Academic literature on the topic 'International broadcasting. Radio journalism'

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Journal articles on the topic "International broadcasting. Radio journalism"

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Algan, Ece. "Local Broadcasting as Tactical Media." Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication 12, no. 2 (2019): 220–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18739865-01202005.

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Abstract Against the backdrop of struggles that local broadcasters in Turkey who advocate for Kurdish minority rights have endured, I discuss local broadcast journalists’ tactics for creating and maintaining programming that caters to the ongoing Kurdish conflict. Local ethnic broadcasting in Kurdish provinces has long strived to offer an alternative discourse than that of the state propaganda and to mobilize political support within and outside Turkey. In order to illustrate the role of Kurdish activist journalism in political mobilization, I analyze examples of local radio programming from 2010 to 2013, a period during which broadcasters in Kurdish provinces enjoyed relative freedom. I aim to illustrate the instrumentality of activist journalism in an authoritarian regime, and the ways in which local broadcasting is utilized as tactical media by both activist journalists and the community they serve.
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Zweifel, Walter. "Reporting war: Covering the Pacific – Radio NZ International and West Papua as a case study." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 16, no. 1 (2010): 68–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v16i1.1008.

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Commentary: Publicly funded, Radio New Zealand International has a broadcasting role that is not ratings-driven; it has no circulation figures or advertising revenue to worry about. The broadcaster’s work is simply to produce the first draft of history. Or, as the advertisement of a national television network in New Zealand says, ‘It’s all about the story’. This commentary was one of a series in a panel of journalists at the Reporting War conference, jointly organised by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and Massey University's Department of Communication, Journalism and Marketing in Wellington on 22 May 2009.
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Merzagora, Matteo. "Science in Radio Broadcasting." Journal of Science Communication 03, no. 04 (2004): C01. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/2.03040301.

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The international symposium Science on air: the role of radio in science communication was held in Trieste on 1 and 2 October, 2004. To our knowledge, it is the first conference ever specifically held on science in radio, and it is certainly the first time science radio journalists, researchers, and media experts from 16 different countries met to discuss their journalistic practice and the role of radio in science communication. The main results are presented in this section.
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Dwan, David, and Emilie Morin. "Introduction: Yeats and Mass Communications." International Yeats Studies 3, no. 1 (2018): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.34068/iys.03.01.01.

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W. B. Yeats’s pursuit of an audience led him into the world of mass media—a landscape populated first by newspapers and later by radios, which he learned to navigate with shrewdness and skill. The purpose of this special issue is to examine Yeats’s various ventures in mass communication. Enlisting a broad range of critical approaches, contributors to this volume show how the demands of print journalism and radio broadcasting informed Yeats’s poetics, his thinking about the social vocation of art, and his ideas about how literature might be best received and structured. The essays also examine the reception and legacies of Yeats’s experiments with mass media, showing how he was at once self-consciously archaic and exultantly avant-garde. This article provides an introduction to this special volume of International Yeats Studies and attendant critical concerns.
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Schwarzer, Marjorie. "Broadcasting Dialogue: Citizen Journalism, Public Radio, and Museums." Museums & Social Issues 2, no. 2 (2007): 221–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/msi.2007.2.2.221.

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Wilson, Helen. "Review: International Radio Journalism." Media International Australia 94, no. 1 (2000): 189–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0009400122.

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Boyd, Douglas A. "International Radio Broadcasting in Arabic." Gazette (Leiden, Netherlands) 59, no. 6 (1997): 445–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0016549297059006003.

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Campbell, John C., Lawrence C. Soley, and John S. Nichols. "Clandestine Radio Broadcasting." Foreign Affairs 65, no. 4 (1987): 891. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20043103.

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Backhaus, Bridget. "News by any other name: community radio journalism in India." Journal of Alternative & Community Media 4, no. 2 (2019): 91–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/joacm_00051_1.

