Academic literature on the topic 'The Daily News (Zimbabwe)'

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Journal articles on the topic "The Daily News (Zimbabwe)"

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Ruhanya, Pedzisai. "An opposition newspaper under an oppressive regime: A critical analysis of The Daily News." Journal of Alternative & Community Media 1, no. 1 (April 1, 2016): 128–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/joacm_00023_1.

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This study focuses on the unprecedented ways in which newspaper journalism helped the cause of democratisation at the height of the economic and political governance crisis, also known as the Zimbabwe Crisis, from 1997 to 2010. The research is designed as a qualitative case study of The Daily News, an independent private newspaper. It was based on semi-structured interviews with respondents, who were mainly journalists and politicians living in Zimbabwe. The analytical lens of alternative media facilitates a construction of how The Daily News and its journalists experienced, reported, confronted and navigated state authoritarianism in a historical moment of political turmoil. The study discusses the complex relationships between the independent and privately owned press, the political opposition and civil society organisations. The research provides an original analysis of the operations of The Daily News and its journalists in the context of a highly undemocratic political moment. Some journalists crossed the floor to join civic and opposition forces in order to confront the state. The state responded through arrests and physical attacks against the journalists; however, journalists continued to work with opposition forces while the government enacted repressive media and security law to curtail coverage of the crisis.
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Mushore, Washington. "THE REPORTAGE OF LAND AND OWNERSHIP IN SELECTED PRIVATE MEDIA IN ZIMBABWE." Latin American Report 30, no. 2 (July 20, 2016): 30–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/0256-6060/1238.

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The aim of this article is to scrutinise how the concepts of land and land ownership were discussed in the private media in Zimbabwe during the Zimbabwe land reform exercise – dubbed ‘the third Chimurenga’ that took place in the period 2000–2008. Using textual analysis, the articles argues that ownership of land, according to the so called ‘private or independent’ newspapers in Zimbabwe was supposed to be accorded to the farmer or person, regardless of the racial bias, who was more productive on the land and who was contributing more to the economic well-being of the nation (Zimbabwe). Accordingly, the private newspapers in Zimbabwe regarded land as belonging to, or as the rightful property of the white commercial farmers/settlers because they perceived them to be more productive on the land than the native people of Zimbabwe who were ultimately seen and labelled as invaders on the so-called white commercial farms. In order to substantiate the above claims and arguments, a number of The Daily News stories of the period were purposively sampled and are used as examples.
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Moyo, Dumisani. "The ‘independent’ press and the fight for democracy in Zimbabwe: A critical analysis of the banned Daily News." Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture 2 (February 1, 2005): 109. http://dx.doi.org/10.16997/wpcc.45.

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Torr, S. J., and J. W. Hargrove. "Behaviour of tsetse (Diptera: Glossinidae) during the hot season in Zimbabwe: the interaction of micro-climate and reproductive status." Bulletin of Entomological Research 89, no. 4 (April 1999): 365–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007485399000504.

