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Patterson, Christopher C. (2020) Using newspaper content analysis to understand media representations of health issues and inform improved health policy advocacy. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow.
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The mass media represent a powerful societal institution that reflects and shapes the social, cultural and political world. Within health research, media content analysis is an increasingly popular tool for examining how the media represent, and potentially influence, audiences’ understandings of health. This submission comprises eight published papers analysing UK news media representations of health issues and policies, and an explanatory essay. The essay seeks to contextualise the papers within relevant theoretical literatures and demonstrate the papers’ original contributions, both individually and collectively, to knowledge in health communication and policy advocacy. The analytical developments between the submitted papers are contextualised within literatures on the mass media, media research and policymaking, each of which is has been a site of paradigmatic change.
The submitted papers demonstrate the application of content analysis to UK newspaper and online news coverage of obesity, single-episodic drinking, alcohol pricing policy, smoke-free policy and e-cigarette regulation. Approaches used include quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods content analysis, consistent with the epistemological heterogeneity of the field. Each paper is informed by relevant theory, chiefly agenda setting theory and framing theory. While each paper produces its own novel topic-specific insights, the explanatory essay also considers commonalities across topics that lead to transferrable learning for practice in health communication and policy advocacy.
The submitted works’ novel contributions to knowledge include: documenting media frames; analysing trends within media frames; documenting stakeholders’ engagement in media debates; highlighting the strategic importance of defining target groups; identifying areas for improvement in media health communication; identifying the need for a social justice approach to public health communication; and identifying the need to engage with values of public health. Specific transferrable learning emerging from synthesis of findings includes: the effectiveness of positioning children as affected groups in negating opposition arguments about individual responsibility; the opportunity to use trends in media coverage to anticipate media framing and policy actor engagement in media debates; and the need for health communication to avoid reproducing harmful stigma, stereotyping and inequality.
While content analysis alone cannot provide conclusive prescriptions for media engagement, the submitted works mitigate the inherent restrictions of the method through the use of rigorous, theory-led methods and the triangulation of findings between different topics and analytical approaches. In doing so, the submitted works contribute to a growing international literature by providing health communicators and policy advocates with novel learning that may contribute to practice. The explanatory essay justifies the importance of studying mass media representations of health issues and policies, and demonstrates the contribution of the submitted works to understanding media representations of health issues and informing improved health policy advocacy.
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
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Qualification Level: | Doctoral |
Keywords: | media, public health, health policy, communications, content analysis, policy advocacy. |
Subjects: | > > |
Colleges/Schools: | |
Funder's Name: | |
Supervisor's Name: | Hilton, Professor Shona |
Date of Award: | 2020 |
Depositing User: | |
Unique ID: | glathesis:2020-81415 |
Copyright: | Copyright of this thesis is held by the author. |
Date Deposited: | 21 Jan 2021 17:38 |
Last Modified: | 14 Sep 2022 13:58 |
Thesis DOI: | |
URI: |
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This is a selection of the best dissertations authored by students from our MSc programmes.
These MSc dissertations have been selected by the editor and deputy editor of the Media@LSE Working Paper Series and consequently, are not the responsibility of the Working Paper Series Editorial Board.
No 313 The App Keeps the Score: Period-Tracking Apps, Self-Empowerment and the Self as Enterprise , Martina Sardelli
No 312 Envisioning Solidarity: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Chinese NGO Communications on Philanthropic Campaigns , Han Zheng
No 311 Examining the Western Media's Representation of Present-Day China Through the Lense of of Orientalism: A critical discourse analysis on BBC News’ coverage of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics , Danrong (Miko) Xiang
No 310 Bodies That Pain: An Emergent Resistance in Neo/Non-Liberal China. Exploring Weibo Hashtag Activism #FacingBirthInjuries From an Affective-Ethical Perspective , Jialu Sun
No 309 'The Algorithm Will Battle Against You': A Qualitative Study on Disabled Content Creators’ Perspectives and Understanding of the Challenges Presented by Algorithmic Systems on Social Media Platforms , Ishana Rhea Ramtohul
No 308 Why They Don't Trust Us: Chilean Mainstream Media, Metajournalistic Discourses and Repairing Journalism , Phillip Duran Pástene
No 307 A ‘Canary in the Coalmine' for Synthethic Media Regulation: The Emerging Threat of Deepfake Image Abuse , Olivia Otts
No 306 Communicating Inside to People from the Outside: How junior international employees in strategic communications companies in London perceive workplace well-being through internal communications , Nam Nghiem
No 305 The Voices That Build America: Theorizing the Labor Union as a Media Technology , Grace Nelson
No 304 "Art on Wheels": A Semiotic and Visual Discourse Analysis of Graffiti on Nairobi’s Matatus , Frank Mutulu
No 303 News Diversity and Morality in the Climate Reparations debate: A Quantitative Content Analysis of British and Irish News Coverage of the COP27 Negotiations about Loss and Damage , Marlene Jacobse
No 302 'We're all going through it': How the Construction of ‘Mental Health’ in One Pandemic HuffPost Series Positions Readers , Clare Lombardo
No 301 F rench Ecocinema and Young Audiences Environmental Mobilistations: An Exploration of the Intersection Between Film and Politics , Lola Messica
No 300 Balancing Digital Selves: Mediated Self-Presentation of Migrant Women in Germany on LinkedIn , Maya Hemant Krishna
No 299 Solidifying Social Immobility: Representation of Sex Workers within Human Trafficking Discourse in the Philippines , Olivia Austria Kemble
No 298 'Give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together': Illusions of A Global village. A Critical Discourse Analysis of Meta Platforms’ Discursive Construction of the Global Citizen , Nelli Jouhki.
