Academic literature on the topic 'Branches of journalism'

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Journal articles on the topic "Branches of journalism"

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Yessenbekova, U. M. "Professional and cognitive level of the journalist in science propaganda." BULLETIN of the L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University. Journalism Series 134, no. 1 (2021): 91–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.32523/2616-7174-2021-134-1-91-96.

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Journalism branches arise in accordance with development of society and its needs. Society, people, and professions are undergoing systematic transformation. Scientific journalism performs with its distinctive characteristics. First, it changes and organized by the achievements of science and education. Second, the success factors of science journalism have a normative, legal, and practical basis. Third, scientific journalism has a combined function of connecting the scientific community and public. The promotion of scientific achievements is jointly carried out by professional journalists and the scientific community. Therefore, the elaboration of scientific information is important for a good perception of the content by a wide audience. The cognitive level of the scientific journalist helps him to freely use scientific theories along with other sources. The author considers that such activities should not end with the publication of scientific results by a journalist. For a journalist, high-quality publication of research results is an integral part of the success of scientific communication. The study concludes that the degree of success in scientific communication depends on several factors, including the cognitive and professional level of a journalist.
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Sagan, Oleksandr N. "Kievan Christianity: Church and spatial-temporal identification." Ukrainian Religious Studies, no. 65 (March 22, 2013): 173–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.32420/2013.65.225.

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In the Ukrainian scientific literature, theology and journalism, the concepts of "Kievan Christianity", "Kyiv-Christian tradition of Volodymyr's baptism", "Ukrainian Orthodoxy" (not to be confused with "Orthodoxy in Ukraine"), "Churches of the Kiev Tradition "," Kiev Churches "," branches of the Kiev Church "," heirs of Vladimir baptism ", etc. However, analyzing the arguments in the disclosure of these concepts by different authors, we are confronted with the traditional problem of Ukrainian science - a variety of interpretations, engagement, and politicization of approaches. And in our case there is also a confessional approach, which many researchers can not always avoid.
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Alam, G. M. Shahidul. "Looking in From the Outside: Media in the Mix of Governance, Security and Development." Making of Contemporary Maldives: Isolation, Dictatorship and Democracy 1, no. 1 (2020): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.52823/sczp3591.

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The Constitutions of democratic countries list, and elaborately specify the makeup and functions of, three branches of government: the Executive, Legislature, and Judiciary. The Media, dubbed the Fourth Estate by Edmund Burke, cannot be a part of the government. In fact, to contemplate a free media being a part of a government would be an oxymoron. After all, the Media is there to keep a check on the abuse of power by the government and other power structures. This paper looks at the media’s role in a country’s governance, security, and development, and these are encapsulated, indicating also to their complementarity, in the quality traditional media’s glamour best: political journalism. Today, in the early twenty-first century, journalism is still, for good and ill, at the heart of politics. But political journalism is also changing and reinventing itself as a craft and a profession in the face of harsh competition, a rapidly changing business environment, and a political world undergoing its own profound changes. Furthermore, in the Internet Age, the new media, because of the possibilities for good or mischief that it can create, is often a target for manipulation towards one’s own benefit, and at the expense of other political entities, in a number of countries.
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PLIASUN, OLGA. "THE CATEGORY OF IMAGE IN MODERN HUMANITIES: THE PROBLEM AND ITS SCIENTIFIC DISCOURSES." Actual issues of Ukrainian linguistics: theory and practice 35 (2017): 70–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/apultp.2017.35.70-87.

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The given article analyzes various approaches to the interpretation of the category of image in modern humanities and social sciences (e.g. politology, economics, culturology, journalism etc.). However, it is stressed that in terms of linguistics the phenomenon of image is insufficiently researched. Thus, the author notes that in linguistic discourse the category of image should be studied within the framework of a new direction of linguistic studies which is currently at the stage of forming – lingvoimageology. The primary interest of lingvoimageology is the study of linguistic mechanisms of image making. The author comes to the conclusion that in modern scientific discourse lingvoimageology is one of the most topical and promising branches of world neolinguistics.
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Laslo, Esther, Ayelet Baram-Tsabari, and Bruce V. Lewenstein. "A growth medium for the message: Online science journalism affordances for exploring public discourse of science and ethics." Journalism 12, no. 7 (2011): 847–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884911412709.

