Academic literature on the topic 'Embedded journalist'

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Journal articles on the topic "Embedded journalist"

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Ensor, Patrick. "Iraq, the Pentagon and the battle for Arab hearts and minds." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 9, no. 1 (2003): 8–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v9i1.749.

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Two months after ‘liberating’ Iraq, the Anglo-American authorities in Baghdad decided to control the new and free Iraqi press. Newspapers that publish ‘wild stories’, material deemed provocative or capable of inciting ethnic violence, are being threatened or shut down. A controlled press is a ‘responsible press — just what Saddam Hussein used to say about the press his deposed regime produced. In this edition of Pacific Journalism Review, essays by media commentators present several perspectives on the war and its aftermath. Patrick Ensor gives an overview, Louise Matthews provides media context for the war, John Pilger challenges journalists, Mohamed Al-Bendary profiles the pan-Arab satellite boom, and Alastair Thompson and Russell Brown examine the New Zealand media connection. Cartoonists Steve Bell (The Guardian) and Deven (Le Mauricien) add their views. Critical of the ‘embedded’ media, Bell laments: ‘There’s never been a more dangerous time to be a journalist at war.’
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Bybee, Roger. "Embedded with Organized Labor: Journalist Reflections on the Class War at Home - By Steve Early." WorkingUSA 13, no. 2 (2010): 315–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1743-4580.2010.00291.x.

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Boter, Babs, and Irene Villaescusa Illán. "Self-fashioning and othering: Women’s double strategies of travel writing." Feminismo/s, no. 36 (December 3, 2020): 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.14198/2020.36.04.

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This essay examines early 20th century travel texts written by two European women: the Catalan journalist Aurora Bertrana (1899-1974) who lived in French Polynesia from 1926 until 1929, and her contemporary, the Dutch journalist Mary Pos (1904-1987), who travelled to the Dutch East Indies in the fall of 1938 and returned early in 1939. Our research is double-focused: on the one hand it examines issues of empire, colonisation, and orientalism, and on the other hand it explores issues of modernity and feminism. The travel texts under study offer personal registrations of self-fashioning strategies that both authors employ, which significantly question gender expectations regarding women’s social and sexual practices, their professional, familial and marital roles, and their opportunities for education. Presenting them as emancipated modern women, however, the accounts are also embedded in an orientalist and colonial discourse and seem to impose their own views of modernity and feminism on other women–despite ardent appeals to intercultural understanding.
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Boter, Babs, and Irene Villaescusa Illán. "Self-fashioning and othering: Women’s double strategies of travel writing." Feminismo/s, no. 36 (December 3, 2020): 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.14198/fem.2020.36.04.

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This essay examines early 20th century travel texts written by two European women: the Catalan journalist Aurora Bertrana (1899-1974) who lived in French Polynesia from 1926 until 1929, and her contemporary, the Dutch journalist Mary Pos (1904-1987), who travelled to the Dutch East Indies in the fall of 1938 and returned early in 1939. Our research is double-focused: on the one hand it examines issues of empire, colonisation, and orientalism, and on the other hand it explores issues of modernity and feminism. The travel texts under study offer personal registrations of self-fashioning strategies that both authors employ, which significantly question gender expectations regarding women’s social and sexual practices, their professional, familial and marital roles, and their opportunities for education. Presenting them as emancipated modern women, however, the accounts are also embedded in an orientalist and colonial discourse and seem to impose their own views of modernity and feminism on other women–despite ardent appeals to intercultural understanding.
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Maguire, Miles. "Embedding journalists shape Iraq news story." Newspaper Research Journal 38, no. 1 (2017): 8–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532917696104.

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This study, based on a review of The New York Times’ inconsistent accounts of a Marine’s death while aiding two embedded Times journalists in Fallujah, illustrates the ethical challenges of embedded journalism and shows how the embedding process can shape news accounts to support military objectives at the expense of traditional journalistic values.
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Cui, Xi, and Yu Liu. "How does online news curate linked sources? A content analysis of three online news media." Journalism 18, no. 7 (2016): 852–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916663621.