No 297 Enabling Empowerment by Establishing Indian Feminity , Sanskriti Bhhatkoti
No 296 The Forces of Development: Communicating Indigenous Identity in Brazil , Alan Gabrielli Azevedo
No 295 Can women really have it all? A Discourse Analysis of Neoliberal Feminist Discourse’s Roles in the Construction of Media Representation of Professional Working Women in Indonesia , Moudy Alfiana
No 294 Framing Utopia In Emerging Technology: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Financial Media Representation of Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality , Chuyue Zhan
No 293 Understanding Brand-Culture Interaction: A Social Semiotic Analysis of an Emerging Form of Brand Communications on Bilibili , Xinyu Yang
No 292 ‘We don’t chase clicks, we chase public interest’: Investigative Journalism Between Democratic Ideals and Economic Realities , Lara Wiebecke
No 291 A Health Risk Community or A Cultural Tourism Destination? A Critical Discourse Analysis of Intertextual Representation of Wanhua District in Taiwanese Mass Media Coverage of 2021 COVID-19 Outbreak in Taipei City and Official Tourism Promotion , Min Tu
No 290 A Duality of Shifting Values in Journalism: ‘Responsible Capitalism’ and Public Service Mission – An Analysis of the News Trade Press , Hanna Siemaszko
No 289 Mediated Social Class Identity Articulation and Performance Over Social Media , Shivani Rao
No 288 Emotions running high – do they catch the reader’s eye? A quantitative content analysis on emotional frames in climate change news – the case of a significant global news publisher’s Cop26 coverage , Sara Nuder
No 287 Selling Surveillance by Fixing Femininity: Exploring the Representation and Discursive Construction of the Gaze Between Women in Indian Advertisements , Vaishnavi Nair
No 286 Development as its own Antithesis: Towards a Multi-disciplinary Exploration of the Neoliberalization of Development , Lisar Morina
No 285 Can creative labor coexist under an industrial capitalist model? A qualitative analysis of worker subjectivity in production work in Vancouver’s film and television industry , Emily Mckenna Arbogast Larman
No 284 Nothing to Hide – Everyone to Suspect: A case study of Neighbor, Neoliberal Security Governance and Securitization , Julia Kopf
No 283 Building a Social Contract for the Network Society: A Discursive Study of How Meta Mediates its Relationship to Users and Society Through Public Policy Communications , Hunter Morgan
No 282 Big Brother Watch’s campaign against COVID Pass and its implications for science communication , Zichen Jess Hu
No 281 “Everyone Was Talking About It”: A Thematic Analysis of Audience Interpretation of Squid Game on IMDb , Junhan Gina Fu
No 280 ‘An Existential Threat’: Right-wing Media and the Formation of Racialised Moral Panics , Sarah Campbell
No 279 ‘Stay at Home, Protect the NHS, Save Lives’: A Critical Discourse Analysis of UK Government Covid-19 press conferences , Morwenna Backhouse
No 278 Datafied Gay Men’s Dating: Ordering of Sexual Sociality on Blued , Hao Wu
No 277 Calculating newsworthiness: Investigating the role that probability plays in newsification and journalistic decision-making , Selina Swift
No 276 Platformisation as Development: Discourse and Justification in the South American Gig Economy , Lucas Stiglich
No 275 Branding for New Futures: Brand Activism’s Mediation of Collective Prospective Remembering , Kelly M. Smith
No 274 ‘It wasn’t meant to be mine, yea?’ – The impacts of automation on the Brazilian Welfare State A case study of the Covid-19 data-driven emergency aid Auxílio Emergencial , Melissa Lima Silva
No 273 ‘Toward a better future’: A critical discourse analysis of the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) reporting on the corporate websites of three large multinational corporations (MNCs) , Kanhai A. Parasharya
No 272 Looking through the mirror: Finding Hybridity in Al Jazeera English’s Journalism Metadiscourse , Zoe Maria Pace
No 271 How many more Emoji do we need? Examining the Unicode Consortium’s Vision of World Standard of Emoji , Yuka Katsumata
No 270 Hate in the Mainstream: Proposing a ‘Keyness-Driven’ Framework to Surface Toxic Speech in the Public Domain , Pica Johansson
No 269 Mapping Networks of Moral Language on U.S. Presidential Primary Campaigns, 2016-2020, Kobi Hackenburg
No 268 The Role of Selective Exposure in ‘A New Era of Minimal Effects’: The Mediating Effect of Selective Exposure on the Relationship between Personal Characteristics and Conspiracy Theory Beliefs , Eunbin Ha
No 267 ‘Thick girls get low’: Representations of gender, fatness, blackness and sexuality in music videos by Lizzo , Alexandra Grinfeld
No 266 We are raising our voices: The use of TikTok for the public self-representation of indigenous identity in Latin America , Camila Figueroa-Zepeda
No 265 The Silenced Sound of Drill The Digital Disadvantage, Neocapitalist Media, and Hyper- Segregation , Alexandra Farje
No 264 Blockchain Island: A critical discourse analysis of the colonial construction of a Puerto Rican crypto utopia , María De Los Milagros Colón Cruz
No 263 From Artists to Creators, From Music to Audio: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Spotify’s ‘Audio First’ Strategy , Ryan Carraro
No 262 Imprisoned by Partisanship? A Critical Discourse Analysis of Media Bias of United States Print and Online Media in Reporting of Bipartisan Issues through the First Step Act , Kimberly Burton
No 261 “This Art of Being French” A Critical Discourse Analysis on Nostalgia and National Identity in Emmanuel Macron’s Speeches , Capucine Bourges
No 260 Freedom for whom? Investigating notions of freedom in European media and communications policy, 1989-2021 , Jakob Angeli
No 259 ‘Inspire Creativity, Enrich Life’? A Critical Discourse Analysis on How Douyin Justifies Its Data Extraction and Shapes Public Values in The Platform Society , Jing An
No 258 Changing Humanitarianism For The Better? Virtual Reality and the Representation of the Suffering ‘Other’ in Humanitarian Communications , Francesca Liberatore Vaselli
No 257 We Are Humans Too: Refugees’ Perceptions of Representations of Migration in European News , Hannah Traussnigg
No 256 The Matter of Online Political Participation: A New Materialist Experiment on Emerging Adult Participatory Practices in the United Kingdom, Ireland and the Netherlands , Hanne M. Stegeman
No 255 Rap Music As Evidence: A Prosecutorial Tactic of Institutionalizing Racism , Claire Ruder
No 254 Put Students Before Your Public Image: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Strategic Communications in the University of Warwick Rape Chat Scandal , Clara Héroux Rhymes
No 253 Set The Record Straight: The Significance of Counter-Archives in Contemporary Struggles of Justice for Apartheid-Era Crimes , Ra’eesa Pather
No 252 Can Stories Change How We Feel About People: The Effect of Older People’s Online Personal Stories on Mitigating Younger Korean Ageism , Jeongwon Leah Park
No 251 The ‘Silent Majority': A Critical Discourse Analysis of Counter-Movement Key Opinion Leaders’ YouTube Coverage of the 2019 Hong Kong Protests , Limichi Okamoto
No 250 Man Up! A Qualitative Analysis of Representations of the Male Body on Instagram and Body Image Among Young Flemish Men , Femke Konings
No 249 Manufacturing The Mapped Metropolis: A Social Semiotic Analysis of Cartographic Representations of Gentrification and Displacement in New York City , Johanne Lahlum Hortman