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Community radio journalism is a cultural resource that offers a voice to local communities and works to democratise media landscapes. Despite its indisputable value, community radio journalism in India faces a unique set of challenges: the foremost being that, officially, it does not exist. According to government policy, community radio stations are prohibited from broadcasting any news and current affairs content. The situation is further complicated by the presence of a development discourse underpinning the entire rationale for the sector. Instead of serving their listeners, community radio stations are beholden to a nebulous development agenda. Under such circumstances, it is unsurprising that community radio journalism in India is relatively unexplored in the literature. This paper aims to address this gap by exploring how community radio practitioners in India source content and work around their restrictions in order to provide their listeners with relevant information and news.
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Tikhonova, Olga V. "“Mayak” (1964-2019) in history and modernity: fragments of the chronicle of the VII Ruzhnikov Readings." RUDN Journal of Studies in Literature and Journalism 24, no. 4 (2019): 800–805. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-9220-2019-24-4-800-805.

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The VII Ruzhnikov Readings, the annual scientifi c round table, took place at the Faculty of Journalism at Lomonosov Moscow State University on September 26, 2019. The fi rst time it were initiated in 2013 by the Associate Professor of the Department of Television and Radio Broadcasting O.V. Tikhonova in memory of Professor V.N. Ruzhnikov, a well-known theorist and historian of Russian radio journalism, author of many scientifi c publications. Based on the materials of the Ruzhnikov Readings, many scientifi c publications were published
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "International broadcasting. Radio journalism"

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Ticha, Abel Akara. "Selecting stories to tell: the gatekeeping of international news at SAfm." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004520.

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The premise of this thesis is that the selection of international news to be aired on the bulletins of SAfm by SABC Radio News staff is influenced by more complex factors than could be seen solely from the prism of an empirical journalistic paradigm. Drawing from data obtained through participant observation and interviewing, it is noted that there has been a revolution from a propagandist approach during apartheid to a professional approach following the demise of apartheid, in the selection of international news for bulletins on SAfm. Using Lewin's theory of forces in decision making and locating it within four out of five levels of a framework of gatekeeping analysis provided by Shoemaker (1991) and Shoemaker et al (200 I), it is concluded that the delimiting well-tested routines of newsmaking act as powerful companions of individuals' selection decisions of international news broadcast on SAfm's bulletins. However, these routines are adapted to meet the organisational demands of the SABC, which as a Public Service Broadcaster (PBS) has embraced the discourse of South African nationalism/panAfricanism, as a major philosophy underpinning the Corporation's coverage of the world. Therefore, some individual, routine and organisational factors influencing the se lection of international news broadcast on SAfm's bulletins, are predetermined and co-determined by the social system (the ideological/discursive structure), which is promoted by certain social institutions. Instances of spokespersons of such institutions as governments, international governmental and non-governmental organisations, etc., officiating the news abound; the gatekeepers use them to meet routine professional standards of journalism. This potentially works to sustain the hegemonic discourses of the powerful in international affairs (in tenns of core/peripheral nations relations, and elite classlruled majority relations) though there is a conscious oppositional effort to modify or dwarf stories that explicitly promote imperialism and to hold rulers accountable to the public. It is posited that the time is ripe for newsworkers responsible for the production of bulletins for SAfm to take the risk that may be necessary to inject a few changes in routine practices that could limit the engineering of consent to the powerful elites in the international arena.
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Dunn, Robert L. "On the Crest of a (Short) Wave: The Rise and Fall of International Radio Broadcasting." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2007. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1055.

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Since 1927 international broadcasters have spanned oceans and transcended borders through the use of shortwave radio. In the beginning of the 21st century, some longtime shortwave stations have sharply cut back their English language services, particularly to North America and the Pacific region; at least one station has signed off forever. This paper examines the history of shortwave broadcasting--how it came to be, how it was used and by whom. Through interviews with broadcasters and listeners, it also explores the nature of the shortwave "experience"--especially how shortwave listening is different from listening to other media. Finally, this paper looks at what forces have precipitated such rapid and drastic changes in an 80-year old medium, why some adherents say new technologies are not necessarily suitable substitutes for shortwave, and what the near future holds for international radio broadcasting.
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Stoneman, Timothy H. B. "Capturing Believers: American International Radio, Religion, and Reception, 1931-1975." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/10415.