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Little attention has been paid to how new media foster public discussion of science-related issues. In this exploratory study, we examine discussions generated by articles on the most popular daily news website in Israel. All articles dealt with research studies that involved animal experimentation, a topic often linked to deep ethical conflicts. Based on analysis of 10 articles and more than 600 reader comments, we found that topics in both science and ethics are initiated both by the original article and in the linked discussion threads. The most fruitful topics (measured by number of comments) were initiated in the discussion threads, not in the articles themselves. We suggest that discourse in new media can be understood by thinking of the audience as a ‘growth medium’ in which seeds planted by individual stories can grow (through the affordances of new media) into both knowledge of the sort imagined by the story writers and new branches nurtured by the community itself.
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SCHWAB, CHRISTIANE. "The transforming city in nineteenth-century literary journalism: Ramón de Mesonero Romanos’ ‘Madrid scenes’ and Charles Dickens’ ‘Street sketches’." Urban History 46, no. 2 (2018): 225–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926818000391.

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ABSTRACT:Nineteenth-century urbanization and industrialization in western Europe have clearly contributed to the formation of societal knowledge and self-reflexive cultural iconographies. Especially from the 1820s onwards, one major context for discussing the social and cultural diversity of the city and concomitant socio-political tensions was the emerging market of journals and magazines. Based upon the writings of two exemplary authors, this article investigates with which techniques and metaphors nineteenth-century journalistic sketches depicted urban sociability and conditions. Furthermore, it reflects on how not only the ever more differentiating urban environments but also the proximity of different networks and institutions of knowledge encouraged the refinement of social observation and thought. Exploring a neglected genre of social knowledge production, the article proposes new perspectives for urban history and aims at stimulating a critical review of contemporary research practices in all branches of the social sciences.
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Flew, Terry. "The Global Trust Deficit Disorder: A Communications Perspective on Trust in the Time of Global Pandemics." Journal of Communication 71, no. 2 (2021): 163–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqab006.

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Abstract There has been much discussion worldwide about the crisis of trust, with evidence of declining trust in social, economic, political and media institutions. The rise of populism, and the differing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic between nations, has been drawing attention to wider implications of pervasive distrust, including distrust of the media. In this article, I develop three propositions. First, I identify trust studies as a rich interdisciplinary field, linking communication to other branches of the social sciences and humanities. Second, I argue that we lack a comprehensive account of how trust has been understood in communication, and that doing so requires integrating macro-societal approaches with the “meso” level of institutions, and the “micro” level of interpersonal communication. Third, I propose that a focus upon trust would open up new perspectives on two important topics—the future of news media and journalism, and the global rise of populism.
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Simonov, P. Yu. "Information and Image Policy of the Country in Cultural Paradigm." Communicology 8, no. 1 (2020): 180–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.21453/2311-3065-2020-8-1-180-187.

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The purpose of this article is to identify and study the mechanisms of information and image policy that contribute to creating a positive image of the country; to reveal the role of information and image policy in the formation and promotion of national culture brands. The relevance of this article is due to the need to develop a scientifically based approach to the study of the country’s image from the standpoint of cultural studies, a complex discipline that is distinguished by its integrity and integrated attitude to the study of all cultural phenomena, taking into account the modern achievements of various branches of knowledge. Particular attention is paid to the concept of image in modern science. The theoretical basis was the provisions and concepts of classical works on cultural studies, the theory of mass and intercultural communication, the media, journalism, imageology, political science, sociology, marketing, psychology, philosophy, and ethnology. The article reflects the theory of the information society (D. Bell, M. Castells), the information space, information policy (I. Melyukhin, V. Popov), country branding (S. Anholt, W. Allins).
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Mangan, Anita, and Aidan Byrne. "Marginalising co-operation? A discursive analysis of media reporting on the Co-operative Bank." Organization 25, no. 6 (2018): 794–811. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350508418763276.