No 248 The Police Have Confirmed all 39 Victims Were Chinese The Mis/Recognition of Vietnamese Migrants in Their Mediated Encounters Within UK Newspapers , Linda Hien
No 247 Brother A-Zhong For the Win: A Qualitative Analysis of Chinese Fan Communities’ Nationalist Practice of Cyber Expedition , Yannan Du
No 246 Police Facial Recognition in Progress: The Construction of The Notion of Accuracy in the Live Facial Recognition Technology Used by the MET Police in London , Romina Colman
No 245 Polarflation: The Inflationary Effect of Attention-Optimising Algorithms on Polarisation in the Public Sphere , Samuel Caveen
No 244 Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Examining How Representation and Accessibility Impact Each Other With Relation to Visual Impairment , Rebecca Sophie Brahde
No 243 Narrating Economics and The Social Vision of a $100 Billion Fund: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Financial Media Representation of Softbank’s Venture Capital Investments in Digital Technology , Carl Bakenhus
No 242 Look Back in Rebellion: Radical Transparency As Refusal of Surveillance , Beatrice Bacci
No 241 The Quantified (Female) Self: Examining the Conceptualisation of Female Health, Selfhood and Embodiment in Fitbit Strategic Communication Campaigns , Jourdan Webb
No 240 Transitioning from Analogue to Digital Broadcast: A Case Of Communicative Inequality , Boikhutso Tsikane
No 239 “Won’t somebody please think of the children?” A Critical Discourse Analysis of Representations of the Figure of the Child in Western Media Coverage of the Yemeni Conflict , Nadine Talaat
No 238 Embodying Disability: Problematising Empathy in Immersive Experiences of Non-Normative Bodies , Pablo Agüera Reneses
No 237 Democratising Bridge or Elite Medium: An investigation into political podcast adoption and the relationship with cognitive social capital , Steve Rayson
No 236 Manufacturing Consent: An Investigation of the Press Support Towards the US Administration Prior to US-led Airstrikes in Syria , Malavika Mysore
No 235 Intercultural dialogue, ordinary justice and indigenous justice in Bolivia: Between challenges, possibilities or utopias , Johanna Lechat
No 234 When a Woman Meets a Woman: Comparing the Use of Negativity of Female Candidates in Single and Mixed-Gender Televised Debates , Emil Støvring Lauritsen
No 233 “Let me tell you how I see things”: The place of Brexit and the Entente Cordiale in Macron’s strategic narrative of and for France on the international scene , Maud-Lily Lardenois-Macocco
No 232 The Pleasures of Solitude? A qualitative analysis of young Chinese women’s daily-life vlog viewing practices , Yue Jin
No 231 Hegemonic Femininity: A Laughing Matter? A Critical Discourse Analysis of Contemporary Stand-Up Comedy in the United States on the Issue of Female Reproductive Rights , Isabella Hastings
No 230 Nice People Take Drugs: An investigation into the communicative strategies of drug policy reform organisations in the United Kingdom from a social movement perspective , André Belchior Gomes
No 229 The Branded Muslim Woman: A Qualitative Study into the Symbolic Boundaries Negotiated around the Portrayal of Muslim Women in Brand Cultures , Nuha Fayaz
No 228 The Uncertain Decorum of Online Identification: Study in Qualitative Interviews , Samuel DiBella
No 227 Decentring Eurocentrism in Communication Scholarship: A Discursive Analysis of resistance in influential communication journals , Sara Demas
No 226 From Asthetic Criticism to News Reporting: Rethinking the concept of Ecstatic News through the Lens of French Print Cultural Journalism , Elisa Covo
No 225 Datafication of Music Streaming Services: A qualitative investigation into the technological transformations of music consumption in the age of big data , Jingwen Chen
No 224 Transnational, Gendered, and Popular Music in the Arab World: A Content Analysis of a Decade (2010-2019) , Dana J. Bibi
No 223 We the Ragpickers: A case-study of participatory video and counterhegemony , Suyash Barve
No 222 Audience Engagement with Ten Years and the Imagination of Hong Kong Identity: Between Text, Context and Audience , Zhi-Nan Rebecca Zhang
No 221 Straightening out Same Sex Marriage for ‘all’ Australians: A content analysis study of prejudices in Australia's campaign for marriage equality ,Tate Soller
No 220 In Search for ‘Liveliness’: Experimenting with Co-Ocurrence Analysis Using #GDPR on Twitter , Sameeh Selim
No 219 ¿Dónde está mi gente? A qualitative analysis of the role of Latinos in the context of the Hillary for America 2016 presidential campaign , Andrea P. Terroba Rodríguez
No 218 Red, White and Blue for Who? A critical discourse analysis of mainstream media coverage of Colin Kaepernick and Take a Knee , Kim M Reynolds
No 217 ‘Algorithmic Bias’ through the Media Lens: A Content Analysis of the Framing of Discourse , Rocío Izar Oyarzun Peralta
No 216 Civic State of Mind: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Celebrity Language on Citizenship and Democracy , Hannah Menchhoff
No 215 Encoding the Social: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Mark Zuckerberg's Construction of Mediated Sociality , Sam McGeachy
No 214 White for White: An Exploration of Gay Racism on the World's Most Popular Platform for Gay and Bisexual Men , Aubrey T. A. Maslen
No 213 Agent of Change? Malaysian Millenials' Social Media Consumption and Political Knowledge, Participation and Voting in the 2018 General Election , ZiQing Low
No 212 The Netflix Phenomenon in India: A qualitative enquiry into the urban Indian youth's engagement with Netflix , Richa Sarah George
No 211 Do the ‘Rich’ Get Richer? Exploring the Associations between Social Media Use and Online and Offline Political Participation Activities among Kenyan Youth , Eric Gatobu Ndubi
No 210 The Weinstein Effect and mediated non-apologies: Evaluating the role of #MeToo public apologies in western rape culture , Eleanor Dierking
No 209 ‘No Script At All’. A Study of Cultural Context and Audience Perceptions of Authenticity in Reality Television , Yun Ting Choo
No 208 “It’s funny ‘cause it’s true”. A critical discourse analysis on new political satire on television in the United States , Darren Chan
No 207 In a Mediated Society, Can Indigenous Knowledge Survive? A Network Ethnography Examining the Influence of Internet Use on Indigenous Herbal Knowledge Circulation in a Remote Yao Community , Anran Wang
No 206 Beauty and the Blogger: The Impact of Instagram Bloggers on Ideals of Beauty and Self-esteem , Sanjana Ahuja
No 205 Memories of Babri: Competing Discourses and contrasting constructions of a media event , Sanaya Chandar
No 204 Habitus, Social Space and Media Representation: The ‘Romantic’ Contemporary Taiwanese ‘Wenyi Qingnian’ Discourse in the Local Lifestyle Magazine ‘One Day’ , Hoi Yee Chau
No 203 Stories Untold? A qualitative analysis uncovering the representation of girls as victims of conflict in the global south , Tessa Venizelos
No 202 What is the Norm? A study of heteronormative representations in Bollywood , Saachi Bhatia
No 201 Live Streaming and its Audiences in China: Making sense of authenticity , Qisi Zhang
No 200 Berniebros and Vagina Voters: Content Analysis of Gendered Facebook Communication in the 2016 U.S. Democratic Presidential Primary , Meredith Epstein
No 199 ‘Othering’ the ‘Left-Behind’? A Critical Discourse Analysis of the representation of Leave voters in British broadsheets’ coverage of the EU referendum , Louise S. Thommessen.