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This article examines journalists’ curatorial practices with regard to linked and embedded sources on three news media platforms: the online version of a legacy news medium, a native online explanatory news medium, and an online citizen news medium. Our goal is to explore the curatorial practices in online journalism, and the continuity and changes in journalistic gatekeeping in the online environment. Our results demonstrate that established journalistic traditions are still prevalent in online news. Meanwhile, links to digital archives are widely used to contextualize news subjects. Explanatory journalism and citizen journalism do exhibit characteristics of what Herbert Gans calls ‘multiperspectival’ news, which covers a wider variety of social institutions. We discuss differences in the prevalence of the curatorial treatments of various types of linked sources in relation to journalists’ views of their roles, and the online news media’s organizational and technological natures.
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Hameleers, Michael, Linda Bos, and Claes H. de Vreese. "Shoot the messenger? The media’s role in framing populist attributions of blame." Journalism 20, no. 9 (2017): 1145–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884917698170.

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Attributing blame to elites is central to populist communication. Although empirical research has provided initial insights into the effects of populist blame attribution on citizens’ political opinions, little is known about the contextual factors surrounding its presence in the media. Advancing this knowledge, this article draws on an extensive content analysis ( N = 867) covering non-election and election periods to provide insights into how populist blame attributions are embedded in journalistic reporting styles. Using Latent Class Analysis, we first identified three distinct styles of reporting: neutral, conflict, and interpretative coverage. In line with our predictions, we find that populist blame attributions are present most in conjunction with an interpretative journalistic style and least when a neutral journalistic style is used. Populist blame attributions are more likely to be used by journalists of tabloid newspapers than journalists of broadsheet newspapers. These results provide valuable insights for understanding the intersections between journalism and populist communication.
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Song, Yunya, and Chin-Chuan Lee. "Embedded journalism: constructing romanticized images of China by US journalists in the 1970s." Chinese Journal of Communication 7, no. 2 (2013): 174–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17544750.2013.854819.

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Powers, Matthew, and Sandra Vera-Zambrano. "How journalists use social media in France and the United States: Analyzing technology use across journalistic fields." New Media & Society 20, no. 8 (2017): 2728–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444817731566.

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This article examines journalists’ use of social media in France and the United States. Through in-depth interviews, we show that shared practical sensibilities lead journalists in both countries to use social media to accomplish routine tasks (e.g. gather information, monitor sources, and develop story ideas). At the same time, we argue that the incorporation of social media into daily practice also creates opportunities for journalists to garner peer recognition and that these opportunities vary according to the distinctive national fields in which journalists are embedded. Where American journalism incentivizes individual journalists to orient social media use toward audiences, French journalism motivates news organizations to use social media for these purposes, while leaving individual journalists to focus primarily on engaging with their peers. We position these findings in relation to debates on the uses of technologies across national settings.
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Baba, Tupeni. "FORUM: Fiji's 'embedded journalists'." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 10, no. 1 (2004): 233–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v10i1.793.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Embedded journalist"

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Huck, Courtney. "Embedded and Unilateral Journalists: How their Access to Sources Affected their Framing During the 2003 Iraq War." Wittenberg University Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=wuhonors1536745236640529.

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Hegarty, Matthew. "Embedding : a brief historical overview and contemporary analysis of journalists' external and internal struggles with war reporting /." Lynchburg, VA : Liberty University, 2007. http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu.

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Gordon, Jeremy. "Framing Anti-War Theatre: Public Perceptions of Embedded." DigitalCommons@USU, 2008. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/191.