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Recently there has been renewed academic interest in co-operatives. In contrast, media accounts of co-operatives are relatively scarce, particularly, in the United Kingdom, where business reporting usually focuses on capitalist narratives, with alternatives routinely marginalised until a scandal pushes them into the public eye. This article analyses media coverage of the United Kingdom’s Co-operative Bank (2011–2015), tracing its transformation from an unremarkable presence on the UK high street to preferred bidder for Lloyds Bank branches and its subsequent near collapse. The article charts changes in reporting and media interest in the bank through five discursive frames: member and customer service; standard financial reporting; human interest, personality-driven journalism; the public relations machine; and political coverage. Our analysis discusses three points: the politicisation of the story through covert and overt political values; simplification and sensationalism; and media hegemony. We argue that although moments of crisis provide an opening for re-evaluating the dominant reporting model, established frames tend to reassert themselves as a story develops. This produces good copy that reflects the interests of the publishers but does not extend understanding of co-operative organisations. Thus, the article identifies the role of the media in delegitimising organisations with alternative governance structures, thereby promoting ideological and economic conformity.
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Ponte, Cristina, and Piermarco Aroldi. "Connecting generations. A research and learning approach for media education and audience studies." Comunicar 21, no. 41 (2013): 167–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.3916/c41-2013-16.

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Based on theoretical and methodological orientations from authors’ previous research on media and generations, this article presents a research and learning process involving supervised field work conducted by graduate students from a Master Seminar on Media Studies at FCSH, New University of Lisbon. Acting as facilitators of focus groups composed of older participants, exploring intergenerational and intragenerational differences and similarities that emerge from different age cohorts, and critically reflecting on this experience on their individual essays, students were able to build a contextual knowledge of media uses among their grandparents’ and parents’ generation in Portugal. The choice of focus groups as a tool for research and the topic of generations to be investigated within Media Studies proved to be very productive. The article argues on the potentialities of this intergenerational relation between facilitator and focus groups’ respondents as a way of activating the interactions inside the groups, leading –for instance– the participants to assume an «explaining» attitude in selfaccounting. Final notes are presented about the educational gains of this methodology for Media Education and for different branches of Media Studies, such as media and social history, journalism and the news or political participation. A partir de orientaciones teóricas y metodológicas previas sobre medios de comunicación y generaciones, este artículo presenta un proceso de investigación y aprendizaje a partir de la supervisión del trabajo de campo desempeñado por estudiantes licenciados en el Seminario del Máster en Medios de Comunicación en la Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales de la Universidad Nueva de Lisboa. Los estudiantes implicados lograron construir conocimiento contextual sobre el uso de los medios en la generación de sus abuelos y en la de sus padres en Portugal, actuando como facilitadores en los grupos de discusión, formados siempre por participantes de mayor edad, explorando las diferencias y similitudes intrageneracionales que emergen en grupos de diferente edad y llevando a cabo una reflexión crítica sobre la experiencia en sus informes individuales. La elección de los grupos de discusión como herramienta para la investigación y la elección del tema en el marco del Estudio de los Medios de Comunicación resultó muy eficaz. Este artículo pretende defender la potencialidad de esta relación intergeneracional entre los facilitadores y los miembros de los grupos de discusión como forma de activar la interacción entre grupos, permitiendo, por ejemplo, que los participantes asuman una actitud explicativa para consigo mismos. Las notas finales que se presentan contemplan las ventajas de esta metodología para la Educación en Medios y para diferentes ramas del Estudio de los Medios, como la historia de los medios de comunicación e historia social, el periodismo o la participación política.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Branches of journalism"

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shan, Lay fu, and 賴富山. "A Study of Local Journalists'' Interpersonal Communication: The Case of Taichung County Executive Branch Political Party News Beats." Thesis, 2003. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/68671790933800675323.

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Lay, Fu Shan, and 賴富山. "A Study of Local Journalists' Interpersonal Communication: The Case of Taichung County Executive Branch Political Party News Beats." Thesis, 2003. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/04282180782721917907.

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Tsai, kuo hua, and 蔡國華. "A Study of the Interaction between Local Journalists and News Sources: The Case of Hsin-Chu City Executive Branch and Council News Beats." Thesis, 2002. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/68718744935770702117.

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hua, Tsai kuo, and 蔡國華. "A Study of the Interaction between Local Journalists and News Sources: The Case of Hsin-Chu City Executive Branch and Council News Beats." Thesis, 2002. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/a39zr6.

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Books on the topic "Branches of journalism"

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Ray, Robinson. Between branches: A collection of writings by Ray Robinson in the journals of the Cricket Society. Cricket Pub. Co. for the Australian Cricket Society (Sydney Branch)], 1996.