No 198 Social Media as Civic Deliberation Space: A content analysis study of the public discussion about the legalization of surrogacy on Weibo and Zhihu , Liu Yu
No 197 Stories of Dismantling the White Patriarchy: A thematic narrative analysis of the imagined futures in 2015 science fiction films , Kylie Courtney
No 196 Too Small to Succeed? The Case of #NoAlVotoElectrónico and the Limits of Connective Action , Juan Floreal Graña
No 195 How we remember and forget via Facebook: The Mediatization of Memento and Deletion Practices , Jacopo Villanacci
No 194 Mediated Japanophile? Media consumption and Chinese people’s attitudes towards Japan among different generations , Han Xiao
No 193 Digital Mediatization in the Lifestyle Sport Slacklining , Friedrich Enders
No 192 Recipe for Success: A qualitative investigation into the role of social capital in the gendered food blogosphere , Fiona Koch
No 191 Access and Beyond: An Intersectional Approach to Women’s Everyday Experiences with ICTs , Fatma Matin Khan
No 190 Not Manly Enough: A Quantitative Analysis of Gender Stereotypes in Mexican Political Advertising, 2010‐2016 , Enrique López Alonso
No 189 Loudspeaker Broadcasting as Community Radio: A qualitative analysis of loudspeaker broadcasting in contemporary rural China in the framework of alternative media Shutong Wang
No 188 21st Century Cholos Representations of Peruvian youth in the discourse of El Panfleto Esteban Bertarelli
No 187 Representations of Calendar Girls and An Ideology of Modernity in 1930s Republican Shanghai Yifan Song
No 186 Reality Television as a Neoliberal Technology of Citizenship? A Critical Discourse Analysis of Điều Ước Thứ Bảy Vu Anh Ngoc Nguyen
No 185 Truth on Trial: Indigenous News Media and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Tomas Borsa
No 184 No Place Like Home: Analysing Discursive Constructions of ‘Home’ in Canadian Mainstream Newspaper Coverage of the Elsipogtog Protest Brooklyn Tchozewski
No 183 Modiplomacy and Diaspower: The discursive construction of modernity and national identity in Narendra Modi’s communication with the Indian diaspora Saanya Gulati
No 182 “The centre must hold”: Partisan dealignment and the rise of the minor party at the 2015 general election Peter Carrol
No 181 ‘Rapefugees Not Welcome’. Ideological Articulations of Media Discourses on Migrants and Refugees in Europe: New Racism and Othering – A Critical Discourse Analysis Monica Ibrahim
No 180 Constructing Connectivity: A Qualitative Analysis of the Representation of the Connected and Unconnected Others in Facebook’s Internet.org Campaign Minji Lee
No 179 Space and Place: The Communication of Gentrification to Young People in Hackney Kimberley Brown
No 178 Adherence to the protest paradigm? An examination of Singapore’s news coverage of Speakers’ Corner protests from 2000 to 2015 Joann Tan
No 177 The system is rigged: A discursive analysis of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Jessica Cullen
No 176 An Examination of American Mainstream Media Discourse of Solidarity and Citizenship in the Reporting of the Black Lives Matter Campaign Eilis Yazdani
No 175 Are All Lives Valued? Worthy 'Us', Unworthy 'Others'. A Comparative Content Analysis of Global News Agencies’. Pictorial Representation of the Paris Attacks and the Beirut Bombings . Dokyum Kim
No 174 Imperial remains: A Critical Discourse Analysis of a Televised Retelling of the Portuguese Colonial Period Beatriz Serra
No 173 Unmasking USAID Pakistan’s Elite Stakeholder Discourses: Towards an Evaluation of the Agency’s Development Interventions Anum Pasha
No 172 Boundary Work between ‘Us’ and ‘Them’ Global News Agencies’ Double Standard on the Construction of Forced Migrants by Geographical Proximity Woo-chul Kim
No 171 Why Did Our Watchdog Fail? A Counter Perspective on the Media Coverage of the 2007 Financial Crisis Tran Thuy-Anh Huynh
No 170 Unmasking ‘Sidekick’ Masculinity: A Qualitative Investigation of How Asian-American Males View Emasculating Stereotypes in U.S. Media Steffi Lau
No 169 The Silence of the Lamb: Animals in Biopolitics and the Discourse of Ethical Evasion Sana Ali
No 168 The Tartan Other: A qualitative analysis of the visual framing of Alex Salmond and the Scottish National Party in the British Press Ross Alexander Longton
No 167 The Unmasking of Burmese Myth in Contemporary Thai Cinema Pimtong Boonyapataro
No 166 Neoliberal Capitalism, Transnationalism and Networked Individualism: Rethinking Social Class in International Student Mobility Nguyen Quynh Tram Doan
No 165 The New Media Elite: How has Participation been Enabled and Limited in Leaders Live Online Political Debates Matilde Giglio
No 164 Constructing a Sense of Place through New Media: A Case Study of Humans of New York Mariele O’Reilly
No 163 The failure of cosmopolitanism and the reinforcement of hierarchical news: managing the visibility of suffering throughout the Multimodal Analysis of the Charlie Hebdo versus the Baga terrorist attacks Maria Paola Pofi
No 162 Imagining (In)security: Towards Developing Critical Knowledges of Security in a Mediated Social World Kathryn Higgins
No 161 Tweens Logged In: How Social Norms and Media Literacy Relate to Children’s Usage of Social Media Kalina Asparouhova
No 160 Finding Ferguson: Geographic Scale in the United States’ National Nightly Network News John Ray
No 159 Solidarity as Irony: Audience Responses to Celebrity Advocacy Isabel Kuhn
No 158 Phantasmagoric Nationalism: State power and the diasporic imagination Felicia Wong
No 157 Investigating Music Consumption ‘Circuits of Practice’ Eva Tkavc Dubokovic
No 156 A complex history turned into a tale of reconciliation: A critical discourse analysis of Irish newspaper coverage of the Queen’s visit to the Republic of Ireland Ciara Spencer
No 155 Economic power of e-retailers via price discrimination in e-commerce: price discrimination’s impact on consumers’ choices and preferences and its position in relation to consumer power Arina Vlasova
No 154 Exploring the Boundaries of Crowd Creation: A study on the value of voice in neoliberal media culture Ana Ecaterina C. Tan
No 153 “Songs of Guilt”: When Generosity is to Blame - A Content Analysis of the Press and Social Media Reactions to U2’s “Songs of Innocence” Giveaway on iTunes Alessandro Volonté
No 152 Hybridity within Peer Production: The Power Negotiation of Chinese Fansub Groups Zongxiao Rong
No 151 Writing On the Wall: Conversations with Beirut's Street Artists Zeina Najjar
