Now showing items 53-72 of 175

    • From Bhopal to Superfund: The News Media and the Environment 

      Hazarika, Sanjoy (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1994)
      Sanjoy Hazarika was among the first reporters to reach Bhopal within hours after tragedy first struck, and he has pursued the story that has grown out of it with the persistence that distinguishes all great reporters. As ...
    • From Natural Disaster and Social Crisis to Great Success of the Olympic Games: Transparent Governance and Foreign Correspondents in China in 2008 

      Dong, Steven Guanpeng (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2011-01)
      A paper by Steven Guanpeng Dong, spring 2010 fellow, takes an in‐depth look at the media policy that altered events that happened in China in 2008 and the impact these events had on the Chinese government and the Chinese ...
    • From VietNet to VietNamNet: Ten Years of Electronic Media in Vietnam 

      Tuấn, Nguyễn Anh (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2008)
      VietNamNet is Vietnam’s most popular online media outlet. Everyday, four million viewers visit the site, generating 100 million page views. VietNamNet’s readership is diverse, including Vietnam’s political and intellectual ...
    • The Future of Global Television News 

      Parker, Richard (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1994-09)
      Television has, in the past forty years, trans-formed the ways we think about the news. The medium’s immediacy (especially when “live”), the unique way it lets us “see” events ten blocks—or ten thousand miles—away, and its ...
    • A Generally Bellicose Society’s Antisocial Media: Reporting Murder & Debating God in a Nation at War 

      Khan, Wajahat S. (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2011-11)
      A paper by Wajahat S. Khan, spring 2011 fellow, examines the media coverage following the assassination of Pakistani politician Salmaan Taseer, from international journalists, oped writers, bloggers, social networkers, the ...
    • Getting It for Free: When Foundations Provide the News on Health 

      Schwartz, Maralee (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2009-06)
      Washington Post Executive Editor Marcus Brauchli was asked at a meeting early this year with reporters why The Post had used two stories from something called Kaiser Health News. Up until a few months before, the paper ...
    • Getting the Story in China: American Reporters Since 1972 

      Mirsky, Jonathan (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2000)
      During China's Communist years, especially from 1980 to the present, American reporters who believe in their right to seek information, have operated within a system which suspects and hinders their work. Beijing's view ...
    • The Global News Networks and U.S. Policymaking In Defense and Foreign Affairs 

      Gilboa, Eytan (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2002)
      This study investigates the effects of global television news on the formulation and implementation of foreign policy. While it found no evidence to support the “CNN effect,” a theory that claims global television now ...
    • Gone Rogue: Time to Reform the Presidential Primary Debates 

      McKinnon, Mark (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2012-01)
      How would the course of history been altered had P.T. Barnum moderated the famed Lincoln-Douglas debates in 1858? Today’s ultimate showman and on-again, off-again presidential candidate Donald Trump invited the Republican ...
    • Great sound makes no noise -- Creeping Freedoms in Chinese Press 

      Li, Xiguang (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2000)
      In contrast to recent Western criticism of China's tightened social control and the crack-down on dissent, a liberalizing tendency has rippled in the most dangerous water in China: the press. The birth and growth of a freer ...
    • The Growing Importance of Nonprofit Journalism 

      Lewis, Charles (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2007)
      A paper by Charles Lewis, spring 2006 fellow, argues that despite the growing audience for non-profit news outlets such as NPR, there are few such organizations that have a sustained commitment to investigative reporting. ...
    • Hamlet’s Blackberry: Why Paper Is Eternal 

      Powers, William (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2007)
      The condition of American journalism in the first decade of the twenty-first century can be expressed in a single unhappy word: crisis. Whether it’s a plagiarism scandal at a leading newspaper, the fall from grace of a ...
    • Hispanic Voices: Is the Press Listening? 

      Quiroga, Jorge (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1995-01)
      Jorge Quiroga, an investigative reporter for WCVB-TV in Boston, has spent most of his more than twenty years in journalism as a "beat" and investigative reporter. Little if any of his professional background has been devoted ...
    • How Much Would You Pay to Save the Planet? The American Press and the Economics of Climate Change 

      Pooley, Eric (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2009-01)
      Suppose our leading scientists discovered that a meteor, hurtling toward the earth, was set to strike later this century; the governments of the world had less than ten years to divert or destroy it. How would news ...
    • How Voters Construct Images of Political Candidates: The Role of Political Advertising and Televised News 

      Kern, Montague; Just, Marion (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1994)
      The voting literature has belittled the impact of campaigns on electoral outcomes, focusing instead on the greater contribution of partisan alignment [Lazarsfeld, Berelson and Gaudet, 1948] and retrospective judgments of ...
    • IJAMBO: “Speaking Truth” Amidst Genocide 

      Sinduhije, Alexis (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1998-07)
      In the fall of 1997, Alexis was invited to Harvard as a Shorenstein Fellow, to reflect on his experience and its implications for the scores of other conflict-ridden regions of the world, where local journalism is ultimately ...
    • Israel in The New York Times Over the Decades: A Changed Narrative and Its Impact on Jewish Readers 

      Lewis, Neil A. (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2012-02)
      During the winter of 1974, Seymour Topping, the assistant managing editor of The New York Times, and his wife, Audrey, visited Jordan as part of a tour of the Middle East. On their stops in Egypt, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia ...
    • The Israeli-Hezbollah War of 2006: The Media As A Weapon in Asymmetrical Conflict 

      Kalb, Marvin (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2007-02)
      Based on content analysis of global media and interviews with many diplomats and journalists, this paper describes the trajectory of the media from objective observer to fiery advocate, becoming in fact a weapon of modern ...
    • Journalism and Economics: The Tangled Webs of Profession, Narrative, and Responsibility in a Modern Democracy 

      Parker, Richard (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 1997)
      What can be done to improve this situation? The answer is clearly important if economics is to contribute to better public policy. It is surely a necessary condition for effective reporting that journalists become more ...
    • Journalism and Global Health 

      Hilts, Philip J. (Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, 2008)
      Looking to see how much coverage global health issues have received across American newspapers, we carried out a survey of news coverage in eight newspapers published over the past several decades. We also conducted two ...