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Extending research of framing anti-war protest is framed in the public sphere, this study examines theatre critics' reviews and viewers' responses to Tim Robbins' anti-war play Embedded. My research examines how two groups of publics interpreted Embedded: (1) professional theatre reviewers and (2) a sample of Utah State University students. It is important to note that the majority of the students who participated in this study are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon), a consistently social and political conservative religious sect. Thus, how this specific group of viewers deciphered Embedded is of special interest. Critical analyses of both reviews and responses revealed the prominence of two seemingly irreconcilable partisan master frames in critics' and spectators' interpretations of the play's protest narratives. Although these frames seem to be incompatible, adherents to both "whining for peace" and "anti-war protest" consider protection of American democracy the primary goal. However, members of both groups define the role of anti-war protest in, and defense of, democracy differently. Examination of discourse suggests that marginalization of anti-war protest continues to be the privileged discourse. Overwhelming dismissal of Embedded's anti-war narratives by the majority of critics and Latter-day Saint (LDS) viewers indicates that dissent was framed according to cultural and societal values, which perpetuated conceptions of anti-war protest as deviant. Thus, in both public discussion and personal interpretation of Embedded's outward expression of protest, anti-war activism is perceived to be illegitimate when the United States is at war. Results suggest that most theatre critics and LDS viewers relied on values framing in their perception of the play, which negated complex and nuanced discussion regarding military action in Iraq. By broadening discussion of how anti-war dissent is framed by including theatre critics and individual viewers, this research provides insight into how dissenting action is perceived within a larger cultural context. As findings reveal, it is reasonable to conclude that marginalization of anti-war dissent is not limited to mass media. Rather, I argue that dismissal of protest may be perpetuated on a wider societal scale, a problematic trend, especially as protest is widely considered to be a valuable tenet of democratic practice.
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Geary, Mark. "Credentialed to embedded : an analysis of broadcast journalists' stories about two Persian Gulf Wars /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 2004. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p1421137.

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Choudhuri, Siddharth. "Macromodeling and characterization of filesystem energy consumption for diskless embedded systems." Texas A&M University, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1969/295.

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Mooney, Michael J. "Live from the battlefield : an examination of embedded war correspondents' reporting during Operation Iraqi Freedom (21 March-14 April 2003) /." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2004. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion/04Jun%5FMooney.pdf.

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Thesis (M.S. in Leadership and Human Resource Development)--Naval Postgraduate School, June 2004.<br>Thesis advisor(s): Alice Crawford, Gail Fann Thomas. Includes bibliographical references (p. 159-170). Also available online.
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Lehtinen, Don. "When Tweets Are Embedded, Who Gains the Upper Hand? : The Discursive Power Struggle on Finnish Digital News Articles before the 2019 Parliamentary Election." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, JMK, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-194180.

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This Master’s thesis focuses on the discursive power struggle between politicians and journalists on Finnish digital news articles where the politician’s tweets are embedded or quoted in using multimodal discourse analysis. Embedded and quoted tweets are one of the premier links between Twitter and digital news platforms but have for the most part been left out of the field of discourse analysis. This research will try to fill that gap, focusing on a time period of one month before the 2019 parliamentary election in Finland. The research material consists of 18 articles from two of the biggest digital news platforms in Finland, Iltalehti and Ilta-Sanomat. They are analyzed using Machin and Mayr’s seven-part scheme for critical discourse analysis, focusing on the embedded and quoted tweets in relation to the text’s discourse, and also the intertwined textual and the visual sides of the articles. The analysis shows that in most articles, the discourse portrayed in the tweets is not challenged by the journalist, meaning that the politicians most often come on top in the discursive power struggle. The analysis also displays that there are multiple ways of challenging the discourse, but they are seldom used in the power struggle. In conclusion, as the tweets’ discourses often go unchallenged, both the politicians and Twitter as a platform have arguably disproportionate power to influence both the discourse on digital news platforms, as well as the readers of those.
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Bouzomita, Jaafar. "La couverture de la guerre en Irak (2003) dans les émissions d’information de la BBC." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013REN20058.

