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1

Matz, Robert. "Health News Reporting." Annals of Internal Medicine 127, no. 10 (November 15, 1997): 948. http://dx.doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-127-10-199711150-00018.

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Ellis, Stephen. "Reporting Africa." Current History 99, no. 637 (May 1, 2000): 221–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/curh.2000.99.637.221.

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How—and by whom—is certain information identified as news, especially with regard to Africa? And what role does the African press play in determining what foreign journalists regard as news—and in providing information for the African public?
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Schuchman, Miriam. "Health News Reporting: Reply." Annals of Internal Medicine 127, no. 10 (November 15, 1997): 948. http://dx.doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-127-10-199711150-00019.

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4

Scialli, Anthony R. "Bias in news reporting." Reproductive Toxicology 6, no. 2 (January 1992): 113–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0890-6238(92)90111-6.

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5

Soloski, John. "News reporting and professionalism: some constraints on the reporting of the news." Media, Culture & Society 11, no. 2 (April 1989): 207–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016344389011002005.

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Mugumya, Levis, and Marianna Visser. "Reporting land conflict in Uganda." International Journal of Language and Culture 2, no. 1 (November 6, 2015): 108–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijolc.2.1.05mug.

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News reporting studies have largely been confined to the Western cultures and languages, yet news reporting in other languages has proliferated throughout the world (Thomson et al. 2008; Thomson & White 2008). This article explores news reporting in Runyankore-Rukiga, an agglutinating Ugandan Bantu language, focusing on land conflict. Assuming the influential discourse-linguistic framework of Appraisal theory and genre theory (Thomson et al. 2008), the article investigates the linguistic expressions of evaluative language in Runyankore-Rukiga across government-oriented and private newspapers. It also examines the properties that constitute Runyankore-Rukiga hard news reports. Although the genre analysis reveals that the structure of Runyankore-Rukiga hard news reports resembles the satellite structure of the English hard news reports as proposed by White (1997), some differences are identified. Not only does the news report unfold in a chronological order, it exhibits a distinct discursive feature that is characterized by anecdotes, metaphors, grim humor, or proverbs in the lead paragraph. This type of introduction does not necessarily capture the gist of the entire report but rather seeks out the reader’s attention. The article further explicates the nature of lexicogrammatical properties of evaluative language that news writers invoke to express attitudes in the news events. The appraisal exploration also examines instances of graduation in which different figures of speech and non-core lexis are invoked to amplify attitudinal values. The article thus extends Appraisal theory analysis to one of only a few African languages examined within this framework, and contributes to the understanding of news reporting in these languages and cultures.
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Wingrove, Paul. "Reporting the news from China." International Affairs 69, no. 1 (January 1993): 176–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2621195.

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8

Pak, Hyeong-Jun. "News Reporting on Comfort Women." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 93, no. 4 (July 10, 2016): 1006–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699016644560.

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This article explored South Korean and Japanese newspaper reports on the “comfort women” who were forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army in the 1930s-1940s, to examine how print media have reproduced the reality of the issue. I conducted a quantitative frame analysis of the contents of news articles ( N = 384) on the comfort women in four South Korean and Japanese newspapers. The frames of comfort women articles in all papers can be considered to be very stereotyped, because they have changed little according to the newspaper’s political position (conservative/liberal), attitude (anti-Japan/anti–South Korea), and nationality (South Korean/Japanese). When the relationship of South Korea and Japan has been combative, conflict and morality frames have been abundant. In contrast, when the relationship has been favorable, human interest frames have been ample.
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Zeidner, M. A. "Responsibility in Reporting Medical News." Iowa State Journal of Business and Technical Communication 1, no. 1 (January 1987): 129–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/105065198700100114.

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10

Pavlova, Lena N., and Nikita A. Argylov. "News Reporting: Substitution of Functions." RUDN Journal of Studies in Literature and Journalism 26, no. 1 (December 15, 2021): 132–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-9220-2021-26-1-132-141.