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Alexander, S. L. Covering the courts: A handbook for journalists. 2nd ed. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2003.

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E, Stevens Michael, Allen Christine M, and South Carolina. Dept. of Archives and History., eds. Journals of the House of Representatives, 1791. Published for the South Carolina Dept. of Archives and History by the University of South Carolina Press, 1985.

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Cameron, Garry M. Last to know, first to go: The United States Marine Corps' combat correspondents. Charger Books, 1988.

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Sauvageau, Florian. The last word: Media coverage of the Supreme Court of Canada. UBC Press, 2006.

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Hindman, Elizabeth Blanks. Rights vs. responsibilities: The Supreme Court and the media. Greenwood Press, 1997.

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Ruskell, Nicoles S., and James R. Lewis. Cult Journalism. Edited by James R. Lewis and Inga Tøllefsen. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190466176.013.16.

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This chapter opens with an examination of the journalism issues surrounding the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) assault on the Branch Davidian community outside of Waco, Texas, in 1993. The discussion of news media coverage of New Religions then moves on to James A. Beckford’s analysis of such journalistic treatments, and examines several studies that place NRM journalism in a diachronic perspective. This will be followed by a short discussion of the relationship between New Religion journalism and fictional treatments of alternative religions. Finally, we examine the news media’s role in the moral panic about NRMs in the latter half of the twentieth century.
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ESV Journaling New Testament, Inductive Edition (TruTone, Olive, Branch Design). Crossway, 2018.

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Harden Fritz, Janie M. Communication Ethics and Virtue. Edited by Nancy E. Snow. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199385195.013.21.

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Virtue approaches to communication ethics have experienced a resurgence over the last decades. Tied to rhetoric since the time of Aristotle, virtue ethics offers scholars in the broad field of communication an approach to ethics based on character and human flourishing as an alternative to deontology. In each major branch of communication scholarship, the turn to virtue ethics has followed a distinctive trajectory in response to concerns about the adequacy of theoretical foundations for academic and applied work in communication ethics. Recent approaches to journalism and media ethics integrate moral psychology and virtue ethics to focus on moral exemplars, drawing on the work of Philippa Foot and Rosalind Hursthouse, or explore journalism as a MacIntyrean tradition of practice. Recent work in human communication ethics draws on MacIntyre’s approach to narrative, situating communication ethics within virtue structures that protect and promote particular goods in a moment of narrative and virtue contention.
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Jones, Arnita. Good Enough for Government Work. Edited by Paula Hamilton and James B. Gardner. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199766024.013.14.

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Government-supported history is as broad and many faceted as the field of public history itself, including not only research and public programming in museums and historic sites but also client-oriented research in the executive, legislative, and military branches of government. This chapter focuses on the work of historians who help to solve problems and provide context for the ongoing work of government agencies and institutions. Serving policy and decision makers, they capture and preserve records, artifacts, and other historical materials; they write institutional histories and policy analysis and they help answer inquiries from citizens and journalists about the work of government. Historians who do this work may be permanent government employees, but they may also be contractors for government agencies, serve as researchers and writers for independent government commissions, or staff special government-funded projects housed at educational and nonprofit institutions.
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Book chapters on the topic "Branches of journalism"

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Naficy, Hamid. "Branch-Campus Initiatives to Train Media-Makers and Journalists: Northwestern University’s Branch Campus in Doha, Qatar." In The Education of the Filmmaker in Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137032690_5.

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O'Brien, Mark. "Power in a union." In The Fourth Estate. Manchester University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9780719096136.003.0005.

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This chapter examines the development of trade unionism for journalists and the impact it had on professional solidarity by examining the development of the National Union of Journalists in Ireland, which established a Dublin branch in 1926. The union provided a focal point for the resolution of many issues affecting journalists and journalism including the protection of sources, free speech, and employment conditions. In 1947 the union secured the first industry-wide agreement between a journalists’ representative organisation and newspaper proprietors and from then the NUJ was central to understanding the development of journalism in Ireland.
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Takatsuki, Yuli, and Nigel Abbas. "The Privacy Codes." In Tugendhat and Christie: The Law of Privacy and The Media. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199685745.003.0021.