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Notre thèse s’intéresse à la couverture médiatique de la BBC pendant la guerre en Irak (2003) et s’interroge sur son impact politico-militaire dans les médias. Afin d’examiner la délicate relation entre la couverture médiatique des guerres récentes et l’opinion publique, notre thèse s’appuie sur une analyse quantitative et qualitative des bulletins d’informations de la BBC ainsi que sur divers documentaires. Il en découle plusieurs constats : à l’image des médias anglo-américains, la BBC demeure perméable à la propagande de guerre et privilégie la communication propre aux Relations Publiques. Sa complicité avec le gouvernement britannique témoigne de son rôle de garant mais aussi de celui d’acteur politique et public. En effet, notre étude de la couverture de cette guerre démontre un glissement du statut de la BBC qui, d’observateur actif et critique, tend à devenir un observateur partial et sélectif. Bien plus, la gestion de l’information et les contraintes culturelles qui y sont liées ont contribué à faire évoluer la couverture de cette guerre qui devait être « politiquement correcte » du point de vue britannique. Ceci a permis de renforcer ce que l’on pourrait envisager comme la possible illustrationd’une complicité voire d’une allégeance politique de la BBC. La « Corporation », ainsi fidèle serviteur d’une « censure patriotique », est partie prenante dans la construction d’un récit militaire épuré et transforme la couverture médiatique de cette guerre en une propagande volontaire. Dans cette guerre en Irak, à l’image du reste des médias, la BBC ne résiste pas aux pressions politiques. L’utilisation de l’« infotainment » par les forces de coalition vise à reconstituer « la réalité de la guerre » et à mettre en avant le prestige des alliés en présentant leur victoire comme indéfectible et incontestée, dans un cadre bien circonscrit, afin de répondre aux attentes du public mais aussi de renforcer son récit patriotique et d’éradiquer toute déception politique et/ou culturelle. Enfin, la couverture de ce conflit par la BBC tend à minimiser l’impact des révélations émanant des médias adversaires et propose une présentation apparemment plus objective de penser la guerre<br>This dissertation explores the BBC’s coverage of the 2003 Iraq War. It investigates the implications of the politico-military intervention in Iraq for the media system. In examining the sensitive relationship binding the media coverage of contemporary wars and public opinion, this thesis is based upon quantitative and qualitative analysis of BBC news bulletins as well as different documentaries. This investigation shows that, along with the rest of the British-American media, the BBC was susceptible to war propaganda and favoured the kind of communication specific to Public Relations. Its complicity with the British government shifted its role from a watchdog to a publicist and political agent. In fact, our study of the Iraq War coverage chronicles the transition of the BBC from an active, critical and communicative medium into a simply passive, partial and selective observer. Moreover, the news management and the cultural as well as political constraints helped to transform the coverage of this war which had to be “politically correct” from a British perspective. This helped reinforce what could be considered as a possible illustration of the BBC’s complicity and even its political allegiance. The Corporation, afaithful servant of “patriotic censorship” was involved, as a partner, in the construction of a sanitized military story and transformed its coverage of the war into voluntary propaganda. During the Iraq War, like the rest of the media, the BBC could not resist political pressure. The Coalition’s use of “infotainment” aimed to exploit the “reality of war” and highlight, in a well-defined context, the prestige of the Allies by presenting their victory as ineluctable and unquestioned, not only in order to meet the expectations of the public but also to enhance a patriotic narrative and eradicate all political and / or cultural disappointment. Finally, the BBC’s coverage of this conflict tended to minimize the impact of revelations in enemy media and offers a presentation of how to think about war
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Pestalardo, Maria. "War on the Media: The News Framing of the Iraqi War in the United States, Europe, and Latin America." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2006. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2205.

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This study analyzes the framing of the war in Iraq (2003) during the week before and the week after the conflict started according to the media coverage of nine leading newspapers from United States, Europe, and Latin America. Through quantitative content analysis, the researcher answered seven research questions and analyzed the framing, sources, and approaches used by the newspapers in the news coverage of the conflict. The researcher compared the news coverage of each region and found that there were significant differences in the content of the war reporting according to the geographical area of the media. European and Latin American newspapers framed a "bigger and more balanced picture" in covering more sides of the war and quoting diverse sources while American media covered a narrower range of war perspectives and quoted coalition sources in almost all of their news stories and editorials.
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Gustafsson, Magnus, and Niclas Hagel. "Al-Jazeera och CNN - En jämförande fallstudie i krigsjournalistik." Thesis, Halmstad University, School of Social and Health Sciences (HOS), 2009. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hh:diva-2234.