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The issue of journalistic functions fulfillment by the modern mass media is considered. The authors examined a number of news reports in socio-political online media and found some cases where the classic functions of journalism such as informing and controlling were substituted by PR functions. The content analysis revealed an alarmingly large number of pseudo journalistic reports, which mainly aimed to create and maintain a positive image. The reason why journalism is losing its value is the lack of professionals representing the public interest. The analysis shown a high number of publications, based on (practically unchanged) press releases, that is common to a number of media and clearly illustrates the unprofessionalism of the authors of pseudo news. The regional media have to monetize its activity, so the matter of finance wins over the matter of beliefs. However, the media and, in particular, journalism is quickly losing public credibility. In general, we are witnessing the undermining of classical journalistic creativity and the merging of this concept with other wider categories of public relations.
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Hu (胡博林), Bolin. "Reporting China." Journal of Chinese Overseas 17, no. 1 (April 8, 2021): 84–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17932548-12341435.

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Abstract This article explores how Chinese-language newspapers in Australia reported on China in the period 1931–37. These newspapers made efforts to build support for the Sino-Japanese war and influence Chinese residents in Australia. However, they offered contrasting views of the Chinese government ruled by the Kuomintang. The Tung Wah Times, along with the Chinese World’s News, continued to publish anti-Chiang Kai-shek propaganda, arguing for a strong anti-Japanese resistance. But the Chinese Republic News and the Chinese Times demonstrated support for and understanding of the Chiang government’s dilemma, though the political position of the former was much more fluid. The divergent views revealed the multiple loyalties of Chinese residents in Australia and their active community politics when their population in Australia was declining, and it was a reminder that the diasporic community cannot be homogenized with a collective concept of a “country.” It also reflected their shared identification with the Chinese nation, showing different approaches to building up a strong home country. By shaping their readerships’ Chinese patriotism and nationalism, these Chinese-language newspapers strengthened the connection and allegiances between Chinese in Australia and their homeland.
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12

Kleemans, Mariska, Roos Dohmen, Luise F. Schlindwein, Sanne L. Tamboer, Rebecca NH de Leeuw, and Moniek Buijzen. "Children’s cognitive responses to constructive television news." Journalism 20, no. 4 (May 30, 2018): 568–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884918770540.

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Given the importance of news in preparing children for their role as active citizens in society, insight into how negative news can be delivered to children most optimally is warranted. In this regard, this study examined the usefulness of constructive news reporting (i.e. solution-based news stories including positive emotions). An experiment ( N = 281 children, 9–13 years old) was conducted to investigate how constructive, compared to nonconstructive, news reporting affected recall of television news, and whether negative emotions elicited by this news mediated this relation. Analyses of covariance revealed that children in the constructive condition displayed a lower recall of the general information about the event. In contrast, their recall of constructive stories was better compared to the recall of comparable, but nonconstructive, stories by children in the nonconstructive condition. Fear and sadness elicited by the news did not mediate the relation between news reporting style and recall. Instead, constructive reporting directly induced smaller increases in fear and sadness than nonconstructive reporting. To conclude, the negative aspects of the news event were less prominently available in memory of children exposed to constructive news.
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13

Stuart, Ian. "Maori and mainstream: Towards bicultural reporting." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 8, no. 1 (September 1, 2001): 42–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v8i1.731.

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The NZ news industry—owners, management and education sectors—has long agreed that the news media requires more Maori journalists. The industry has long recognised an imbalance does exist, whatever its characterisation. But the solution is not as simple as it seems.
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14

Kadri, Hamdi Khalis, Nidana Yahya, and Farahnaz Khalib. "Emotive Language in Online News: The Case of Awani News Channel." e-Jurnal Bahasa dan Linguistik (e-JBL) 2, no. 2 (November 30, 2020): 125–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.53840/ejbl.v2i2.56.