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AbstractStudies were made of the behaviour of Glossina pallidipes Austen and G. morsitans morsitans Westwood during the hot season (September–November) in Zimbabwe, and attributes of samples of tsetse from refuges, odour-baited traps, targets and mobile baits were compared. Various arrangements of electric nets were used to study tsetse as they entered or left artificial refuges. The peak time of entry into a refuge varied between 0800 h and 1400 h and coincided with the time when the air temperature reached 32°C; the response was stronger if 32°C occurred earlier in the day. The peak time of exit varied between 1500 h and 1700 h, being significantly later on hotter days, but did not show a clear temperature threshold. Micro-meteorological measurements showed that refuges were significantly cooler than the surrounding riverine woodland during the day but warmer at night. There was no significant difference between the air temperatures in leafless mopane woodland and semi-evergreen riverine woodland during the day but at night the riverine woodland was significantly cooler. Combining the micro-meteorological data with the estimated local movements of tsetse suggested that during the hot season, tsetse experienced temperatures 2°C cooler than the daily mean in a Stevenson screen located in mopane woodland. Compared with the catches of tsetse from traps, refuges had higher proportions of G. m. morsitans, males, young flies and females in the later stages of reproduction, and it is suggested that during the hot season, samples from refuges were less biased than traps with respect to species and sex composition, age and reproductive status. During the hot season, tsetse populations declined by c. 90% and although air temperatures exceeded lethal levels (c. 40°C), the refuge-entering responses meant that adult flies probably experienced a maximum of only c. 35°C. It is suggested that the decline in numbers is not due to direct mortality effects of temperature on adults but may be due, in part, to a doubling in the rates of reproductive abnormality during the hot season and an increase in adult mortality related to a temperature-dependent decrease in pupal period.
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Hargrove, J. W., M. T. P. Holloway, G. A. Vale, A. J. E. Gough, and D. R. Hall. "Catches of tsetse (Glossina spp.) (Diptera: Glossinidae) from traps and targets baited with large doses of natural and synthetic host odour." Bulletin of Entomological Research 85, no. 2 (June 1995): 215–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007485300034295.

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AbstractIn Zimbabwe, catches of Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood and G. pallidipes Austen, at an odour source produced by up to 60 tonnes of cattle, fell by 90% from April to October 1987. With the time effect removed, the catches were: positively correlated with daily maximum temperature; up to twice as high with a trap as with an electrified target; and unaffected by the presence of an incomplete ring of electrified netting (11.5 m diameter) around the catching site. Catches increased as a power of bait mass in accord with the theory of odour dispersal. The power was ca. 0.32–0.44 for G. pallidipes, ca. 0.15 for post-teneral G. m. morsitans, 0.67 for Stomoxyinae and 0.48 for non-biting muscids. Earlier results from dose-response studies accord with the new model. Tsetse catches were 1.7–4.5 times higher with 20 tonnes of cattle as bait than with a synthetic simulate of this dose, consisting of carbon dioxide, acetone, butanone, octenol and phenolic residues. Important olfactory components thus remain to be identified. Trap efficiency for G. m. morsitans rose from 10–20% to 40% with increasing bait mass between 0 and 5 tonnes; thereafter bait mass had no effect. Increased efficiencies were also seen in Stomoxyinae (5 to 60%;) and in post-teneral G. pallidipes (45 to 70–80%). Increases in catch for bait mass greater than five tonnes were due to increased attraction rather than increased efficiency. Targets were 60–66% efficient for G. pallidipes, regardless of dose; for G. m. morsitans the efficiency was ca. 54% when unbajted and 24–35% when 60 tonnes of cattle were used as bait. The probability that G. pallidipes landed on the cloth part of the target, rather than colliding with the flanking nets, increased as the square of the bait mass for both sexes—from 0.11 to 0.22 for males and from 0.06 to 0.15 for females. There was no effect of bait mass on landing probability for G. m. morsitans and no difference between the sexes; ca. 11% of the catch landed on the cloth portion of the target. Efficiency and landing behaviour were independent of climate and season.
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Hsu, P. Peggy. "Health News Daily." Medical Reference Services Quarterly 11, no. 4 (November 8, 1992): 61–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j115v11n04_05.

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Stapleton, Julia, and Nicolas Bellord. "Chesterton @ the Daily News." Chesterton Review 38, no. 3 (2012): 679. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/chesterton2012383/4111.

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Stapleton, Julia. "Chesterton at the Daily News." Chesterton Review 39, no. 1 (2013): 49–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/chesterton2013391/210.

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Henningham, John. "The Shape of Daily News." Media International Australia 79, no. 1 (February 1996): 22–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x9607900104.

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Unz, Dagmar, Frank Schwab, and Peter Winterhoff-Spurk. "TV News – The Daily Horror?" Journal of Media Psychology 20, no. 4 (January 2008): 141–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1864-1105.20.4.141.