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<p>Författare: Magnus Gustafsson Niclas Hagel</p><p>Handledare: Thomas Knoll</p><p>Examinator: Martin Danielsson</p><p>Titel: Al-Jazeera och CNN - En jämförande fallstudie i krigsjournalistik</p><p>Typ av rapport: C - uppsats</p><p>Ämne: Medie- och Kommunikationsvetenskap</p><p>År: Höstterminen 2008</p><p>Sektion: Sektionen för Hälsa och Samhälle</p><p>Syfte: Vårt syfte är att studera och jämföra al-Jazeeras och CNN:s</p><p>bevakning av en händelse i Afghanistankonflikten för att kunna</p><p>redogöra för eventuella skillnader. Vi vill se hur olika faktorer</p><p>påverkar journalistiken. En analys ur ett genusperspektiv</p><p>kommer också att göras.</p><p>Metod: Fallstudie har tillämpats som huvudsaklig metod och vid analys</p><p>av material har innehållsanalys och kritisk diskursanalys använts.</p><p>Slutsatser: Efter att ha jämfört de två nyhetskanalerna kan vi tydligt se att</p><p>det finns stora skillnader i rapporteringen av ett amerikanskt</p><p>flyganfall mot en afghansk by. CNN som amerikansk</p><p>nyhetskanal visar att deras rapportering påverkas av det</p><p>amerikanska medieklimatet där en neutral krigsrapportering kan</p><p>ses som stötande och journalister ständigt utsätts för</p><p>påtryckningar. Ur ett genusperspektiv ser vi dock tydliga</p><p>likheter mellan kanalerna.</p>
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Books on the topic "Embedded journalist"

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Dale, Ross. Embedded: Confessions of a TV sex journalist. Sourcebooks, 2008.

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editor, Camaṛiyā Anila, and Media Studies Group (Delhi, India), eds. Embedded journalism: Punjab. Media Studies Group, 2014.

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Dale, Ross. Embedded. Sourcebooks, Inc., 2008.

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Early, Steve. Embedded with organized labor: Journalistic reflections on the class war at home. Monthly Review Press, 2009.

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Hayne, Palmour. A thousand miles to Baghdad: Impressions & images from two journalists embedded with U.S. Marines. North County Times, 2003.

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Embedded journalism: Ursprünge, Ziele, Merkmale, Probleme und Nutzen von "Embedding" am Beispiel des Irak-Krieges 2003. VDM Verlag Dr. Müller, 2007.

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Bizimana, Aimé-Jules. Le dispositif embedding: Surveillance et intégration des journalistes en Irak. Presses de l'Université du Québec, 2014.

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Katovsky, Bill. Embedded: The media at war in Iraq. Lyons Press, 2003.

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Timothy, Carlson, ed. Embedded: The media at war in Iraq. Lyons Press, 2003.

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Çubukçu, Mete. Ateş altında gazetecilik: Savaş ve savaş haberciliği. Metis Yayınları, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Embedded journalist"

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Sehr, Marc. "Embedded Journalism." In Handbuch Medien- und Informationsethik. J.B. Metzler, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05394-7_17.

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Pensold, Wolfgang. "Embedded Journalists im Irakkrieg." In Eine Geschichte des Fotojournalismus. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-08297-0_21.

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Revers, Matthias. "Embedded Political Reporting: Boundary Processes and Performances." In Contemporary Journalism in the US and Germany. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-51537-7_6.

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Leydesdorff, Loet. "The Communication Turn in Philosophy of Science." In Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis of Scientific and Scholarly Communication. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59951-5_2.