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Capturing Believers provides a history of the reception of American conservative evangelical missionary broadcasting from its inception in 1931 through the rise of the commercial era in 1970. The dissertation narrates accounts of two major Protestant stations, HCJB and ELWA, located in Ecuador and Liberia, respectively, as well as the U.S.-based project to build a custom transistor radio for the mission field. Employing a case-study approach, the thesis demonstrates the innovativeness of religious broadcasters who formulated a range of pragmatic responses to the drastic shortage of receiving sets in the southern hemisphere, including the use of social convention and the development of pretuned receiver technology. Missionary stations imported not only radios, but a constellation of American values into host countries through their reception activities. Overall, officials employed creative methods to construct a particular type of listener experience known as radio capture, characterized by regular listening in a domestic setting. By penetrating into the home or village and exposing listeners to proprietary broadcasts on a continual, even daily, basis, missionary receiver programs legitimized American conservative evangelicalism abroad and sowed seeds for a widespread revival of Protestantism in Latin America and Africa after 1970.
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Xiangtao, David Wang. "News "Outlook" in international broadcasting : a case study of Radio Australia's Connect Asia program /." Connect to thesis, 2009. http://repository.unimelb.edu.au/10187/6670.

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The main proposition of this thesis is that the news media serve as public connectors in sustaining and stabilizing national citizens’ transnational public connection to the global public sphere. The term transnational public connection refers to civic orientation to affairs beyond national borders. This approach builds on Couldry et al.’s (2006, 2007)’s notion of nationally based “public connection”. This thesis contends that in order to fulfill such a role, the news media need to provide international news with a transnational outlook, which interprets and describes international events and affairs in relation to different countries, the region and ultimately the globe.<br>Considering different factors affecting international news reporting, this thesis posits that news content carried by international broadcasters would generally have a broader outlook than national news media. Hence it focused its effort on examining one type of international broadcaster: government-funded shortwave radio. This thesis argues that shortwave radio broadcasting is still relevant in today’s multimedia environment. This thesis contends that shortwave radio broadcasting functions as a crucial supplementary “external public connector” in connecting publics located in the world’s less developed regions and/or under repressive regimes to the global public sphere. Therefore it is important for them to incorporate transnational news outlook in their news reporting.<br>This thesis argues that shortwave radio broadcasters’ core mission of carrying out government public diplomacy does not necessarily act as an impediment to their incorporating a transnational outlook in their news reporting. It proposes that the changing notion of public diplomacy is theoretically intertwined with the concept of transnational public connection; hence it is potentially an impetus for news with transnational outlook to emerge. But for such potential to be fully realized, this thesis argues that the broadcasting stations needs to have certain levels of editorial independence and be able to balance the interests of its home country and target region in its news coverage.<br>Using Australia’s international shortwave broadcaster, ABC Radio Australia as a case study, this research attempts to discover whether international news with a transnational outlook could be found and to try to define the parameters of such a type of news. Operationalizing a three dimensions approach proposed by Berglez (2008) in a quantitative content analysis, this study examined news content broadcast by Radio Australia’s flagship news program Connect Asia over a period of nine weeks. It found that news with a transnational outlook does exist in Connect Asia’s news coverage and the emergence of this type of news is closely linked with news topics. This type of news is more likely to emerge in news topics such as environment and health. It also found that news with a transnational outlook comprises a very small proportion of the totality of Connect Asia’s news coverage. The frequency of such news is limited by Connect Asia’s overwhelming focus on the news topic of politics. This thesis discusses several contributory factors which resulted in Connect Asia’s overall emphasis on politics and contends that government-funded international broadcasters, as well as other international broadcasters might need to de-politicize and broaden the scope of their news coverage in order to further incorporate a transnational outlook.
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Fulcher, Helen Margaret. "A qualitative analysis of radio news in Australia." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1987. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09ARM/09armf962.pdf.