No 150 'Gaining Control with the Power of the Gun and Maintaining Control with the Power of the Pen': A Content Analysis of Framing the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) in the People's Daily Yuanyuan Liu
No 149 Let My Voices be Heard: A Qualitative Study of Migrant Workers' Strategies of Mediation Resistance in Contemporary China Yijun Chen
No 148 'Popular Politics': A Discourse Theory Analysis of Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa's TV/radio Program Citizen Link Veronica Leon Burch
No 147 A Comparative Analysis of Chinese, Western and African Media Discourse in the Representation of China's Expansion of Economic Engagements in Africa Tong Wei
No 146 Ideological Trafficking of God and the Other Sultana Haider
No 145 The Maasai and the Internet: Online Civil Participation and the Formation of a Civic Identity in Rural Kenya Stine Ringnes Wilhelmsen
No 144 Wood in Water Does Not a Crocodile Make: Migrants Virtual Place-making, Ontological Security and Cosmopolitanism in the Transnational Social Field Sheetal Kumar
No 143 Droning On: A Critical Analysis of American Policy and News Discourse on Drone Strikes Sadaf Khan
No 142 The Impact of Mass Media Sentiments on Returns and Volatility in Asset Markets: Evidence from Algorithmic Content Analysis Panu Kuuluvainen
No 141 Problematising the Self-Representation of Race and Gender in Vines: Who has the Last Laugh? Shaikha Nurfarah Mattar
No 140 Corporate Public Apologies, or Capitalism in Other Words Nina M Chung
No 139 Agenda Setting and Framing in the UK Energy Prices Debate Nicholas Davies
No 138 'It is of Inestimable Benefit': Communicating American Science Policy in the Post-Cold War Era Mercedes Wilby
No 137 Beyond Twenty Cents: The Impact of the Representation of Violence on the Coverage of the Brazilian Protests of June 2013 by the Mass Media Margarida Gorecki Telles
No 136 Framing Françafrique: Neo-colonial Framing Practices in Le Monde 's Coverage of the French Military Interventions in Mali and the Central African Republic Lucie Gagniarre
No 135 Representing Persia: A Discourse Analysis of The American Print Media's Coverage of Iran Kyle Bowen
No 134 From Fat Cats to Cool Cats: CEOs and Micro-celebrity Practices on Twitter Julia Regina Austmann
No 133 Critically Imagining Ineternet Governance: A Content Analysis of the Marco Civil da Internet Public Consultation João Carlos Magalhães
No 132 The Ambiguous ICT: Investigating How Tablet Users Relate to and Interact with Their Device Jessica Blank
No 131 Threats, Parasites and Others: The Visual Framing of Roma Migrants in the British Press Grace Waters
No 130 Fifty Years of Negativity: An Assessment of Negative Compaigning in Swedish Parlimentary Election Campaigns 1956-2006 Gustav Gidenstam
No 129 The Talking Dog: Representations of Self and Others in Japanese Advertising Eryk Salvaggio
No 128 The Selfie Protest: A Visual Analysis of Activism in the Digital Age Clare Sheehan
No 127 Negativity and Australian Political Discourse: A Case Study of the Australian Liberal Party's 2013 Election Television Advertising Clare Creegan
No 126 What are You Laughing at? A Social Semiotic Analysis of Ironic Racial Stereotypes in Chappelle's Show Cindy Ma
No 125 Reconsidering Agenda Setting and Intermedia Agenda Setting from a Global Perspective: A Cross-National Comparative Agenda Setting Test Christoph Rosenthal
No 124 Big Data Exclusions and Disparate Impact: Investigating the Exclusionary Dynamics of Big Data Phenomenon Charly Gordon
No 123 Tabloidisation of the Norwegian News Media: A Quantitative Analysis of Print and Online Newspaper Platforms Celine Storstad Gran
No 122 Red, White and Afro Caribbean: A Qualitative Study of Afro-Caribbean American Identity During the Olympic Games Ashley Gordon
No 121 The City without Gates: Facebook and the Social Surface Andrew Crosby
No 120 Yes I Do Mind: Constructing Discourses of Resistance against Racial Microaggressions on Tumblr Abigail Kang
No 119 Tensions in Urban Street Art: a Visual Analysis of the Online Media Coverage of Banksy Slave Labour Elisabetta Crovara
No 118 The Sticky Case of Sticky Data: An Examination of the Rationale, Legality, and Implementation of a Right to Data Portability Under European Competition Law Paul T. Moura
No 117 Pinning Pretty: A Qualitative Study of Pinterest Users' Practices and Views Elizabeth White
No 116 Comparing Perceptions of NGOs and CSR: Audience Evaluations and Interpretations of Communications Gitanjali Co Devan Anderson
No 115 What is Web-Populism doing to Italian Politics? The Discursive Construction of 'Grillini' vis-a-vis the Antagonist Other Isadora Arredondo
No 114 Yellow Skin-White Prison: A Content Analysis of French Television News Broadcast Ngo Bossoro
No 113 A Revisionist Turkish Identity: Power, Religion and Ethnicity as Ottoman Identity in the Turkish series Muhteşem Yüzyıl Esra Doğramacı
No 112 Behind the Curtain: Women's Representations in Contemporary Hollywood Reema Dutt
No 111 From Liberal Conservative to Conservative Conservative : David Cameron's Political Branding Ignacio José Antonio López Escarcena
No 110 'Micropolitics' and Communication: An Exploratory Study on Student Representatives' Communication Repertoires in University Governance Nora Kroeger
No 109 Ideology No More: A Discourse of Othering in Canadian Mainstream Newspaper Representations of the Idle No More Movement Christian Ledwell
No 108 Media Representation of Nationalism and Immigration: A Case Study of Jamie's Great Britain Xin Liang
No 107 You're Not Alone : Virtual Communities, Online Relationships & Modern Identities in the Military Spouse & Blogging Community Elizabeth M. Lockwood
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No 76 In what Forms and Patterns does Inequality Exist in the Weibosphere? Xiao Han
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Text description provided by the architects. The building hosts a new audiovisual pole that offers a powerful tool allowing a synergy between RTBF Charleroi and Télésambre. It works the duality of the program between the bubbling workplace of the newsrooms and the will of transparency of the media towards their public.
The project includes a 200m² TV studio, a 70m2 visual studio for radio and television recordings, and a duplex space hosting the newsrooms of the two editorial offices and the offices of Télésambre. It is located in a cavity on the recently renovated Place de la Digue.