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Abstract Whereas knowledge has often been attributed to individuals or, from a sociological perspective, to communities, a communications perspective on the sciences enables us to proceed to the measurement of the discursive knowledge contents. Knowledge claims are organized into texts which are entrained in evolving structures. The aggregated citation relations among journals, for example, can be used to visualize disciplinary structures. The structures are reproduced as “ecosystems” which differ among them in terms of using specific codes in the communications (e.g., jargons). Unlike biological DNA, these codes are not hard-wired; they can be changed in the communication. The sciences develop historically along trajectories embedded in regimes of expectations. Regimes exert selection pressure on the historical manifestations. The evolutionary dynamics at the regime level induce crises, bifurcations, etc., as historical events.
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Zimmermann, John. "Embedded Journalist Reversed: Ulrich de Maizière alias „Cornelius“." In Bundeswehr und Medien. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845274034-165.

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Dworkin, Ira. "Introduction." In Congo Love Song. University of North Carolina Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469632711.003.0001.

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This introduction uses the popular James Weldon Johnson and J. Rosamond Johnson song “Congo Love Song” to consider the way that African American popular culture—in this instance a wildly successful vaudeville song—were integral parts of a larger culture of African American transnational engagement with the Congo. The song was written and first performed in 1903 at the height of an African American campaign against King Leopold II of Belgium’s colonial regime. The political significance of the song is further highlighted by the career of James Weldon Johnson, who was not only a songwriter, but also a novelist, journalist, lawyer, educator, diplomat, and political activist with the NAACP. His longer career trajectory points to the ways that the Congo is deeply embedded with a wide range of African American cultural and political engagements.
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Carlson, Matt. "Embedded Links, Embedded Meanings." In The Future of Journalism: Risks, Threats and Opportunities. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429462030-39.

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Dowd, Cate. "The backend of news as a juxtaposition of data and human costs." In Digital Journalism, Drones, and Automation. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190655860.003.0003.

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Indexing and semantic code in news draw on a base of well-defined vocabulary from classification systems used by news editors for search tags, but journalism also uses leaked data, mobile metadata logs, and datasets for visualisations. The tagging systems in news, like NewsCode, are embedded in CMS and help to bind data for cross-referencing purposes. The defined concepts have an ontological base that relate to “news” and they are structured in hierarchical and logical ways. For many years social media tags were unstructured, but folksonomy approaches do not exclude semantic methods, and vice versa. Media cloud tools can also be used by journalists to generate lightly interactive graphic visualisations or to integrate data onto maps. However, data and metadata should also be used to develop new semantic systems to better protect journalists in conflict zones and to embed the values and ethics of journalism into algorithms for journalism training systems.
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Hesketh, Ian. "Evolution, Ethics, and the Metaphysical Society, 1869–1875." In The Metaphysical Society (1869-1880). Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198846499.003.0009.

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This chapter seeks to chart the lively debate about the evolutionary origins and development of morality as it occurred at the Metaphysical Society, a debate that began with the first paper delivered at the Society in 1869 and, after the intervention of several subsequent papers on the topic, came to an end in 1875. Proponents of an evolutionary ethics included the Darwinians John Lubbock and William Kingdon Clifford, while the critics included the journalist and editor Richard Holt Hutton, the classicist Alexander Grant, and the moral philosopher Henry Sidgwick. Much of the debate focused on competing interpretations of the historical record and the nature of historical evidence itself. For the critic of an evolutionary morality, the evidence for the origins and development of morality had to be sought in written records; for the proponent, the evidence needed to be sought much further back in time, in the era known as ‘prehistory’. This important distinction brought to the fore a related area of contention, namely the relationship between civilized European and contemporary aboriginal societies, and what that relationship meant for understanding the deep history of human moral development. The debate largely came to an end when Sidgwick challenged the unjustifiable normative claims that were often embedded in evolutionary descriptions of the origins and development of morality. He showed that a supposedly naturalist account of ethical principles was just as fraught as was the intuitionist account it sought to critique.
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Hackett, Robert. "Understanding Media During Times of Terrorism." In Journalism and Ethics. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-8359-2.ch004.

