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Journalism Scholarly Works: Recent submissions
Now showing items 61-80 of 93
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Frame flow between government and the news media and its effects on the public: Framing of North Korea
(Oxford University Press, 2009-07-01)Public opinion is likely to be susceptible to the way a government and the news media frame foreign countries, because unlike domestic issues, foreign news is typically beyond a person's direct experience. How does the ... -
A mixture model of global Internet capacity distributions
(Wiley, 2015-05-13)This article develops a preferential attachment-based mixture model of global Internet bandwidth and investigates it in the context of observed bandwidth distributions between 2002 and 2011. Our longitudinal analysis shows, ... -
International Media Coverage of North Korea: A Study of Journalists and News Reports on the Six-party Nuclear Talks
(Taylor & Francis, 2009-01-01)This study examines what factors influence journalists’ perceived importance of different attributes of North Korea. In particular, this study analyzes the degree to which journalists’ perceived credibility of their sources ... -
Media and Foreign Policy: Comparative Study of Journalists’ Perceptions of Press-Government Relations during the Six-Party Talks
(SAGE Publications, 2011-05-01)This study examines journalists’ role conceptions in their coverage of diplomatic issues, based on a survey of South Korean, U.S., and European journalists who covered the six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear program. ... -
Networks of Networks: Changing Patterns in Country Bandwidth and Centrality in Global Information Infrastructure, 2002-2010
(Wiley, 2012-04-01)The global distribution of information infrastructure has evolved significantly in the last decade. At a structural level, one of the most notable changes is in the way in which countries—as nodes in digital networks—link ... -
Three Korean perspectives on U.S. internet public diplomacy
(Elsevier, 2013-12-01)This study identifies perspectives of relationships publics have about countries other than their own and examines whether publics engaged through social media-based public diplomacy programs demonstrate different relationship ... -
Meaning of Democracy Around the World: A Thematic and Structural Analysis of Videos Defining Democracy
(Taylor & Francis, 2012-06-01)This study examines thematic and structural features of short films submitted to a worldwide video competition to define democracy. A total of 120 videos submitted from around the world are analyzed to identify prominent ... -
Urban Youth’s Perspectives on Flash Mobs
(Taylor & Francis, 2013-07-01)Flash mobs are new, emerging, and evolving social phenomena that have recently been associated with youth violence in U.S. cities. The current study explores how youth understand flash mobs through focus groups conducted ... -
Visual Propaganda in the Age of Social Media: An Empirical Analysis of Twitter Images During 2012 Israeli-Hamas Conflict
(Taylor & Francis, 2014-07) -
Network approach to internet bandwidth distributions
(Springer, 2015-07-19)This study examines the communications networks formed by direct international Internet links, weighted by bandwidth capacity, each year over the 2002–2011 period. Specifically, we analyze changes in bandwidth distributions ... -
Teens’ social media use and collective action
(Sage, 2014-09)This research examined how social self-efficacy, collective self-esteem, and need to belong can be used to predict teens’ use of social media. The particular focus was on how these social psychological variables together ... -
Online Social Relations and Country Reputation
(University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, 2013-01-01)See article for abstract. -
Readers as gatekeepers of online news: Brazil, China, and the United States
(Universidade de Brasilia, 2010-01-01)See article for abstract. -
Assessing the Assessors: JMC Administrators Critique the Nine ACEJMC Standards
(SAGE Publications, 2013-12-01)For nearly ninety years, journalism professionals and academics have attempted to develop standards by which to prepare college students for the media industry. For nearly 70 years, the Accrediting Council on Education in ... -
Leaders in Journalism Education: Administrators at ACEJMC Accredited Programs and Non-accredited HBCU Programs Critique the Standards
(Fayetteville State University, 2014-01-01)Administrators of journalism and mass communication units have had to make decisions on how they would lead their units into the future. For over 70 years, the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass ... -
A Link To The Future: A Pilot Study Look at How Historically Black Colleges and Universities With Journalism and Mass Communications Units Use The Internet in Recruiting
(The Clute Institute, 2012-04)Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) have had the ability to recruit African-American students since the 1860s by stressing a sense of inclusion and family through their mission statements and community ... -
The Challenges And Successes of Department Governance: A Look At HBCU Journalism and Mass Communications Unit Administrators
(The Clute Institute, 2012-09)Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) are facing challenges to their continued existence on several fronts. One is fiscally, as federal funding for education has been cut and the responsibility for paying ... -
Higher Education: How Freshmen and First-Year Journalism and Mass Communication Students At HBCUs and PWUs Used The Internet In Their Decision
(The Clute Institute, 2013)This study set out to explore how the Internet was used by Journalism and Mass Communications Program students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Predominately White Universities in their college choice ... -
Journalism and Mass Communication Students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Predominantly White Institutions: Saying Goodbye to the Digital Divide
(Canadian Center of Science and Education, 2013-04-07)The digital divide has been described as the distance or gap in access to information based on race, ethnicity, income,education and geographical location. This study examined how freshmen and first-semester journalism and ...