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Employing emotive words in news writing is one of the most common strategies in today’s newspaper reporting. Emotive words are usually used in writings to evoke readers’ emotion on the subject. It is important for a reader to be aware of this phenomenon so they would not be easily manipulated by provoking news articles. However, in Malaysia where the news media is still being controlled strictly by regulations and ethics, are emotive words the commonly employed strategy by journalists? This study intends to discover the usage of emotive words in news reporting in Awani News. The data for this study are the ‘viral’ news articles on one of the social media, Twitter. The tweets with mass number of engagements were taken and the article from the link attached with those tweets were analysed. From the analysis, the researcher found that generally, Awani News was able to keep their objectivity in reporting the news article but not in the headlines. However, there were also some instances where the news channel used emotive words heavily in their news reporting. Out of 14 news articles analysed, there were 13 headlines that contained emotive words/phrases and 32 emotive words/phrases within the news articles. But, the employment of emotive words in the news articles is not even as there are news articles that have 9 emotive words/phrases and there are also news articles that do not contain any of them.
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15

Saputra, Adi, Anis Endang SM, and Bayu Risdiyanto. "ANALYSIS OF CRIMINAL REPORTING DISCOURSE ON MEDIA ONLINE." SENGKUNI Journal (Social Science and Humanities Studies) 1, no. 1 (April 29, 2020): 46–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.37638/sengkuni.1.1.46-59.

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The news delivered is various, including news about crime. Crime is always interesting to broadcast and of course a lot of public interest and is constructed to produce interesting news and broadcast in the media, including online media. This study aims to explain and find out the discourse from the news of the case of one family in CurupTimur conducted by the online newspapers BETVNews.com, Harian Rakyat Bengkulu.comand BengkuluToday.com. This research uses descriptive qualitative method andTeunA Van Dijk's discourse analysis theory by conducting interviews, observations and documentation. The results of this study indicate that between the three media each gives an overview of the discourse of the case BETVNews.com focuses more on the chronological facts of events in more detail. Whereas Harian Rakyat Bengkulufrom the point of news is more balanced between the perpetrators and victims, it is more about how to get balanced news, and for a more flexible title, it is not limited by space and the format must be interesting to read. And finally, BengkuluToday.com reporting is made by prioritizing dramatic news writing, because this case is a criminal incident..
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16

Givoly, Dan, Carla K. Hayn, and Ashok Natarajan. "Measuring Reporting Conservatism." Accounting Review 82, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): 65–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/accr.2007.82.1.65.

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The paper examines the power and reliability of the differential timeliness (DT) measure developed by Basu (1997) to gauge reporting conservatism. We identify certain characteristics of the information environment unrelated to conservatism that affect the DT measure and find that it is sensitive to the degree of uniformity in the content of the news during the examined period, the types of events occurring in the period, and firms' disclosure policies. Our tests, based on both actual and simulated data, indicate that assessing the extent of reporting conservatism using this measure requires the recognition of, and control for, these characteristics. We also find that the difference in the timeliness of reporting bad versus good news is likely to be more pronounced than previously reported. Further, we provide additional evidence on the negative association between the DT measure and alternative aspects of conservatism, suggesting that the exclusive reliance on any single measure to assess the overall conservatism of a reporting regime (firms, countries, or time periods) is likely to lead to incorrect inferences.
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17

Falasca, Kajsa. "Political news journalism: Mediatization across three news reporting contexts." European Journal of Communication 29, no. 5 (July 7, 2014): 583–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0267323114538853.

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18

Tan, Yuzao. "Some Reflections on the Broadcasting and Hosting Skills of Journalists." Insight - News Media 2, no. 1 (June 2, 2020): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.18282/inm.v2i1.307.

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<p>With the continuous improvement and development of television and radio, the forms of news reports have become rich and diverse. Compared with other news reporting methods, the outbound journalists have enhanced the intuitive nature of news reports by capturing the freshest news information and expressing them fluently, and this way of live reporting has gradually been widely recognized by the audience. Therefore, in the news live reporting process, the news reporters broadcast hosting skills also put forward higher requirements, this article corresponding to how to improve the news reporters broadcast hosting comprehensive literacy, put forward a few effective suggestions.</p>
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19

Miczo, Nathan. "The ethics of news media reporting on coronavirus humor." HUMOR 34, no. 2 (April 2, 2021): 305–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/humor-2021-0011.

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Abstract This essay explores the news media’s portrayal of humor during the early phase of COVID-19-related lockdowns. Examining a collection of online news articles reveals the media tended to frame the issue as an ethical one (e.g., “is it okay to laugh at the coronavirus?”). After reviewing work on humor ethics, a qualitative content analysis of 20 news media articles is presented. Three issues from the news stories are identified, allowing comparison of the media’s claims against the ethical principles articulated. The essay concludes with a consideration of how news media’s coverage of humor fits within a broader pandemic narrative.
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20

이완수 and Jae Young, Bae. "News Reporting Mechanism on Economy Rumor." Journal of Governance Studies 10, no. 1 (April 2015): 117–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.16973/jgs.2015.10.1.006.