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In two studies we examined the influence of violent television news on viewers’ emotional experiences and facial expressions. In doing so, we considered formal and content aspects of news reports as well as viewers’ gratifications as independent variables. Analyses showed that violence in TV news elicits primarily negative emotions depending on the type of portrayed violence. Effects of presentation mode and of expected gratification on the viewers’ feelings are traceable. On the whole, fear is neither the only nor the most prominent emotion; rather, viewers seem to react to violence with “other-critical” moral emotions, including anger and contempt, reflecting a concern for the integrity of the social order and the disapproval of others. Emotions shown in reaction to the suffering of others, like sadness and fear, occur much more rarely. The results largely show a complex web of relations between media variables, viewers’ characteristics, and emotional processes.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "The Daily News (Zimbabwe)"

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Runhanya, Pedzisai. "Alternative media and African democracy : The Daily News and opposition politics in Zimbabwe, 1997-2010." Thesis, University of Westminster, 2014. https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/item/8yv72/alternative-media-and-african-democracy-the-daily-news-and-opposition-politics-in-zimbabwe-1997-2010.

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The end of the 1990s and the beginning of the 21st century were marked by enormous social, economic and political challenges in Africa and in other developing contexts. This was partly due to the effects of a global economic recession and arguably failed national economic structural adjustment programmes, rampant public sector corruption and a rise in authoritarianism, as states tried to keep restive populations under control. Zimbabwe saw intense political struggles between the government and various agents of social change who were pressing for democratic space. This study specifically investigates how the news media in Zimbabwe played a critical role in actively mobilizing for political change and as a site for opposition politics and agitation during moments of turmoil and repression from 1997-2010. Zimbabwe’s news media, particularly privately owned newspapers, provided more accessible platforms for robust debate that challenged the status quo in the troubled state. Not only did the private press in Zimbabwe successfully oppose the one-party state after the country attained independence in 1980, they were even more significant at the height of the economic and political governance crisis, also known as the Zimbabwe Crisis, from 2000-2010. My research focuses on the unprecedented ways in which newspaper journalism helped the cause of democratisation in Zimbabwe. The research is designed as a qualitative case study of The Daily News, a leading private newspaper whose masthead was aptly worded: “telling it like it is”. Apart from content illustration of purposely-selected headlines of newspaper articles, it was based on semi-structured interviews conducted with 51 respondents, who were mainly politicians and journalists living in Zimbabwe. I also draw upon my experience and observations of having worked for the Daily News during this eventful period. The research methods gave me access to primary data on the institutional and personal experiences of a private newspaper and its journalists, who reflected and affected the political crisis in Zimbabwe. The main aim was to investigate why and how news journalists working for a prominent private medium came to oppose an undemocratic state under conditions of repression. The analytical lens of alternative media facilitates a construction of how The Daily News and its journalists experienced, reported, confronted and navigated state authoritarianism in a historical moment of political turmoil. The study discusses the complex relationships between the independent and privately-owned press, the main opposition political party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) and civil society organizations. Such groups include the labour movement and the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA), the main constitutional reform movement. This dissertation argues that in the struggles for political change that ensued between the opposition forces and the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) party, The Daily News provided form and solidity to oppositional and civic voices that were previously shut out by the dominant public media. The significance of this study is that existing scholarship on media and communication studies in Zimbabwe do not adequately capture these experiences. The agency of such media institutions and journalists has rarely been investigated. Further, the research provides an original analysis of the operations of The Daily News and its journalists in the context of highly undemocratic political moment, inclusive of the trials and tribulations, such as assaults, arrests, detentions, and office bombings, civil and criminal trials. Arguably, this study fills an important lacuna in scholarship on the role of the news media in democratising states during moments of political instability. The study thus contributes to knowledge on the experiences of alternative, opposition, activist and often radical journalists in Zimbabwe, where they championed ordinary citizens’ stories instead of focussing entirely on expert views of the crisis. By embracing alternative media theory as the analytic lens of the study, there is arguably a normative contribution to knowledge through the use of the framework in a democratising context to broaden the understanding of the role of the news media in societies going through turbulent political transitions.
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Mawarire, Jealousy Mbizvo. "A critical inquiry into the absence of a gender equality discourse in the coverage of the land redistribution issue in two Zimbabwean newspapers, The Daily News and The Herald, between 01 February and 30 June 2000." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002915.