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Alongside the legal framework which regulates the media’s activities, a system of regulation operates to uphold standards of journalism and programme-making and to provide at least a partial remedy for those whose privacy has been invaded by the media. Different bodies currently regulate different branches of the media. Ofcom (the Office of Communications) regulates the content of all television and radio programmes in the United Kingdom except that the BBC retains sole jurisdiction in relation to certain matters broadcast on BBC channels funded by the licence fee. The Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO) has recently taken over as principal regulator of the newspaper and magazine industry (although a new body, the Independent Monitor for the Press (Impress), has also recently been formed). IPSO replaced the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) in September 2014, with which has now ceased to exist, having regulated the print media industry since 1991. These bodies adjudicate upon complaints with reference to codes of practice which media falling within their regulatory remit are required to comply. The Ofcom Broadcasting Code, drawn up and regularly reviewed and revised by Ofcom, is the primary broadcasting code relating to the broadcast of television and radio programme content in the United Kingdom.
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"Ethics, Root and Branch." In Law and Ethics for Today's Journalist. Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315702957-9.

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Pareek, Rekha, and Sudhir Kumar. "Open Access Journal in Bioinformatics." In Biotechnology. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-8903-7.ch063.

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Bioinformatics is rapidly growing, interdisciplinary field of science, where methods from information technology, computer science, mathematics, and statistics are used to solve problems of biological science. To access latest scholarly articles in such an important branch one cannot deny the importance of open access journals. In this chapter an attempt has been made to access the current status of open access journals of bioinformatics which are covered by Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) on various parameters like country and language of publication, their currency, impact factor, article processing charges, copyright licensing model they are using, platform for hosting and their coverage in abstracting/indexing databases.
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Pareek, Rekha, and Sudhir Kumar. "Open Access Journal in Bioinformatics." In Library and Information Services for Bioinformatics Education and Research. IGI Global, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-1871-6.ch014.

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Bioinformatics is rapidly growing, interdisciplinary field of science, where methods from information technology, computer science, mathematics, and statistics are used to solve problems of biological science. To access latest scholarly articles in such an important branch one cannot deny the importance of open access journals. In this chapter an attempt has been made to access the current status of open access journals of bioinformatics which are covered by Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) on various parameters like country and language of publication, their currency, impact factor, article processing charges, copyright licensing model they are using, platform for hosting and their coverage in abstracting/indexing databases.
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Goldman, Shalom. "American Journalists, Artists, and Adventurers and the Zionist Movement (1917–1947)." In Starstruck in the Promised Land. University of North Carolina Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469652412.003.0003.

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Beginning with the “reconquest of Jerusalem” of the British over the Turks, this chapter details the transition to British rule and the seeds sown for future conflict. The Balfour Declaration served as a clarion call both to Jews and American Evangelicals, for whom the obsession with a Jewish return to Jerusalem resounded with Biblical import. The chapter also details opponents of Zionism, such as Joseph P. Kennedy, appointed by Franklin Delano Roosevelt as ambassador to Great Britain during the transition to British rule in Palestine. Further, it accounts for the two main branches of political belief in the Yishuv, Palestine’s Jewish community: Labor Zionism, embodied by David Ben Gurion, and Revisionism, embodied by Vladimir Jabotinsky. Finally, the chapter explores Ghandi’s relationship to Israel, the rise of the Nazi state vis a vis British Palestine, and American pro-Israel activism and fundraising in New York City and on Broadway, by such champions as Ben Hecht.
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Ingravallo, Ivan. "The Formation of International Law Journals in ItalyTheir Role in the Discipline." In A History of International Law in Italy. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198842934.003.0008.

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This chapter analyzes the role played by legal journals as ‘tools’ for international law studies in Italy. The author considers their role in the development of this subject in the domestic arena, where there were no specialized legal journals expressly devoted to these topics until 1898. The early journals represented ephemeral experiments, prior to the foundation of the Rivista di diritto internazionale in 1906 under the leadership of Dionisio Anzilotti. The Rivista represented a turning point in this branch of law and was followed by other periodicals established in the 1930s and 40s, which were partly inspired by the political milieu characterizing Fascist Italy, and by those that developed in the aftermath of World War II, which were influenced in turn by the theoretical and methodological premises of the time and by accentuated contrasts between different academic ‘schools’ of thought. Lastly, the author evaluates how the Italian journals of international law dealt with foreign scholars and foreign languages.
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Vellaichamy, A., and R. Jeyshankar. "Impact of Information and Communication Technology among the Physical Education Students in Alagappa University, Tamilnadu." In Advances in Library and Information Science. IGI Global, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8178-1.ch020.