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21

Moewaka Barnes, Angela, Belinda Borell, Amanda Gregory, Tim McCreanor, Raymon Nairn, and Jenny Rankine. "Suburban Newspapers’ reporting of Māori news." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 17, no. 2 (October 31, 2011): 50–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v17i2.351.

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ENNY RANKINE, ANGELA MOEWAKA BARNES, BELINDA BORELL, TIMOTHY McCREANOR, RAYMOND NAIRN and AMANDA GREGORY (Te Rōpu Whariki Research Group, Massey University, Auckland) A content analysis of editorial items about Māori issues and the Treaty of Waitangi in 14 Suburban Newspaper publications in Auckland and Northland found a low proportion of articles about these issues, despite high proportions of Māori resident in several areas served by these publications. Stories included a higher proportion of apparent news releases compared to a national sample of non-daily papers. Māori perspectives came largely from sources representing pan-Māori non-government organisations; Suburban Newspapers used a low proportion of iwi and hapū sources compared with other community papers. Use of te reo Māori was low, and there were no signs of attempts to support readers in learning or increasing their understanding of te reo Māori. This article concludes that Māori and non-Māori readers are poorly served by the poverty of Suburban Newspapers’ reporting of Treaty and Māori issues.
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Letterie, Gerard S. "News media reporting of multiple births." Fertility and Sterility 78 (September 2002): S41—S42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(02)03488-x.

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23

Davies, Kayt. "International news reporting: Frontlines and deadlines." Continuum 25, no. 1 (February 2011): 137–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2011.538370.

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24

Lewis, Glen. "Reporting the News from China.Robin Porter." Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs 29 (January 1993): 182–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2949966.

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Berkson, Sam. "Hip Hop World News: reporting back." Race & Class 59, no. 2 (October 2017): 102–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0306396817716053.

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Responding to the BBC 4 documentary, The Hip Hop World News, the author examines a number of debates that the programme, narrated by Rodney P, a pioneer of British rap music, and a believer in the revolutionary potential of hip hop culture, throws up. For hip hop also has many reactionary elements and has become big business for the corporations and rap ‘stars’ involved in its production. Beyond just pointing to individual rappers who have been ‘conscious’ political voices, such as Public Enemy’s Chuck D, we are shown structures embedded in the origins and ‘elements’ of hip hop that continue to make it a ‘voice of the voiceless’. Some people, like Lord Jamar, who is interviewed on the documentary, have argued that hip hop as a black art form can only be performed by black artists, yet, as Rodney P points out, hip hop has been adopted everywhere to express and transmit the situations and struggles of marginalised and oppressed groups all over the globe.
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Pribble, James M., Matthew J. Trowbridge, Sonia V. Kamat, Erika Franklin Fowler, Kenneth M. Goldstein, and Stephen W. Hargarten. "Injury Reporting on Local TV News." American Journal of Preventive Medicine 34, no. 5 (May 2008): 420–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2008.02.004.

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27

Guillory, Ferrel. "Weaker Media, Weaker Health News Reporting." North Carolina Medical Journal 70, no. 4 (July 2009): 360–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.18043/ncm.70.4.360.

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28

Jiaying, Wang, and Pan Cuiqiong. "A Critical Discourse Analysis of Major Media Reports about the Issue of the China-US Trade." IRA-International Journal of Management & Social Sciences (ISSN 2455-2267) 15, no. 5 (December 5, 2019): 150. http://dx.doi.org/10.21013/jmss.v15.n5.p1.

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Nowadays, CDA is widely used in news discourse because it can help people understand the implicit viewpoints in news discourse and grasp the true situation of news reports. As the main form of news discourse, media reporting is good intertextuality for CDA. Therefore, this paper, based on the theory of CDA, tries to discuss the implication of major media reporting about the issue of the China-US trade, from which the genre of media reporting here is also analyzed.
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Ewart, Jacqui, and Hamish McLean. "Best practice approaches for reporting disasters." Journalism 20, no. 12 (February 9, 2018): 1573–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884918757130.