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Temo, Sumbu. "Broadcasting Peace In CôTe D’Ivoire: What Happens After Democracy? : A case study of Côte d’Ivoire’s UN radio- ONUCI FM." Thesis, Södertörns högskola, Journalistik, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-39642.

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This research will analyze the radio station ONUCI FM, UN’s peace radio in Côte d’Ivoire. The central focus is on journalists’ perception of their role as professional advocacy for peace and democracy. Personal interviews with five ONUCI FM-journalists provide the primary source of qualitative source. In light of the Security Council’s decision to end UN’s peacekeeping mission in Côte d’Ivoire in 2017 followed an uncertainty of ONUCI FM’s future before it was decided that the station would continue to broadcast under the Felix Houphouët-Boigny foundation. This research attempts to elucidate the consequences in similar previous cases. This research shows that the UN often lacks a long-term plan of how to handle their stations when their mission ends, thereby creating an indisputable journalistic vacuum where they previously operated. This research shows that few UN radios are capable of surviving without donations but that leaving abruptly may cause harm to the achieved peace. With the intention to provide a solution to the vacuum created after the UN this research explores the possibilities of citizen journalists filling the void after the organization’s withdrawal. This research argues that Citizen Journalism is a suitable substitute to Peace Journalism when UN radio stations stop broadcasting. Applied theories are Peace Journalism, Journalism ethics and Citizen Journalism. All theories are applicable in the analysis of journalists as nation builders, government partners, and agents of empowerment and also as watchdogs. In conclusion, the purpose of this research is to understand the journalist's own experience of working at ONUCI FM and to analyze if a radio station such as ONUCI FM, when no longer supported by the UN, can benefit of Citizen Journalism.
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De, Jager Augustinus Kock. "Die gebruik van klank om nuus op die Internet oor te dra." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/53371.