It is crossed by a passage allowing the staff to reach the RTBF headquarters and the Place Saint Fiacre.
Neither a public monument nor a simple tertiary architecture. An architecture that would not deny the expression of its particular program without losing sight of the fact that the very role of this program is to clarify the reading of its environment rather than to cover the noise.
The project is characterized by the generosity of the interior spaces and the care given to the design of the façade on the Place de la Digue. The sober and largely glazed design gives a view of the company's operations, including the studio dedicated to the Radio and the TéléSambre news program located on the façade.
The building meets very high energy criteria and has the Breeam Very Good label.
Address: charleroi, belgium.
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Ukraine's foreign ministry describes "Russian propaganda" that its forces are planning to use dirty bombs or attack nuclear power plants in the Kursk region are "crazy". Russia's defence ministry claims rockets shipped from a Western nation were used by Kyiv to destroy a bridge in Kursk.
Saturday 17 August 2024 15:02, UK
Security and defence correspondent Deborah Haynes was at the site of a missile strike in Sumy city this morning.
Residents described being awoken by a huge explosion.
One said the blinds across her window saved her from glass shattering as a result of the blast.
Watch more below...
Washington appears to be effectively blocking the UK from permitting Kyiv to fire Storm Shadow missiles inside Russia, The Times reports.
The UK has been waiting for US approval for over a month, a government source said.
The British government wants Ukraine to use the weapons as they wish, but consensus is required between the US, France and another unnamed NATO country.
A government source stressed to The Times that the UK was not blaming the US for any delay.
Britain was the first country to publicly supply Kyiv with long-range cruise missiles.
While it has permitted the use of British tanks and other weapons on Russian soil, restrictions remain on the missiles.
A British source previously said Ukrainian troops are thought to have used British Challenger 2 tanks inside Kursk.
Ukraine's success in Kursk has shown the West it does not need to take an incremental approach to Russia, says Ukrainian MP Oleksiy Goncharenko.
Kyiv's allies need to approve the use of Western weapons to strike deep inside its territory, he said.
He added the incremental style of Western support has only drawn out the war.
"Watch the Russian reaction. For more than one week, for the first time since the Second World War, Russian territory is occupied. And what is the reaction? Just some mumbling from Putin," said Mr Goncharenko.
"I hope that this will help us to convince our allies that Ukraine is capable of big successes and to win this war, so finally our hands will be untied," he said, adding Ukraine needs permission to use the UK's Storm Shadow missiles deep into Russian territory.
"I think this incremental style is very, very bad."
He continued: "Russia only understands one language, the language of force, and Ukraine has shown it now."
Kyiv has dismissed "insane Russian propaganda" alleging that Ukraine plans to carry out nuclear attacks.
Moscow has accused Ukraine - without providing any evidence - of gearing up to attack Kursk nuclear power plant and developing a "dirty bomb"; an explosive used to scatter radioactive waste.
The Russian defence ministry said Ukraine would blame Moscow and that it would respond harshly in the event of such an attack.
The allegations were "dangerous lies" and Ukraine officially denies them, said Ukrainian foreign office spokesperson Heorhii Tykhyi.
"We are witnessing another surge of insane Russian propaganda."
He continued: "Ukraine has neither the intention nor the ability to carry out any such actions. Russia must stop spreading dangerous lies.
"Ukraine has always been and remains a loyal member of the NPT (Non-proliferation treaty).
"We do not have any 'dirty bombs' and do not plan to acquire them."
Vladimir Putin made similar allegations shortly before launching the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Then, in March the same year, Moscow alleged Ukraine was going to use a dirty bomb. Neither claims were borne out.
Russia also alleged a Ukrainian drone dropped an explosive charge on a road outside the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine this morning.
Its Russian management posted an image to Telegram showing several men in IAEA jackets surrounding a dent in the road the width and depth of a pothole.
Both Russia and Ukraine have accused eachother of close calls with drones and rockets at the power plant since Russia occupied it.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy says Ukrainian forces have been "strengthened" in Kursk and the size of "stabilised" territory expanded.
He said there has been a "replenishment of the exchange fund for our state" - a phrase often used by Kyiv officials to refer to the number of captured prisoners of war to be swapped.
The president thanked his forces for taking Russian prisoners and "thereby bringing the release of our soldiers and civilians held by Russia closer".
Ukraine's offensive in Kursk will show the West that escalating attacks against Russia is "nothing to be afraid of", says a former foreign policy adviser to Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Igor Novikov says Kyiv is calling Russia's bluff and giving Ukraine a chance to avoid defeat by switching from "meat grinder" warfare to an asymmetrical one.
And putting Ukrainian troops on Russian soil has major psychological upsides, he added.
"The main goal of this is to destabilise the Russian elites. Russia is not a monolith. Obviously there's Putin on top, but there are many different power players there and hopefully this will awaken some of them to the fact that Putin has gone too far."
Turning to the Russian population, he says: "Now the war has come to them.
"It's a wake up call to them to think and seriously consider what they stand for and what their government stands for."
Back in Ukraine, the move has been "magical" for morale.
"People got really fatigued of this meat grinder-style war that had no bright light at the end of the tunnel.
"Now Russia's on the back foot and people are happy about it."
Mr Novikov says there can be "no victory against Russia" through conventional warfare.
"Russia is way bigger, has way more resources, and without full support from the West, like all-in kind of support, Ukraine would have lost eventually."
But asymmetrical warfare gives Ukraine a chance of avoiding defeat, he said.
"This offensive was going to put pressure on Putin. It's going to show the West that escalating against Russia is actually a winning strategy and nothing to be afraid of. That Russia is bluffing most of the time."
We've more information on the Russian attack on Sumy city that we reported earlier this morning.
Pictures show approximately 10 cars ablaze after strikes outside several apartment buildings.
Some 41 explosions were recorded across the Sumy region, according to its regional military administration, caused by missiles, airstrikes, drones, tank shells and artillery.
"Russians continue to commit crimes against the civilian population of Sumy Oblast, directing rockets at residential buildings in populated areas," the Sumy administration posted on Telegram.
Vladimir Putin will be feeling "angry and potentially humiliated" by Ukraine's surprise invasion of Kursk, says military analyst Sean Bell.
He will not accept any negotiations involving the occupied territory, despite Ukrainian ambitions, and will instead deal with it "ruthlessly", Bell said.
But for now, Putin has two choices: play to Ukraine's agenda and bolster Kursk's defences with some of his elite units from the frontline in the Donbas, or move fresh troops down from the Lithuanian border and up from Crimea.
"But none of those troops will be battle-hardened and you only have to look back to the Second World War, that Blitzkrieg worked because they had battle-hardened troops," said Bell.