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Much of the research about disasters has focused on the poor and unethical practices of journalists reporting on disasters, but relatively little has been written about best practice approaches to news media coverage of such events. This article uses two sources of data, interviews with senior emergency managers in eight countries and the body of research on news media coverage of disasters, to develop a best practice schema for journalists reporting disasters in two phases – before they occur and as they unfold. There is relatively little research on best practice approaches to reporting disasters; therefore, we also include the literature about news media coverage of disasters as this enabled identification of key problems with reportage of disasters. We conclude this article with suggestions about how this schema might be further refined and note some additional areas for research that might be pursued as a result of the best practice approach.
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Plaut, Martin. "Reporting conflict in Africa." Media, War & Conflict 10, no. 1 (March 26, 2017): 40–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1750635217699546.

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The quality of reporting African conflicts by Western media has declined in recent years as budgets have been cut and the number of correspondents has been reduced. Falling coverage has meant that audiences are unfamiliar with even the most basic facts about most African states. Most news stories must start from first principles, leaving little room for nuance and detail. This article, drawing on nearly three decades of first-hand experience, explains the pressures faced in reporting developing stories in complex emergencies. These include persuading editors of the need to cover events in countries that rarely appear in the Western media to the difficulties of interpreting journalistic standards written to meet the needs of domestic news coverage. This comes as the demand to satisfy the needs of an ever-expanding range of outlets has never been greater, including radio, television and online media. In the circumstances, careful preparation and a highly professional and supportive editorial team in a journalist’s home base are essential for a successful assignment.
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Hswen, Yulin, Amanda Zhang, Clark Freifeld, and John S. Brownstein. "Evaluation of Volume of News Reporting and Opioid-Related Deaths in the United States: Comparative Analysis Study of Geographic and Socioeconomic Differences." Journal of Medical Internet Research 22, no. 7 (July 10, 2020): e17693. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/17693.

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Background News media coverage is a powerful influence on public attitude and government action. The digitization of news media covering the current opioid epidemic has changed the landscape of coverage and may have implications for how to effectively respond to the opioid crisis. Objective This study aims to characterize the relationship between volume of online opioid news reporting and opioid-related deaths in the United States and how these measures differ across geographic and socioeconomic county-level factors. Methods Online news reports from February 2018 to April 2019 on opioid-related events in the United States were extracted from Google News. News data were aggregated at the county level and compared against opioid-related death counts. Ordinary least squares regression was used to model opioid-related death rate and opioid news coverage with the inclusion of socioeconomic and geographic explanatory variables. Results A total of 35,758 relevant news reports were collected representing 1789 counties. Regression analysis revealed that opioid-related death rate was positively associated with news reporting. However, opioid-related death rate and news reporting volume showed opposite correlations with educational attainment and rurality. When controlling for variation in death rate, counties in the Northeast were overrepresented by news coverage. Conclusions Our results suggest that regional variation in the volume of opioid-related news reporting does not reflect regional variation in opioid-related death rate. Differences in the amount of media attention may influence perceptions of the severity of opioid epidemic. Future studies should investigate the influence of media reporting on public support and action on opioid issues.
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Dashti, Ali A., Salah M. al-Fadhli, M. S. Son, and H. I. Hamdy. "The Effect of Tweeting on Journalists’ Reporting Practices in Kuwait." Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication 11, no. 3 (November 23, 2018): 274–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18739865-01103002.

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Abstract The social and the technical mechanisms of Twitter have encouraged many journalists to use it as part of their daily journalism practices. Journalists use Twitter for various purposes, such as newsgathering, reporting and sourcing news. Twitter has become an official and unofficial source for news for many journalists and news organizations. This study examines how Twitter is affecting the way Kuwaiti journalists source news, and asks whether Twitter has affected their journalistic practices. The results support previous studies that Twitter represents a platform in which journalists source, seek and cover news stories.
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Tuggle, C. A., and Suzanne Huffman. "Live Reporting in Television News: Breaking News or Black Holes?" Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 45, no. 2 (June 2001): 335–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15506878jobem4502_9.