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The media, which help define what we think and our roles in the society, have a crucial role to project both men and women’s issues so as to change people’s perceptions and stereotypes about the role men and women play in the society. There is need, therefore, to ensure gender equality in the operations of the media so that issues to do with both men and women get adequate and equal coverage. This study on the reportage of the land redistribution exercise in Zimbabwe has, however, exposed the gendered nature of the operations of the media, particularly in the news production process. It provides that, overally, the news discourse is a masculine narrative whose androcentric form is a result of, and is protected by, claims to ‘objectivity,’ ‘professionalism’, ‘impartiality’ and the pursuit of a journalistic routine system that hegemonically prioritises men’s issues over those of women. The situation, as the research shows, has not been helped by journalists’ incapacity to do thematic appreciation of issues and their over-inclination towards a simplistic event-based journalism that fails to question policies as they are enacted and implemented in gender-skewed processes. The lack of gender policies, the operations of patriarchy and the pursuit of a journalistic routine system that sees nothing wrong with the ostracisation of women issues are very fundamental findings that the research uses in its attempts to explain why the gender equality discourse was left out of the news reports about the land reform exercise in Zimbabwe.
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McCarthy, Mark R. "The Daily Show: Journalism’s Jester." Scholar Commons, 2009. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/4270.

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The social meaning of television news has been under transformation since the successes of cable news in the final years of the previous century. In their attempts to preserve viewership and to remain relevant, traditional broadcast news outlets increasingly emulate the conventions of cable news. Instead of retaining audiences, the result has been declining news content and a continued loss of viewers. Amid these industry transformations, the concept of “journalist” continues to undergo change. This evolution of the news allows for a decidedly unique response to news programming in The Daily Show With Jon Stewart. Though advertised as a half-hour comedy show, it has established itself as a consistent re-teller and producer of news, only possible in a postmodern era of journalism after objectivity. Amid the industry’s shift in priorities from objectivity and reporting to influencing, framing and re-telling the news, The Daily Show is considered as much an example of journalism as many of the shows currently in the news sphere. Although our society is currently saturated with information, this information often fails to penetrate the surface of the issues covered. Too much information is as paralytic as ignorance. Recently, attention has shifted towards a re-evaluation of television news into something that will both help the public find the information they are searching for and give them the tools to make sense of and utilize that information. This concept of journalism as tool is present in every episode of The Daily Show. The show encourages viewers to peel away the layers of mediation of traditional newscasts, to recognize substance and the lack thereof, and become active consumers of information rather than passive receptacles submersed in irrelevant information. The Daily Show proves that a news show can inform, entertain and teach audiences how to critically process television as an informational medium.
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McCarthy, Mark R. "The daily show : journalism's jester." [Tampa, Fla] : University of South Florida, 2009. http://purl.fcla.edu/usf/dc/et/SFE0002903.

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Lei, Man Tat. "A study of international news translations done by the Macao Daily News." Thesis, University of Macau, 2010. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b2456348.

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Larris, Rachel Joy. "The daily show effect : humor, news, knowledge and viewers." CONNECT TO ELECTRONIC THESIS, 2005. http://dspace.wrlc.org/handle/1961/605.

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Choi, Sin Kuan. "Framing Article 23 : contrasts in Narratives of the Wen Wei Po, Apple Daily, Macao Daily News and People's Daily (2000-2009)." Thesis, University of Macau, 2010. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b2162011.

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Chiu, Ming-wah, and 趙明華. "Resistance, peace and war: the Central China Daily News, the South China Daily News and the Wang Jingwei Cliqueduring the Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2005. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B3624689X.

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Chiu, Ming-wah. "Resistance, peace and war the Central China Daily News, the South China Daily News and the Wang Jingwei Clique during the Sino-Japanese War, 1937-1945 /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2005. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B3624689X.