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Thesis (MPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2003.<br>ENGLISH ABSTRACT: In this work I explore the use of sound as a means of presenting news to the user of the Internet. I accept that news sound as such, as it is presented on radio, is an effective mass communication medium. From there I ask the question if this sound, with the same underlying principles used in radio, can be effectively used on the Internet. This opposed to real changes made in the gathering, preparation and presentation of sound to be effective on the Information Superhighway. In the first chapter I look at the methods (good and bad) utilized to present sound on the radio. When I present a model for Internet use later in the work (chapter 5) I use these as a starting point. Some definitions are formulated, which also become important in chapter 5. In the second chapter I touch on the origins of the Internet and the use of web sites to provide a news service. I explore the methods employed by news specific sites to communicate information to Internet users and I compare that to uses on a non-news site, in this case National Geographic.com. Again I use the positive aspects of the study of these sites to form part of the model presented in chapter 5. Chapter 3 is dedicated to the technological development of the Internet and the use of multimedia to convey information. I also touch on the future of the information system and the expectations and requirements these developments would put on journalists working on the medium. In chapter 4 I compare the way in which three news sites handled the covering of the terrorist attack on America. Because of the territorial advantage, I choose to look at the coverage one year after the event. The positive use of text, video, sound and images on these three sites are used to format the model in the next chapter. As said previously, chapter 5 contains a model for the use of multimedia, specifically sound, to convey news information on the Internet. While the focus is on sound, I suggest here that the model is applicable to all the aids available to the Internet producer.<br>AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In hierdie werkstuk ontleed ek die gebruik van klank as 'n werktuig om nuus aan die Internetgebruiker oor te dra. Ek gaan van die beginsel af uit dat nuusklank op sy eie, met ander woorde soos dit op die radio uitgesaai word, wel 'n effektiewe, vinnige metode is om nuus aan massas mense oor te dra. Die vraag word gevra of klank op dieselfde manier, met dieselfde grondbeginsels en gebruike, 'n effektiewe medium is om nuus op die Internet aan te bied. Dié vraag word in teenstelling geplaas met die moontlikhede dat klank liefs op die radio hoort en nie deel behoort te wees van nuuswebtuistes nie, of dat daar wesenlike veranderinge gemaak behoort te word aan die nuus wat op die radio aangebied word, voor dit effektief op die Internet gebruik kan word. In die eerste hoofstuk kyk ek na die oorsprong en geskiedenis van radio en daarna na die ontwikkeling van nuus op radio. Ek behandel die beginsels van radionuus, met die doelom hierdie kenmerke dan later in die werkstuk (hoofstuk 5) te gebruik as die grondbeginsels vir 'n model vir die gebruik van klank om nuus op die Internet oor te dra. Ek kyk na die goeie en slegte praktyke wat in die oordrag van nuus op radio ontstaan het en probeer hierdeur sif om nie dieselfde swakplekke by die bogenoemde model in te sluit nie. In hierdie hoofstuk formuleer ek dan definisies vir die verskillende gebruike van klank om nuus oor die radio oor te dra. Hierdie definisies word ook later gebruik in die model vir die effektiewe gebruike van nuusklank op die Internet. In die tweede hoofstuk kyk ek na die oorsprong van die Internet, en dan (in meer detail) na die ontstaan van nuuswebtuistes. Ek ontleed die manier waarop inligting aan Internetgebruikers oorgedra word, op webtuistes wat spesifiek vir nuus geskep is, maar ek vergelyk dit ook met 'n webtuiste wat na my mening die Internet se kenmerke behoorlik aanwend om inligting oor te dra, nl. NationaIGeographic.com. Die goeie en slegte punte van die oordrag van inligting op die medium word ontleed, om ook later deel te vorm van die model in hoofstuk 5. Ek kyk in die derde hoofstuk na die tegnologiese ontwikkeling van die Internet en die gebruik van multimedia op die netwerk. Daar word ook geraak aan die toekomsmoontlikhede van die oordrag van groot hoeveelhede data (soos klank en video) op die netwerk. Soos die tegnologie ontwikkel, moet die persoon wat die produk daarstelontwikkel, en ek kyk na die vereistes wat aan joernaliste/vervaardigers van Internetnuus gestel word. In die vierde hoofstuk vergelyk ek die Internetaanbiedings van 'n spesifieke nuusgebeurtenis, die aanval op Amerika op 11 September 2001, van drie nuuswebtuistes. Ek kyk na die aanbiedings van die BBC, CNN en die SAUK, spesifiek na die gebruik van teks, grafika, video en klank om nuus aan Internetgebruikers oor te dra. Die (goeie en minder goeie) gebruik van klank op dié drie webtuistes vorm dan die basis van die model wat ek in hoofstuk 5 aanbied. Die vyfde hoofstuk word gewyaan die daarstelling van 'n model om klank as nuusmedium op die Internet te gebruik. Ek kyk na die beginsels van die goeie gebruik van klank wat in die eerste hoofstuk daargestel is en probeer dit verwerk vir gebruik op die Internet. Hoewel ek nie spesifiek die gebruik van ander media, soos teks, video en grafika, behandel nie, doen ek in hoofstuk 5 voor dat die model vir al die hulpmiddels op die Internetnuuswebtuiste kan geld.
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Stoneman, Timothy H. B. ""Capturing believers American international radio, religion, and reception, 1931-1975" /." Available online, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006, 2006. http://etd.gatech.edu/theses/available/etd-11282005-173744/.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--History, Technology and Society, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006.<br>Dr. Susan Smulyan, Committee Member ; Dr. John Tone, Committee Member ; Dr. Larry Foster, Committee Member ; Dr. Steve Usselman, Committee Member ; Dr. John Krige, Committee Chair.
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Hogarth, David 1959. "Shortwave news work : a case study of Radio Canada International's Hong Kong "Journal"." Thesis, McGill University, 1989. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=59389.