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34

Blackall, David. "Environmental Reporting in a Post Truth World." Asia Pacific Media Educator 27, no. 1 (June 2017): 27–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1326365x17703205.

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The science publication Nature Climate Change this year published a study demonstrating Earth this century warmed substantially less than computer-generated climate models predict. Unfortunately for public knowledge, such findings don’t appear in the news. Sea levels too have not been obeying the ‘grand transnational narrative’ of catastrophic global warming. Sea levels around Australia 2011–2012 were measured with the most significant drops in sea levels since measurements began. This phenomenon was due to rainfall over Central Australia, which filled vast inland lakes. It was not predicted in the models, nor was it reported in the news. The 2015–2016 El-Niño, a natural phenomenon, drove sea levels around Indonesia to low levels such that coral reefs were bleaching. The echo chamber of news repeatedly fails to report such phenomena and yet many studies continue to contradict mainstream news discourse. Whistle-blower Dr. John Bates exposed the U.S. National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) when it manipulated data to meet politically predetermined conclusions for the 2015 Paris (Climate) Agreement. This was not reported. Observational scientific analyses and their data sets continue to disagree with much of climate science modelling, and are beginning to suggest that some natural phenomena, which cause variability, may never be identified.
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Büchi, Moritz. "Microblogging as an extension of science reporting." Public Understanding of Science 26, no. 8 (July 5, 2016): 953–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0963662516657794.

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Mass media have long provided general publics with science news. New media such as Twitter have entered this system and provide an additional platform for the dissemination of science information. Based on automated collection and analysis of >900 news articles and 70,000 tweets, this study explores the online communication of current science news. Topic modeling (latent Dirichlet allocation) was used to extract five broad themes of science reporting: space missions, the US government shutdown, cancer research, Nobel Prizes, and climate change. Using content and network analysis, Twitter was found to extend public science communication by providing additional voices and contextualizations of science issues. It serves a recommender role by linking to web resources, connecting users, and directing users’ attention. This article suggests that microblogging adds a new and relevant layer to the public communication of science.
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Sharma, Nitasha, Nidhi Chauhan, Bir S. Chavan, and Priti Arun. "Suicide prevention and media reporting: an evaluative study from Chandigarh." International Journal Of Community Medicine And Public Health 8, no. 4 (March 25, 2021): 1704. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20211221.

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Background: Responsible reporting represent an evidence-based population-level strategy for suicide prevention.Methods: The present investigation aimed to evaluate the print media news items in leading newspapers from Chandigarh between January 2015 to December 2016 in terms of compliance to desirable media reporting guidelines issued collaboratively by WHO and International Association of Suicide Prevention.Results: A total of 284 news item from English and Hindi newspapers were evaluated for compliance using a 12 item checklist. The data was analysed for frequency in terms of compliance to each item of checklist. The compliance was also compared in English and Hindi news papers. 92% of the news items failed to educate public on the complex issue of suicide and related mental illness. 60% news items portrayed it in a sensationalizing way. 98.5% news items revealed the identity of the suicide victim, much in contradiction to what guidelines promote.Conclusions: There is overall poor compliance to media reporting guidelines. The present study highlights a strong need for a country like India to develop and implement media reporting guidelines at a policy level.
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Kurnia, Septiawan Santana, Dadi Ahmadi, and Firmansyah Firmansyah. "Investigative News of Online Media." MIMBAR : Jurnal Sosial dan Pembangunan 36, no. 1 (June 4, 2020): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.29313/mimbar.v36i1.4286.

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An investigative reporting has changed quite rapidly in the last few periods after the development of information technology. The presence of online media encourages the emergence of online journalism. The existence of online journalism, within the framework of online media, gives a certain touch to investigative reporting activities. Investigative reporting developed in online media has managerial uniqueness and certain coverage patterns. The purpose of this study is to illustrate how the management of editorials and online media coverage patterns in Indonesia conducting investigative coverage.Data for this research is obtained through interviews with data analysis using a qualitative approach and a case study method of single case-multilevel analysis. Research subjects (journalism) and research objects (online investigative news) of this study are Detik.com and Tirto.id.The results of the study show that investigative data are at the core of investigative reporting in online media. It can be in the form of direct observation under investigation (disguising) or the disclosure of new facts that have not been revealed before. The online news media in Indonesia, although it relies on the speed, also still takes into account the accuracy and rules of journalism, especially in the coverage of investigations. The online media strategy in reporting investigations is to divide investigative data into several news stories with one theme, but each headline is different according to the investigative reporting to be reported in parts.
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Hassan, Isyaku, Mohd N. L. Azmi, and Usman I. Abubakar. "Framing Islam in News Reporting: A Comparative Content Analysis." Asian Social Science 13, no. 10 (September 27, 2017): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ass.v13n10p112.

