Browsing HKS Shorenstein Center by Title
Now showing items 17-36 of 175
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Changing Lanes on the Inside Track: The Career Shuttle Between Journalism, Politics and Government
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1991-05)The results of this inquiry reveal that the volume of traffic between journalism and government, or politics, is heavy throughout the country. The dilemmas facing such career changers, and the clear pattern which describes ... -
The Church, The Press and Abortion: Catholic Leadership and Public Communication
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1991-12)The abortion issue currently exercising the minds and emotions of many Americans is one of the more disturbing moral and political questions of recent U.S. history. This paper addresses the interrelationship of the Catholic ... -
Clarifying The CNN Effect: An Examination of Media Effects According to Type of Military Intervention
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1997-06)In recent years, observers of international affairs have raised the concern that media have expanded their ability to affect the conduct of U.S. diplomacy and foreign policy. Dubbed the “CNN effect” (or “CNN curve” or “CNN ... -
Climate emergencies do not justify engineering the climate
(Nature Publishing Group, 2015)Current climate engineering proposals do not come close to addressing the complex and contested nature of conceivable ‘climate emergencies’ resulting from unabated greenhouse gas emissions. -
Communication Patterns in Presidential Primaries 1912-2000: Knowing the Rules of the Game
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1998-06)Instituted as a sweeping reform in American politics, the presidential primaries were conceived in passionate democratic debate. Arguing that “the power to nominate is more important than the power to elect” (Eaton, 1912, ... -
Confusion, Contradiction and Irony: The Iraqi Media in 2010
(2010)After the fall of Baghdad on April 9, 2003, Iraq’s news media environment transformed almost overnight from the tightly controlled propaganda arm of Saddam Hussein’s rule into one of the most diverse and unrestricted news ... -
The Content of Reports on U.S. Newspaper Internet Sites
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2002)Moving newspaper content onto the Internet has not, in itself, changed what journalists write. In many ways, the who, what, when, where, why, and how of news stories continue to evolve in ways that enhance the professional ... -
Covering Controversial Science: Improving Reporting on Science and Public Policy
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2006)As the pace of new developments in science and technology quickens, journalists are increasingly confronted with covering complicated technical information as well as the potential social, legal, religious, and political ... -
Covering Crime in Washington, D.C.: Examining the Nature of Local Television News Coverage of Crime and its Effect on Emotional Response
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2006)This paper examines the nature of local television news coverage of crime and its effects on emotional response. Specifically, I present the results of a content analysis of two months of local television news coverage of ... -
Covering September 11 and Its Consequences: A Comparative Study of the Press in America, India and Pakistan
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2002)The September 11 attack on the World Trade Center in New York , confronted the Press with a supreme challenge, in America where the earth-shaking event happened and in South Asia which continued to experience violent ... -
Covering the CIA in Times of Crisis: Obstacles and Strategies
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2004)A paper by Ted Gup, fall 2003 fellow, examines how the U.S. press fared in covering the intelligence community before and after two catastrophic intelligence failures—9/11 and the yet-to-be-found weapons of mass destruction ... -
Death in Wartime: Photographs and the “Other War” in Afghanistan
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2005)This paper addresses the formulaic dependence of the news media on images of people facing impending death. Considering one example of this depiction - U.S. journalism's photographic coverage of the killing of the Taliban ... -
The Decline, But Not Yet Total Fall, of Foreign News in the U.S. Media
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2000)In my darker moments I feel like a virtual dinosaur. In fact I am a print foreign correspondent with 40 years of wars, rebellions, uprisings, crises, epidemics, disasters man-made and natural as well as bad whisky under ... -
Dialectical Spaces in the Global Public Sphere: Media Memories across Generations
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2003)A decade ago, CNN and MTV emerged as new types of 'global' players, initiating and supporting a new global transnational community of 'news junkies' and music cultures from New York, to Tokyo, to Buenos Aires and Los ... -
Did Twitter Kill the Boys on the Bus? Searching for a better way to cover a campaign
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2013-09)This paper will examine the merits of being a reporter “on the bus” during a presidential campaign, at a time when Twitter and other web-driven developments in the media have broken down walls between the political press ... -
Different Stories: How the newspapers in the United States, Britain and South Asia covered the Iraq War
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2004)In many ways, war presents the biggest challenge to the values and the professional practices of the press. Despite the growing internationalism and readership over the Internet, most newspapers are rooted firmly in a ... -
Different Strokes: Public Broadcasting in America and Australia
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1991-07)Glyn Davis, Commissioner for Public Sector Equity in the newly created Public Sector Management Commission of Queensland, Australia, has taken a close look at what he calls the "chaos" of America's public broadcasting ... -
Digital Divas: Women, Politics and the Social Network
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2011-06)In the 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama emerged as the champion of new media by using social networking tools in innovative ways to turn on and turn out young voters. Since then, some of most visible and creative ... -
Digital Fuel of the 21st Century: Innovation through Open Data and the Network Effect
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2012-01)The history of civilization has seen continuous evolutionary progress, occasionally culminating in changes that are revolutionary. In the broadest classification, three such revolutions are apparent, each one building upon ... -
Diminishing Returns: A Comparison of the 1968 and 2000 Election Night Broadcasts
(Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2003-12)Shortly before 8 p.m., the television networks projected Al Gore as the winner of the Florida vote.Two hours later, they retracted the call. Then, just after 2 a.m., the networks claimed George W. Bush had won in Florida ...