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This paper focuses on the Impact of Information and Communication Technology among the Physical Education Students in Alagappa University, Tamilnadu. Data was collected through a structured questionnaire from 214 students of various branches of physical education. The population includes UG students, PG students and Research Scholars. The findings show that Internet has become a significance source for the students as they use internet for education purposes, research work and updating knowledge. A half of the respondents (72.90%) have stated that internet used for E-Mail purpose only. Up to 72% of the respondents have stated that no computer lab is the prime barrier of using ICT Resources. The study suggests that for the optimum utilization of e-journals, consortia's and various other ICT based resources and services and the library should undertake the literacy/orientation programs on regular intervals for their respective respondents.
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Wei, Shuge. "Confronting Encirclement." In News Under Fire. Hong Kong University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888390618.003.0009.

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Chapter 8 examines the Nationalist government’s foreign propaganda activities after Chiang Kai-shek moved the capital to Chongqing. Despite Japan’s constant air attacks and the lack of news infrastructure in the inner land, the International Department managed to transmit the Chongqing government’s view abroad via wireless devices. Tong continued to nurture friendship with foreign journalists by providing them comfortable living conditions despite the austerity and hardship in wartime. Yet he had to compromise his liberal control of the press following Chiang Kai-shek’s spy master Dai Li’s attempt to heighten scrutiny of the journalists’ activities. Tong also competed with the Communist party for foreign correspondents’ attention and challenged the propaganda efforts of the Wang Jingwei regime through his clandestine propaganda branch office in Shanghai. The International Department led by Tong successfully broke Japan’s encirclement of China’s out-going information and won US public’s sympathy to China’s case.
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Conference papers on the topic "Branches of journalism"

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Чевычелова, Мария Минаиловна. "METHODS OF TEACHING JOURNALISM AND THE FORMATION OF A CONVERGENT EDITION IN THE FORMAT OF A PRE-UNIVERSITY EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION OF THE MINISTRY OF DEFENSE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION." In Проблемы управления качеством образования: сборник избранных статей Международной научно-методической конференции (Санкт-Петербург, Июль 2020). Crossref, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.37539/ko186.2020.14.78.002.

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В статье рассматриваются методики преподавания журналистики и особенности деятельности медиацентра в общеобразовательных структурах, овладении профессиональными инструментами воспитанниками филиала НВМУ (Владивостокское ПКУ). The article discusses the methods of teaching journalism and features of the media center in general education structures, mastering professional tools by students of the branch of NVMU (Vladivostok PKU).
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Reports on the topic "Branches of journalism"

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Yaremchuk, Olesya. TRAVEL ANTHROPOLOGY IN JOURNALISM: HISTORY AND PRACTICAL METHODS. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.49.11069.

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Our study’s main object is travel anthropology, the branch of science that studies the history and nature of man, socio-cultural space, social relations, and structures by gathering information during short and long journeys. The publication aims to research the theoretical foundations and genesis of travel anthropology, outline its fundamental principles, and highlight interaction with related sciences. The article’s defining objectives are the analysis of the synthesis of fundamental research approaches in travel anthropology and their implementation in journalism. When we analyze what methods are used by modern authors, also called «cultural observers», we can return to the localization strategy, namely the centering of the culture around a particular place, village, or another spatial object. It is about the participants-observers and how the workplace is limited in space and time and the broader concept of fieldwork. Some disciplinary practices are confused with today’s complex, interactive cultural conjunctures, leading us to think of a laboratory of controlled observations. Indeed, disciplinary approaches have changed since Malinowski’s time. Based on the experience of fieldwork of Svitlana Aleksievich, Katarzyna Kwiatkowska-Moskalewicz, or Malgorzata Reimer, we can conclude that in modern journalism, where the tools of travel anthropology are used, the practical methods of complexity, reflexivity, principles of openness, and semiotics are decisive. Their authors implement both for stable localization and for a prevailing transition.
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