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The emergence of modern communication technology suggests that the society as a whole is now a simple hostage at the hands of the media. However, the time has come to ask whether the people are being managed, manipulated, massaged or brainwashed by the media. Media contents are unjustifiably dominated by expressions that create negative impressions of Islam. As a result, the media accentuate anti-Muslim bias and bigotry. This study aims to comparatively examine how Nigerian and Malaysian newspapers frame Islam-related events in news reporting. Using purposive sampling, Punch and Vanguard were chosen from Nigeria while The Star and New Straits Times were chosen from Malaysia based on their popularity and readership. Relevant news articles that focus upon reports about Islam or Muslims were collected from the selected newspapers using internet-based search from November 2015 until September 2016. The newspapers produced 599 different Islam-related news articles within this period. The study found that out of 599 news articles published in the selected newspapers, 228 portrayed Islam in conflict situation by using conflict frame. For the rest, 60 news articles used consequence frame, 32 used crime frame, 11 used responsibility frame, 19 used morality frame, and 249 portrayed Islam using human interest frame. Nigerian newspapers used more conflict frames in reporting Islam than Malaysian newspapers. Collective efforts of journalists, editors, and corporate ownership of the newspapers should be directed toward suppressing the negative media portrayal of Islam.
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Haight, Timothy D. "Earnings Shortfalls and Strategic Profit Allocations in Segment Reporting." Accounting Horizons 33, no. 4 (June 1, 2019): 37–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/acch-52464.

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SYNOPSIS I examine whether firms strategically classify earnings components when reporting bad earnings news. Specifically, I examine whether firms reporting small earnings shortfalls allocate profits across their business segments in a manner that understates the future implications and within-firm drivers of disappointing earnings performance. I find that firms reporting small earnings shortfalls transfer profits toward segments in which profit rates are more informative for firm value and away from segments that operate in industries with higher frequencies of bad earnings news. In addition, I find that shortfall shifting initially tempers negative market responses to shortfall news, but pricing effects reverse in the months following shortfall announcements. My findings suggest that firms strategically classify earnings components when reporting small earnings shortfalls and that strategic classifications temporarily affect the pricing of shortfall news. Data Availability: Data are available from public sources identified in this paper.
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JACOBS, ALAN M., J. SCOTT MATTHEWS, TIMOTHY HICKS, and ERIC MERKLEY. "Whose News? Class-Biased Economic Reporting in the United States." American Political Science Review 115, no. 3 (April 12, 2021): 1016–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003055421000137.

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There is substantial evidence that voters’ choices are shaped by assessments of the state of the economy and that these assessments, in turn, are influenced by the news. But how does the economic news track the welfare of different income groups in an era of rising inequality? Whose economy does the news cover? Drawing on a large new dataset of US news content, we demonstrate that the tone of the economic news strongly and disproportionately tracks the fortunes of the richest households, with little sensitivity to income changes among the non-rich. Further, we present evidence that this pro-rich bias emerges not from pro-rich journalistic preferences but, rather, from the interaction of the media’s focus on economic aggregates with structural features of the relationship between economic growth and distribution. The findings yield a novel explanation of distributionally perverse electoral patterns and demonstrate how distributional biases in the economy condition economic accountability.
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41

Matsushita, Kayo. "Reporting quotable yet untranslatable speech." AILA Review 33 (October 7, 2020): 157–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aila.00035.mat.

