media coverage of the two audits by the two major Australian media organisations, News Limited and Fairfax Media Limited. The analysis is based on a qualitative study complemented by quantitative techniques that explore critical incidents and representations in the daily press.

Findings

The paper illustrates the way in which News Limited, the owner of the infringing club, mobilised its media platform to promote favourable viewpoints and interpretations and how these were challenged in the Fairfax press. Evidence of both coverage bias and statement bias in the treatment of the two audits is produced.

Originality/value

This paper provides evidence that commercial interests of owner/publishers coloured media coverage of the two audits, which were central pillars of the crisis management strategy of News Limited and the NRL. Implications for the media's contribution to public accountability, accounting outputs and impression management, and the growing commercial diversification and reach of media outlets are considered.

Details

Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, vol. 27 no. 1
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/AAAJ-02-2012-00936
ISSN: 0951-3574

Keywords

  • Crisis
  • Media
  • Accounting outputs
  • Coverage bias
  • Media bias
  • Statement bias

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Book part
Publication date: 29 August 2017

Corruption in the Media

Edward H. Spence

Using a general model of corruption that explains and accounts for corruption across professions and institutions, this chapter will examine how certain practices in the…

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Abstract

Using a general model of corruption that explains and accounts for corruption across professions and institutions, this chapter will examine how certain practices in the media, especially in areas where journalism, advertising and public relations regularly intersect and converge, can be construed as instances of corruption. It will be argued that such corruption, as in the case of cash-for-comment scandals, advertorials, infomercials, and infotainment, as well as public relations media releases disseminated misleadingly as journalistic opinion, is regular, ubiquitous, and systematic.

Details

The Handbook of Business and Corruption
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78635-445-720161020
ISBN: 978-1-78635-445-7

Keywords

  • Corruption
  • Plato
  • Myth of Gyges
  • media
  • media corruption
  • collusion of corruption

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