"They will be no match for Ukrainian forces on the front foot."
He continued: "Ukraine probably didn't expect to get this far. They put a thousand soldiers in, probably 20 tanks, and then found they were rolling in almost unopposed and they've capitalised on that."
Ukraine also has two options: try to hold on to parts of Kursk and risk being defeated there, or eventually withdraw, leaving Putin guessing which part of Russia's longer border will be hit next and forcing him to reinforce it, thereby easing pressure on the frontline, Bell explained.
"It seems to be an absolute masterstroke," said the analyst.
"Momentum, initiative, is everything on the frontline and they've seized that. They've shown that Russia isn't in control of everything on their front foot. And just imagine the effect on morale of the troops on the frontline."
However it's important to note that Kyiv has seized just 0.003% of Russian territory, compared to the 20% of Ukraine controlled by Moscow, he added.
" Although people are talking about it being a bargaining chip in some sort of negotiation, I think that's really unlikely. Putin will not want to accept any form of negotiation around something like this. He is going to deal with it. He will deal with it ruthlessly. The question is when, and when does he ease pressure on the frontline?"
A Ukrainian presidential adviser has said the Kursk incursion was required to convince Moscow to start "fair" peace talks.
Mykhailo Podolyak said Ukraine had no interest in occupying Kursk but it had to force Russia to start talks on Kyiv's terms.
"We need to inflict significant tactical defeats on Russia," Mr Podolyak said.
"In the Kursk region, we clearly see how the military tool is objectively used to convince the Russian Federation to enter into a fair negotiation process."
Senior Ukrainian officials have repeatedly said Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity should be fully respected in any peace agreement, while Vladimir Putin has demanded it give up a fifth of its territory and any aspirations to join NATO.
Former Russian president and deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev has also said Russia would continue to capture Ukrainian land after any truce.
The Ukrainian invasion of Kursk has turned the "narrative of the war on its head", says security and defence editor Deborah Haynes.
Kyiv will be hoping that its capture of land and Russian prisoners of war will put pressure on Vladimir Putin should the time come for peace talks, resulting in land swaps, she said.
But the "jury is still out" on the impacts of "this stunning move".
Haynes said Ukraine is "hoping to draw Russian forces from frontline positions inside Ukraine".
"While there is evidence of that happening to a degree, there's also evidence, at least from Russian claims, that their troops in, for example, the east of Ukraine, are managing to gain ground."
What's the latest from inside Kursk?
"It looks as though they [Ukraine] are trying to sever the various routes into Kursk region," said Haynes.
Just as they destroyed bridges and roads in their own territory at the beginning of the war, Ukrainian forces are destroying Russian infrastructure to stop supplies reaching Moscow's soldiers in Kursk.
It is the same the military tactics that proved successful in pushing Russian forces out of northern Ukraine, said Haynes.
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After a deadly stabbing at a children’s event in northwestern England, an array of online influencers, anti-Muslim extremists and fascist groups have stoked unrest, experts say.
By Esther Bintliff and Eve Sampson
Esther Bintliff reported from London, and Eve Sampson from New York.
Violent unrest has erupted in several towns and cities in Britain in recent days, and further disorder broke out on Saturday as far-right agitators gathered in demonstrations around the country.
The violence has been driven by online disinformation and extremist right-wing groups intent on creating disorder after a deadly knife attack on a children’s event in northwestern England, experts said.
A range of far-right factions and individuals, including neo-Nazis, violent soccer fans and anti-Muslim campaigners, have promoted and taken part in the unrest, which has also been stoked by online influencers .
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has vowed to deploy additional police officers to crack down on the disorder. “This is not a protest that has got out of hand,” he said on Thursday. “It is a group of individuals who are absolutely bent on violence.”
Here is what we know about the unrest and some of those involved.
The first riot took place on Tuesday evening in Southport, a town in northwestern England, after a deadly stabbing attack the previous day at a children’s dance and yoga class. Three girls died of their injuries, and eight other children and two adults were wounded.
The suspect, Axel Rudakubana , was born in Britain, but in the hours after the attack, disinformation about his identity — including the false claim that he was an undocumented migrant — spread rapidly online . Far-right activists used messaging apps including Telegram and X to urge people to take to the streets.
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Did anyone say Epic Job Expo?
The largest graduate recruitment fair in South Africa, hosted by the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Careers Service, was back with a bang on Wednesday, 7 August, in the Sports Centre on upper campus. This time, the event drew 90 prospective employers armed and ready to recruit top talent from Africa’s top university.
And UCT students showed up in their droves to leverage the opportunity. With approximately 4 000 opportunities on offer, including bursaries, internships, graduate programmes, and full-time jobs, how could they not? The expo catered to the employment needs of all faculties and joined a diverse range of employers and job-seeking students and graduates under one roof.
“We are thrilled to bring together students and industry partners in a vibrant, socio-cultural education setting. With nearly 100 companies participating in the Epic Job Expo, we are excited to offer a diverse array of local and international opportunities to UCT students across all levels,” said Naziema Jappie, the interim director of Careers Service, located in the Centre for Higher Education Development (CHED).
The one-day-only event, which kicked off at 09:00 and concluded at 16:00, included a curriculum vitae (CV) lab where students could drop in and get advice on how to structure their CVs; a jobs wall, which included a list of jobs from exhibitors, as well as other employers who could not make the event; and a chill zone, where students could take a break if the expo got too epic.
World-class event
David Buckham, the chief executive officer of Monocle Solutions – a management consulting firm that specialises in banking and insurance, and the event’s platinum sponsor – said the firm was delighted to be part of a world-class event, which showcased just how many opportunities across various fields are available to young South Africans. Buckham said Monocle strives for excellence in all its business endeavours and can only achieve this by employing exceptional people.
“We look for individuals who possess a special kind of drive, intelligence, empathy and passion for learning. We believe that UCT students embody these qualities,” Buckham said.
S’phesihle Mbambo, a graduate and youth recruitment consultant at Shoprite, agreed.
Mbambo said Shoprite has been a returning vendor for the past few years and enjoys being part of the event and engaging with UCT students. This year, she said, the team was overwhelmed by the number of students who visited their stand within the first hour of the expo. She said students’ enthusiasm, their well-prepared questions, innovative thinking, curiosity and energy really stood out.
“Students are curious. They know what they want and they’re asking the right questions. They are excited to be here, and we can easily feed from that,” she said.
An opportunity to engage
For the hundreds of students in attendance, the event was more than just some time away from class and the books. It served as an opportunity to connect and network with potential employers and get a sense of what they look for in an ideal employee.
Sibonelelo Dlamini, a third-year computer science and mathematics student, who attended the expo for the first time last year, said he was excited to be back again and brought a group of friends with him. He described the event as “top class” because it provides students with the platform to engage with employers one-on-one and receive information that’s not necessarily available on their websites.