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Palmer, Brandice. "Seeking Story: Finding the Modern Day Folktale in the Daily News." [Tampa, Fla.] : University of South Florida, 2005. http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/SFE0001306.

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Books on the topic "The Daily News (Zimbabwe)"

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National and Local Government Officers Association. NALGO news daily. London: NALGO, 1991.

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The Metropolitan Daily News: Understanding American newspapers. Hemel Hempstead: Prentice Hall, 1994.

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Bartel, Joan Corliss. The metropolitan daily news: Understanding American newspapers. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Regents/Prentice Hall, 1994.

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Black, Judith M. Development of the Shields Daily News 1864-1984. [Newcastle upon Tyne]: History of the Book Trade in theNorth, 1986.

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Alarming reports: Communicating conflict in the daily news. New York: Berghahn Books, 2009.

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Gosvāmī, Satsvarūpa Dāsa. The daily news: All things fail without Kṛṣṇa. Port Royal, PA: GN Press, 1994.

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Perry, Phyllis. 1905 vital statistics from the Amherst Daily News. Amherst, NS: Cumberland County Genealogical Society, 2003.

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Tosczak, Jan. Dawson daily news, 1899-1920: Index and summary. Yukon: Heritage Branch, Dept. of Tourism, Government of Yukon, 1991.

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Cohen, Justin M. Yale daily news guide to writing college papers. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2000.

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Daily news, eternal stories: The mythological role of journalism. New York: Guilford Press, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "The Daily News (Zimbabwe)"

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Dombo, Sylvester. "Predictable and Unavoidable: The Closure of the African Daily News and Daily News." In Private Print Media, the State and Politics in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zimbabwe, 209–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61890-6_9.

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Dombo, Sylvester. "African Daily News and Early African Politics in Rhodesia." In Private Print Media, the State and Politics in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zimbabwe, 51–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61890-6_4.

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Dombo, Sylvester. "‘Uneasy Bedfellows’: The Daily News and The State 1999–2003." In Private Print Media, the State and Politics in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zimbabwe, 181–207. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61890-6_8.

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Dombo, Sylvester. "“Telling It Like It Is?”: The Daily News and Zimbabwean Political Crisis to 2000." In Private Print Media, the State and Politics in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zimbabwe, 153–79. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61890-6_7.

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Veecock, Candace. "China Daily infographics." In Chinese News Discourse, 103–25. London; New York: Routledge, 2021. | Series: Routledge studies in Chinese discourse analysis: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003032984-9.

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Chambwera, Collen. "Business News Making Practices in Zimbabwe." In Re-imagining Communication in Africa and the Caribbean, 217–33. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-54169-9_12.

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Hetherington, Alastair. "A People’s Paper: The Daily Record." In News in the Regions, 196–201. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19952-5_22.

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Drew, John M. L. "Launching The Daily News (1845–46)." In Dickens the Journalist, 67–90. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230006102_6.

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Hetherington, Alastair. "A ‘Solid’ Community Newspaper: The Huddersfield Daily Examiner." In News in the Regions, 74–77. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19952-5_8.

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Bracewell, David B. "Automatic Creation of Daily News Digests from Internet News Sites." In Technological Developments in Networking, Education and Automation, 633–37. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9151-2_110.

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Conference papers on the topic "The Daily News (Zimbabwe)"

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Douglas, Shona, Deepak Agarwal, Tirso Alonso, Robert Bell, Mazin Rahim, Deborah F. Swayne, and Chris Volinsky. "Mining customer care dialogs for "daily news"." In Interspeech 2004. ISCA: ISCA, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2004-124.

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Setty, Vinay, Abhijit Anand, Arunav Mishra, and Avishek Anand. "Modeling Event Importance for Ranking Daily News Events." In WSDM 2017: Tenth ACM International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3018661.3018728.

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Fu, Daan, and Ying Men. "Features of Political News English in China Daily." In 2013 International Conference on the Modern Development of Humanities and Social Science. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/mdhss-13.2013.92.