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Political violence, including terrorism, can be regarded as a form of (distorted) communication, in which media spectacles play an integral role. Conversely, mass-mediated communication can be regarded as a form of violence, and even terror, in several respects. Media are often propagandistic facilitators to state terror. More broadly, they may help to cultivate a political climate of fear and authoritarianism, contributing to conflict-escalating feedback loops. Even more broadly, beyond media representations, dominant media institutions are arguably embedded in relations of global economic, social, and cultural inequality—constituting a form of structural violence. Notwithstanding its democratic potential, the Internet does not comprise a clear alternative in practice, and neither censorship of terrorist spectacles nor the intensified pursuit of dominant forms of journalistic “objectivity” offer viable ways to reduce the media's imbrication with violence. Three potentially more productive strategies explored in this chapter include reforming the media field from within through the paradigm of Peace Journalism, supporting the development of alternative and community media, and building movements for media reform and democratization.
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Conference papers on the topic "Embedded journalist"

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Jeong-Ki Kim, Hyung-Seok Lee, and Heung-Nam Kim. "Dual Journaling Store Method for Embedded Systems." In 8th International Conference on Advanced Communication Technology. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icact.2006.206195.

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Ge, Qianqian, and Yiwei Zhu. "The Structure and Implementation of Journaling File System on Embedded System." In 2008 International Seminar on Future BioMedical Information Engineering (FBIE). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fbie.2008.74.

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Timashev, Sviatoslav, and Anna Bushinskaya. "Assessment of the Reliability Level Embedded in Pipeline Design Codes." In 2014 10th International Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2014-33151.

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Recently a long time discussion among specialists about the meaning of the probabilities of failure (POF) produced by different reliability analysis methods surfaced in pipeline journals. This paper, which was a long time in the making, is a follow-up on the discussion and analyses the actual reliability level which was empirically embedded in codes for pipeline design [B31G, B31Gmod, Shell92 and Battelle (PCORRC)] and Building Standard (BR) Main Pipelines #2.05.06-85, using a real pipeline as an example. Assessment of the actual reliability level empirically embedded in BR is based on assessing the order of the quintiles of strength parameters (design values of tensile strength and yield strength of the pipe material) and load (internal pressure) on the pipeline. This approach allows direct connection of the deterministic safety coefficients used in the BR with the level of reliability of the pipelines associated with these coefficients. The actual reliability level, empirically embedded in international codes, is calculated as the probability that the limit state function (LSF) of ideal pipeline (without defects) is positive. LSF = Pf − Pop, where Pf is the failure pressure of an ideal pipe, which is estimated by any design code; Pop is the operating pressure. The failure and operating pressure are considered as random variables. The expression for this probability was obtained analytically and in closed form. Recommendations are also presented for choosing probability distributions and statistical parameters for random variables RVs. Extensive calculations permitted revealing the reliability levels which are actually present in the analyzed international pipeline design codes. In a nutshell, the paper proves that the international codes under consideration are very reliable, as they produce very safe designs of pipelines with very low POF, and, hence, provide large safety coefficients, and that the algorithm developed in the paper permits connecting the current level of pipeline degradation (in terms of POF), with its current safety coefficient, which, in this case, is a function of time. All calculating in the paper where performed using MathCAD. Illustrations of these calculations are also presented in the paper.
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Al-Azirjawi, Basheer Saad Kadhum. "New Design Solution for Crankshaft." In ASME 2017 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2017-70436.

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The crankshaft is a key part moving in the internal combustion engine. It converts the reciprocating piston movement into rotary motion. It is exposed to different forces resulted from the pistons pressures, friction, bending stresses and others. The paper concentrates on protecting the crankshaft journals from the direct impact of the piston pressure and other forces. It presents a familiar new modular product design. From this concept, work has done on the additional of the so-called ‘load bearing’ (two halves of a highly finished surfaces sleeve) embedded within the crankshaft journal. The proposed load bearing isolates the crankshaft journal and takes the place in the contact with other rotary components. This is an experimental research because of the presence of an extensive variety of models and uses of crankshafts. A prototype of the new solution was made and implemented on a single piston four stroke internal combustion engine and put in operation for 250 hrs. A precise examination and analyses of parameters in contrast with conventional crankshaft was done for verification and validation.
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