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Abstract When a newsmaker (i.e., a newsworthy subject) is speaking or being spoken about in a foreign language, quoting requires translation. In such “translingual quoting” (Haapanen, 2017), it is not only the content of the speech but also its translatability that determines newsworthiness. While news media in some countries prefer indirect quotation, Japanese media favor direct quotes (Matsushita, 2019). This practice yields relatively clear source text (ST)-target text (TT) relationships in translingual quoting, especially when a political speech is directly quoted by newspapers, offering abundant data for news translation research (Matsushita, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2019). However, this research approach has been challenged by the rise of a public figure known for making headlines with his extemporaneous remarks: US President Donald J. Trump. Translingual quoting of Trump in the non-English media has proven at times a “nearly impossible quest” (Lichfield, 2016) because of the unique features of his utterances, such as unorthodox word choices, run-on sentences and disjointed syntax (Viennot, 2016). This difficulty is heightened for Japanese newspapers, which uphold a longstanding journalistic standard of reporting speech as faithfully as possible, even in the case of translingual quoting (Matsushita, 2019). Against this backdrop, this article examines the often-conflicting relationship between “quotability” and “translatability” by analyzing how Japanese newspaper articles have quoted Donald Trump and his predecessor, Barack Obama, through comparison of original speeches and news texts produced by Japanese newspapers. The comparison shows that institutional conventions of Japanese newspaper companies regarding direct quotes are frequently neglected by the journalists trans-quoting Trump (e.g., changed to indirect quotes or reproduced less faithfully), leading to marked differences in the textual portrayals of the newsmakers in terms of eloquence and assertiveness.
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Herman, Jack R., and John A. T. Morgan. "Medical news reporting: establishing goodwill and cooperation." Medical Journal of Australia 183, no. 4 (August 2005): 195–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5694/j.1326-5377.2005.tb06995.x.

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43

Stiff, Cindy. "Risk Management Questions for News Reporting Classes." Journalism & Mass Communication Educator 50, no. 2 (June 1995): 41–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769589505000205.

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44

Reich, Zvi. "The Impact of Technology on News Reporting." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 90, no. 3 (July 26, 2013): 417–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699013493789.

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45

Ramaprasad, Jyotika, and James D. Kelly. "Reporting the News from the World's Rooftop." Gazette (Leiden, Netherlands) 65, no. 3 (June 2003): 291–315. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0016549203065003005.

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46

Domaradzki, Mikolaj. "Conceptualizing conflict in Arab economic news reporting." Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 1, no. 1 (June 18, 2013): 115–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jlac.1.1.06dom.

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The present article is a corpus-based study that aims to shed some light on the use of conflict metaphors in Arab economic news reporting. When examining the conventionality and functions of various metaphors for conflict, the paper offers the following empirical findings. First, conflict metaphors are highly entrenched in Arab economic journalism. Second and relatedly, the different linguistic conceptualizations of these metaphors can be used interchangeably. Finally, the analyses described herein show that Arabic and English have a great deal in common as far as the cognitive and pragmatic aspects of conflict metaphors are concerned. Thus, these metaphors (1) provide the users of both languages with a very useful frame for understanding and evaluating various social phenomena, (2) are frequently used for highly comparable reasons of persuasion, and — finally — (3) create very similar networks of entailments which, in both languages, structure the readers’ interpretation accordingly. Having discussed the commonalities between Arabic and English, the paper goes on to hypothesize that they might reflect certain fundamental and presumably universal human experiences.
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47

Wu, Bing. "Book Review: Reporting the News from China." Armed Forces & Society 22, no. 4 (July 1996): 649–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0095327x9602200409.

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48

Swasy, Alecia, Edson Tandoc, Manu Bhandari, and Rachel Davis. "Traditional Reporting More Credible than Citizen News." Newspaper Research Journal 36, no. 2 (June 2015): 225–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532915587298.

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Thomson, Elizabeth A., Peter R. R. White, and Philip Kitley. "“OBJECTIVITY” AND “HARD NEWS” REPORTING ACROSS CULTURES." Journalism Studies 9, no. 2 (April 2008): 212–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700701848261.

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50

Jaffery, Jonathan B., Lynn M. Jacobson, Kenneth M. Goldstein, and James M. Pribble. "Local Television News Reporting of Kidney Disease." American Journal of Kidney Diseases 48, no. 6 (December 2006): 983–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.ajkd.2006.08.026.

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