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Wang, Jenq-Haur. "Unsupervised multilingual concept discovery from daily online news extracts." In 2010 IEEE International Conference on Intelligence and Security Informatics. IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isi.2010.5484763.

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Martins, Ciro, Antonio Teixeira, and Joao Neto. "Dynamic language modeling for a daily broadcast news transcription system." In 2007 IEEE Workshop on Automatic Speech Recognition & Understanding (ASRU). IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/asru.2007.4430103.

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Lam, Wai, Pik-Shan Cheung, and Ruizhang Huang. "Mining events and new name translations from online daily news." In the 2004 joint ACM/IEEE conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/996350.996418.

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McKeown, Kathleen R., Regina Barzilay, David Evans, Vasileios Hatzivassiloglou, Judith L. Klavans, Ani Nenkova, Carl Sable, Barry Schiffman, and Sergey Sigelman. "Tracking and summarizing news on a daily basis with Columbia's Newsblaster." In the second international conference. Morristown, NJ, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/1289189.1289212.

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Martins, Ciro, Antonio Texeira, and Joao Neto. "Dynamic Vocabulary Adaptation for a daily and real-time Broadcast News Transcription System." In 2006 IEEE Spoken Language Technology Workshop. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/slt.2006.326839.

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Tran, Giang Binh, and Mohammad Alrifai. "Indexing and analyzing wikipedia's current events portal, the daily news summaries by the crowd." In the 23rd International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2567948.2576942.

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Rahmayati, Reski, Ermanto Ermanto, and Harris Effendi Thahar. "Inclusion of Criminal News In Daily Online Newspaper Haluan Padang: Theo Van Leeuwen Perspective." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Language, Literature, and Education (ICLLE 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/iclle-18.2018.62.

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Reports on the topic "The Daily News (Zimbabwe)"

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Ripey, Mariya. NUMBERS IN THE NEWS TEXT (BASED ON MATERIAL OF ONE ISSUE OF NATIONWIDE NEWSPAPER “DAY”). Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.50.11106.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of the digital content of publications of one issue of the daily All-Ukrainian newspaper “Den” (March 13-14, 2020). The author aims to identify the main thematic groups of digital designations, as well as to consider cases of justified and unsuccessful use of digital designations. Applying the content analysis method, the author identifies publications that contain numerical notations, determines the number of such notations and their affiliation with the main subject groups. Finds that the thematic group of digital designations “time” (58.6% of all digital designations) is much more dominant. This indicates that timing is the most important task of a newspaper text. The second largest group of digital designations is “measure” (15.8% of all digital designations). It covers dimensions and proportions, measurements of distance, weight, volume, and more. The third largest group of digital signage is money (8.2% of all digital signage), the fourth is numbering (5.2% of all digital signage), and the fifth is people (4.4% of all digital signage). The author focuses on the fact that the digits of the journalist’s text are both a source of information and a catch for the reader. Vivid indicators give the text a sense of accuracy. When referring digital data to the text, journalists must adhere to certain rules for the writing of ordinal numbers with incremental graduation; submission of dates; pointing to unique integers that are combined (or not combined) with units of physical quantities, monetary units, etc.; writing a numerator at the beginning of a sentence; unified presentation of data. This will greatly facilitate the reader’s perception of the information.
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2

Hendricks, Kasey. Data for Alabama Taxation and Changing Discourse from Reconstruction to Redemption. University of Tennessee, Knoxville Libraries, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7290/wdyvftwo4u.