“I appreciate this platform because it gives us the exposure and an opportunity to talk to people, to ask our questions and get answers about the things we’re curious and unsure about. It’s also a good time to understand different businesses’ preferences because at the end of the day, it’s not just about the fact that I have the degree, certain companies have other preferences as well,” he said.
Likewise, Lupumlo Ndzele, a third-year electrical engineering student, who only heard about the expo by chance that morning, said he enjoyed visiting the different stands to wrap his head around their offering. And the expo comes at the right time – as he starts thinking about job opportunities, which he will be eligible for once he graduates.
“I’m here to see what it’s all about and to network. I hear there are internships on offer, and it would be great to get a foot in the door like that,” he said.
Other Epic Job Expo sponsors include McKinsey & Company (gold), the Auditor General of South Africa (silver), Rain Chartered Accountants (CV lab) and Procter & Gamble (chill zone).
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a central position of the city of Chur: the RTR Media Centre." Content The RTR Media Centre will include all the necessary facilities for its activities of production, editing broadcasting and management, plus the local delegation of the DRS (Radio und Fersehen der deutschen Schweiz) and of the RTSI (Radio e Televisione di lingua italiana).
Conservative Media's Coverage of Coronavirus on YouTube: A Qualitative Analysis of Media Effects on Consumers, Michael J. Layer. Theses/Dissertations from 2019 PDF. Problem Chain Recognition Effect and CSR Communication: Examining the Impact of Issue Salience and Proximity on Environmental Communication Behaviors, Nandini Bhalla. PDF
The thesis attempts to answer the question of whether the media led or followed the democratization processes that were underway in the region by concentrating on print media. Through a comparative content analysis of two official newspapers in each country of analysis between 1989 to1990, it is suggested that the media assumed an active and ...
The vehicle chosen to demonstrate the thesis is a Media Centre - a multi-tenanted complex for media-related small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). These companies comprise a wide range of professionals who are highly mobile and require a variety of work environments. As it is crucial for them to always stay at the frontier of technological ...
A Concise Guide to Writing a Thesis or Dissertation by Halyna M. Kornuta; Ron W. Germaine. ISBN: 9780367174583. Publication Date: 2019-04-24. A Concise Guide to Writing a Thesis or Dissertationprovides clear, succinct, and intentional guidelines about organizing and writing a thesis or dissertation.
List of dissertations / theses on the topic 'Communication / Media Center'. Scholarly publications with full text pdf download. Related research topic ideas.
The mass media represent a powerful societal institution that reflects and shapes the social, cultural and political world. Within health research, media content analysis is an increasingly popular tool for examining how the media represent, and potentially influence, audiences' understandings of health. This submission comprises eight published papers analysing UK news media representations ...
Arkhitektura media-tsentrov: dis. kand. Arkhitektury [Media centre architecture. Jan 2006; p. (rus) ... PhD Thesis Engenharia Electrotécnica e de Computadores. Faculdade de Engenharia ...
This thesis is a literature review that focuses on the negative effects that social media use has on psychological well-being. Past research has shown positive effects from social media as well as negative effects. ... Media narratives are an extremely powerful communication tool that affect society, culture, and individuals in many ways. As ...
These MSc dissertations have been selected by the editor and deputy editor of the Media@LSE Working Paper Series and consequently, are not the responsibility of the Working Paper Series Editorial Board. 2022-23. No 313 The App Keeps the Score: Period-Tracking Apps, Self-Empowerment and the Self as Enterprise, Martina Sardelli.
The impact of social media in conserving African Languages amongst youth in Limpopo Province. Malatji, Edgar Julius (2019) This study focuses on the impact of social media towards conserving African languages, particularly Sepedi, Tshivenda and Xitsonga. Social media are given attention to explore their impact in conserving African languages ...
The rapidly shifting digital landscape is reshaping our society, our economy, and our democracy. The Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy (MTD) at McGill University is an interdisciplinary research centre dedicated to understanding and responding to the social, political, and policy challenges posed by our evolving information ecosystem and digital technologies.
Completed in 2017 in Charleroi, Belgium. Images by Maxime Delvaux. The building hosts a new audiovisual pole that offers a powerful tool allowing a synergy between RTBF Charleroi and Télésambre.
In this thesis, I explore recent trends in social media through models and experiments of user behavior, platform algorithms and incentives, and policy initiatives. I focus on the social consequences of new communication technologies, their intended and unintended societal consequences, and how to steer them in more socially beneficial ...
The theory of media dependency states that for societies in states of crisis or instability, citizens are more reliant on mass media for information and as such are more susceptible to their effects. ... to measure the audience of foreign media broadcasts. Bulgaria: conducted by CSD (Centre for the Study of Democracy); face-to-face interviews ...
Media Centre. Prizes. Guidelines. Journal. MyEASD Login. Contact. Home › Media Centre › Programme at a Glance. About us. The aims of the Association are to encourage and support research in the field of diabetes, the rapid diffusion of acquired knowledge and to facilitate its application.
The media centre's studio hardware unit allows a TV broadcast of the event in full HD & 4K, multi-track video recording, live broadcasting online, as well as the use of video-conferencing systems such as Cisco, Webex, Skype, Zoom & others. Press conferences. Press conferences with a set of interesting speakers, exclusive content, opportunities ...
(between librarians and media educators, between mass media outfits and academic organisations, etc.). With this context, the International Conference Media and Information Literacy for Knowledge Societies that was held in Moscow on 24-28 June 2012 aimed at raising public awareness of the significance, scale and topicality of the tasks of media and
An ally of the Russian president says Ukraine's invasion of Kursk has left the planet on the brink of a "third world war", as Alexander Lukashenko calls on Kyiv and Moscow to end the conflict.
Eyewitness videos shared on social media showed flames and thick black smoke engulfing the entirety of a large two-story structure in front of an empty parking lot.. Russia's state-run news ...
Russia, Moscow Region - August 13, 2024: Igor Kirillov, Commaner of the Russian NBC Protection Troops, gives an interview to the media during the Army 2024 International Military and Technical ...
With effect from October 2024, Oman Air will resume its flights to three winter season destinations, which are Zurich (starting 5 October), Malé (starting 27 October) and Moscow (starting 29 ...
Other far-right agitators spread information about the protest on social media, including British Movement, a neo-Nazi group. Images of the protests examined by Hope not Hate showed some people ...
The largest graduate recruitment fair in South Africa, hosted by the University of Cape Town's (UCT) Careers Service, was back with a bang on Wednesday, 7 August, in the Sports Centre on upper campus. This time, the event drew 90 prospective employers armed and ready to recruit top talent from Africa's top university.