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The Radio Canada International news and current affairs program "Canadian Journal" is used as a case study to develop an adequate theory of news work. A theory of news structuration is proposed which seeks to overcome the dichotomy between agency and structure in news sociology. News is conceived as a social production which constitutes, and is constituted by, its institutional conditions.
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Dunn, Anne, and n/a. "Manufacturing audiences?: policy and practice in ABC radio news 1983-1993." University of Canberra. Professional Communicaton, 2005. http://erl.canberra.edu.au./public/adt-AUC20051123.132051.

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This thesis sheds light on the ways in which audiences are made through the relationships between organisational policy and news production practice. It explores the relationships between news practitioners� perceptions and definitions of audiences, production, and organisational policies, using the radio news service of the Australian national public broadcaster, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). In so doing, the thesis demonstrates that production, in its institutional context, is a crucial site for the creation of audiences in the study of news journalism. In the process, it illuminates the role of public service broadcasting, in a world of digital media The conceptual framework utilises a new approach to framing analysis. Framing has been used to examine the news "agenda" and to identify the salient aspects of news events. This thesis demonstrates ways in which framing can be used to research important processes in news production at different levels, from policy level to that of professional culture, and generate insights to the relationship between them. The accumulated evidence of the bulletin analysis - using structural and rhetorical frames of news - field observation and interviews, shows that a specific and coherent audience can be constructed as a result of newsroom work practices in combination with organisational policies. The thesis has increased knowledge and understanding both of how news workers create images of their audiences and what the institutional factors are that influence the manufacture of audiences as they appear in the text of news bulletins.
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Books on the topic "International broadcasting. Radio journalism"

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Fortner, Robert S. Public diplomacy and international politics: The symbolic constructs of summits and international radio news. Praeger, 1994.

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al- Barāmij al-ikhbārīyah fī al-idhāʻāt al-muwajjahah bi-al-lughatayn al-Fārisīyah wa-al-Bushtū: Dirāsah taḥlīlīyah muqāranah bayna idhāʻatay Landan wa-Ṣawt Amrīkā. al-Mamlakah al-ʻArabīyah al-Saʻūdīyah, Wizārat al-Taʻlīm al-ʻĀlī, Jāmiʻat al-Imām Muḥammad ibn Saʻūd al-Islāmīyah, ʻImādat al-Baḥth al-ʻIlmī, 2005.

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Łatyński, Marek. Ogród angielski: Wspomnienia z Radia Wolna Europa. Wydawn. Uniwersytetu Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej, 1997.

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Klapperich, Dirk. "A thorn in my side": Die Osteuropa-Redaktion der Deutschen Welle von der KSZE-Schlussakte bis zur Kooperation mit Radio Moskau (1975 bis 1990). m press Martin Meidenbauer, 2007.

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Xing shi yu dui ce: Cong chuan bo huan jing de xin bian hua lun wo guo dui Eluosi, Dong Ou chuan bo de zhan lüe ce lüe tiao zheng. Zhongguo guo ji guang bo chu ban she, 2011.

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"A thorn in my side": Die Osteuropa-Redaktion der Deutschen Welle von der KSZE-Schlussakte bis zur Kooperation mit Radio Moskau (1975 bis 1990). m press Martin Meidenbauer, 2007.

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Hussain, Mehmood. Radio journalism. National Book Foundation, 1997.

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(Pakistan), National Book Foundation, ed. Radio journalism. National Book Foundation, 2012.

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International radio journalism: History, theory and practice. Routledge, 1998.