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At their most basic level taxes carry, in the words of Schumpeter ([1918] 1991), “the thunder of history” (p. 101). They say something about the ever-changing structures of social, economic, and political life. Taxes offer a blueprint, in both symbolic and concrete terms, for uncovering the most fundamental arrangements in society – stratification included. The historical retellings captured within these data highlight the politics of taxation in Alabama from 1856 to 1901, including conflicts over whom money is expended upon as well as struggles over who carries their fair share of the tax burden. The selected timeline overlaps with the formation of five of six constitutions adopted in the State of Alabama, including 1861, 1865, 1868, 1875, and 1901. Having these years as the focal point makes for an especially meaningful case study, given how much these constitutional formations made the state a site for much political debate. These data contain 5,121 pages of periodicals from newspapers throughout the state, including: Alabama Sentinel, Alabama State Intelligencer, Alabama State Journal, Athens Herald, Daily Alabama Journal, Daily Confederation, Elyton Herald, Mobile Daily Tribune, Mobile Tribune, Mobile Weekly Tribune, Morning Herald, Nationalist, New Era, Observer, Tuscaloosa Observer, Tuskegee News, Universalist Herald, and Wilcox News and Pacificator. The contemporary relevance of these historical debates manifests in Alabama’s current constitution which was adopted in 1901. This constitution departs from well-established conventions of treating the document as a legal framework that specifies a general role of governance but is firm enough to protect the civil rights and liberties of the population. Instead, it stands more as a legislative document, or procedural straightjacket, that preempts through statutory material what regulatory action is possible by the state. These barriers included a refusal to establish a state board of education and enact a tax structure for local education in addition to debt and tax limitations that constrained government capacity more broadly. Prohibitive features like these are among the reasons that, by 2020, the 1901 Constitution has been amended nearly 1,000 times since its adoption. However, similar procedural barriers have been duplicated across the U.S. since (e.g., California’s Proposition 13 of 1978). Reference: Schumpeter, Joseph. [1918] 1991. “The Crisis of the Tax State.” Pp. 99-140 in The Economics and Sociology of Capitalism, edited by Richard Swedberg. Princeton University Press.
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3

Carrasquilla-Barrera, Alberto, Arturo José Galindo-Andrade, Gerardo Hernández-Correa, Ana Fernanda Maiguashca-Olano, Carolina Soto, Roberto Steiner-Sampedro, and Juan José Echavarría-Soto. Report of the Board of Directors to the Congress of Colombia - July 2020. Banco de la República de Colombia, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.32468/inf-jun-dir-con-rep-eng.07-2020.

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In Colombia, as well as in the rest of the world, the Covid-19 pandemic has seriously damaged the health and well-being of the people. In order to limit the damage, local and national authorities have had to order large sectors of the population to be confined at their homes for long periods of time. An inevitable consequence of isolation has been the collapse of economic activity, expenditure, and employment, a phenomenon that has hit many countries of the world affected by the disease. It is an unprecedented crisis in modern times, not so much for its intensity (which is undoubtedly immense), but because its origin is not economic. That is what makes it so unpredictable and difficult to manage. Naturally, its economic consequences are enormous. Governments and central banks from all over the world are struggling to mitigate them, but the final solution is not in the hands of the economic authorities. Only science can provide a way out. In the meantime, the economic indicators in Colombia and in the rest of the world cause concern. The output falls, the massive loss of jobs, and the closure of businesses of all sizes have become daily news. Added to this, there is the deterioration in global financial conditions and the increase in the risk indicators. Financial volatility has increased and stock indexes have fallen. In the face of the lower global demand, export prices of raw materials have fallen, affecting the terms of trade for producing countries. Workers’ remittances have declined due to the increase of unemployment in developed countries. This crisis has also generated a strong reduction of global trade of goods and services, and effects on the global value chains. Central banks around the world have reacted decisively and quickly with strong liquidity injections and significant cuts to their interest rates. By mid-July, such determined response had succeeded to revert much of the initial deterioration in global financial conditions. The stock exchanges stopped their fall, and showed significant recovery in several countries. Risk premia, which at the beginning of the crisis took an unusual leap, recorded substantial corrections. Something similar happened with the volatility indexes of global financial markets, which exhibited significant improvement. Flexibilization of confinement measures in some economies, broad global liquidity, and fiscal policy measures have also contributed to improve global external financial conditions, albeit with indicators that still do not return to their pre-Covid levels.
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