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L'info radio-- recto verso. Harmattan, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "International broadcasting. Radio journalism"

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Clark, Andrew M. "International Radio Broadcasting: It’s Not What it Used to Be." In The Palgrave Handbook of Global Radio. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-230-37332-7_1.

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Matsilele, Trust, and Golden Maunganidze. "Ethnic Journalism as a Social Mission: An Exploration of Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation’s (ZBC) National FM Radio Station." In Palgrave Studies in Journalism and the Global South. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-76163-9_10.

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Courseille, O., P. Poiré, M. C. Durand, and M. Mazzella. "Integrating Satellite Digital Radio Broadcasting (S-DB), Terrestrial Cellular Technology and EGNOS Satellite Navigation." In IFIP International Federation for Information Processing. Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/0-387-24043-8_5.

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Sterling, Christopher H. "Radio Broadcasting: Pre-1945." In Encyclopedia of International Media and Communications. Elsevier, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b0-12-387670-2/00253-3.

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Sterling, Christopher H. "Radio Broadcasting: Post-1945." In Encyclopedia of International Media and Communications. Elsevier, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b0-12-387670-2/00254-5.

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"Radio Canada International." In History of International Broadcasting, Volume 2. Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/pbht023e_ch10.

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"Swiss Radio International." In History of International Broadcasting, Volume 2. Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/pbht023e_ch11.

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"Radio France International." In History of International Broadcasting, Volume 2. Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/pbht023e_ch8.

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"Radio Australia." In History of International Broadcasting, Volume 2. Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/pbht023e_ch20.

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"Appendix 1: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty." In History of International Broadcasting, Volume 2. Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/pbht023e_appendix1.

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Conference papers on the topic "International broadcasting. Radio journalism"

1

Bedford, Charlotte. "Can Alternative Media Redefine Public Service Broadcasting? Prison Radio & the BBC." In Annual International Conference on Journalism & Mass Communications. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-3710_jmcomm14.55.

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M.Si, MA, Masduki. "Indonesian Public Service Broadcasting: From Government-Analogue to Public-Digital Era." In Annual International Conference on Journalism & Mass Communications. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-3710_jmcomm14.59.

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Mistrik, Milos. "The Regulation of Freedom of Expression in TV Broadcasting." In Annual International Conference on Journalism & Mass Communications (JMComm 2016). Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-3710_jmcomm16.54.

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FREEMAN, Bradley C. "Kabayan voices: Ethnic Filipino radio programming in Dubai." In Annual International Conference on Journalism & Mass Communications. Global science and Technology Forum (GSTF), 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-3710_jmcomm15.22.

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Murata, Yoshitoshi, Daisei Sato, Yuki Itoga, Tsuyoshi Takayama, Nobuyoshi Sato, and Shoichi Horiguchi. "New Broadcasting System Combined with Radio Broadcasting and WWW." In 2008 IEEE International Conference on Web Services (ICWS). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icws.2008.130.

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Yu, Hang, Ahmad Rahmati, Ardalan Amiri Sani, Lin Zhong, Jehan Wickramasuriya, and Venu Vasudevan. "Data broadcasting using mobile FM radio." In the 13th international conference. ACM Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2030112.2030146.

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Camilli, Marco, Massimiliano Dibitonto, Alessandro Vona, Roberta Grimaldi, Francesco Di Nocera, and Carlo Maria Medaglia. "Searching digital audio broadcasting radio stations." In the 9th ACM SIGCHI Italian Chapter International Conference. ACM Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2037296.2037331.

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Demeure, C. J. "COFDM modem for terrestrial radio broadcasting." In 8th International Conference on High-Frequency Radio Systems and Techniques. IEE, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp:20000148.

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Stoll, G. "Internet radio and excellent audio quality: dreamboat or reality?" In International Broadcasting Conference (IBC). IEE, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp:19971266.

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Witherow, D. M. L. "Digital audio broadcasting - the future of radio." In International Broadcasting Conference IBC '95. IEE, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp:19950929.

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