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Titre : The business of media : Corporate media and the public interest Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : David Croteau, Auteur ; William Hoynes, Auteur Mention d'édition : 2nd edition Editeur : Thousand Oaks [USA] : Pine Forge Press Année de publication : 2006 Importance : 315 p. Format : 23 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-4129-1315-7 Prix : 33€ Langues : Anglais Catégories : ECONOMIE - Aspects Généraux
MEDIAS
MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects générauxTags : medias démocratie service public concurrence fusion regulation aspect économique éducation aux médias citoyenneté journalisme aspect socio-culturel télécommunications Index. décimale : 338 Industrie (production) - Aspect économique Résumé : The Business of Media presents the critical, yet careful, analysis of the rapidly changing media industry that students need in order to get behind the headlines and understand our increasingly media-saturated society. The writing is clear and jargon-free, accessible to undergraduates without requiring a background in economics.
Key Features:
Examines the basic dynamics that underlie the changing media industry and the possible influence these changes are having on society (society's insatiable quest for profits and democratic society's need for a media system that serves the public interest)
Draws from both social and economic theory to create two conceptual frameworks: market model, and public sphere model
Focus on devlopments in the last decade to major media industry trends mapping structural organization, the rise of media conglomerates, and their new strategies
Assesses the impact of recent changes in the media industry using the public sphere model on social and political life
Offers clear, concise, jargon-free writing accessible to all students and professionals without an economics background
(Présentation de l'éditeur sur son site ; http://www.pineforge.com/)Note de contenu : Grandes lignes de la table des matières :
Introduction : The new media industry and an old dilemna
Part I : Profits and the public interest: theoretical and historical context
1. Media, markets, and the public sphere
2. The rise and (de)regulation of the media industry
Part II : industry structure and corporate strategy : explaining the rise of media conglomerates
3. The new media giants : changing industry structure
4. Strategies of the new media giants
Part III : Neglecting the public interest : media conglomerates and the public sphere
5. How business strategy shapes media content
6. How the media business influences society
7. Choosing the future : citizens, policy, and the public interest
Appendix : Select online resources for studying the media industry, media policy, and media education
Part III : Neglecting the public interest: media conglomerates and the public sphereEn ligne : http://www.pineforge.com The business of media : Corporate media and the public interest [texte imprimé] / David Croteau, Auteur ; William Hoynes, Auteur . - 2nd edition . - Thousand Oaks ("An Imprint of Sage Publications, Inc", USA) : Pine Forge Press, 2006 . - 315 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN : 978-1-4129-1315-7 : 33€
Langues : Anglais
Catégories : ECONOMIE - Aspects Généraux
MEDIAS
MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects générauxTags : medias démocratie service public concurrence fusion regulation aspect économique éducation aux médias citoyenneté journalisme aspect socio-culturel télécommunications Index. décimale : 338 Industrie (production) - Aspect économique Résumé : The Business of Media presents the critical, yet careful, analysis of the rapidly changing media industry that students need in order to get behind the headlines and understand our increasingly media-saturated society. The writing is clear and jargon-free, accessible to undergraduates without requiring a background in economics.
Key Features:
Examines the basic dynamics that underlie the changing media industry and the possible influence these changes are having on society (society's insatiable quest for profits and democratic society's need for a media system that serves the public interest)
Draws from both social and economic theory to create two conceptual frameworks: market model, and public sphere model
Focus on devlopments in the last decade to major media industry trends mapping structural organization, the rise of media conglomerates, and their new strategies
Assesses the impact of recent changes in the media industry using the public sphere model on social and political life
Offers clear, concise, jargon-free writing accessible to all students and professionals without an economics background
(Présentation de l'éditeur sur son site ; http://www.pineforge.com/)Note de contenu : Grandes lignes de la table des matières :
Introduction : The new media industry and an old dilemna
Part I : Profits and the public interest: theoretical and historical context
1. Media, markets, and the public sphere
2. The rise and (de)regulation of the media industry
Part II : industry structure and corporate strategy : explaining the rise of media conglomerates
3. The new media giants : changing industry structure
4. Strategies of the new media giants
Part III : Neglecting the public interest : media conglomerates and the public sphere
5. How business strategy shapes media content
6. How the media business influences society
7. Choosing the future : citizens, policy, and the public interest
Appendix : Select online resources for studying the media industry, media policy, and media education
Part III : Neglecting the public interest: media conglomerates and the public sphereEn ligne : http://www.pineforge.com Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 1000601 4 CRO BUS Livre Bibliothèque Documentaires Disponible
Titre : The Data Journalism Handbook : How journalists can use data to improve the news Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Jonathan Gray, Editeur scientifique ; Lilianna Bounegru, Editeur scientifique ; Lucy Chambers, Editeur scientifique Editeur : Open Knowledge Foundation Année de publication : 2012 Note générale : The Data Journalism Handbook can be freely copied, redistributed and reused under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Contributors to the Data Journalism Handbook retain copyright over their respective contributions, and have kindly agreed to release them under the terms of this license. Langues : Anglais Catégories : MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects généraux Tags : journalisme communication Index. décimale : 070.4 Journalisme Résumé : "What is data journalism? I could answer, simply, that it is journalism done with data. But that doesn’t help much.
Both ‘data’ and ‘journalism’ are troublesome terms. Some people think of ‘data’ as any collection of numbers, most likely gathered on a spreadsheet. 20 years ago, that was pretty much the only sort of data that journalists dealt with. But we live in a digital world now, a world in which almost anything can be — and almost everything is — described with numbers.
Your career history, 300,000 confidential documents, who knows who in your circle of friends can all be (and are) described with just two numbers: zeroes, and ones. Photos, video and audio are all described with the same two numbers: zeroes and ones. Murders, disease, political votes, corruption and lies: zeroes and ones.
What makes data journalism different to the rest of journalism? Perhaps it is the new possibilities that open up when you combine the traditional ‘nose for news’ and ability to tell a compelling story, with the sheer scale and range of digital information now available."Note de contenu : Sommaire :
Front Matter
For the Great Unnamed
Contributor List
What This Book Is (And What It Isn’t)
The Handbook At A Glance
Introduction
What Is Data Journalism?
Why Journalists Should Use Data
Why Is Data Journalism Important?
Some Favorite Examples
Data Journalism in Perspective
In The Newsroom
The ABC’s Data Journalism Play
Data Journalism at the BBC
How the News Apps Team at Chicago Tribune Works
Behind the Scenes at the Guardian Datablog
Data Journalism at the Zeit Online
How to Hire a Hacker
Harnessing External Expertise Through Hackthons
Following the Money: Cross-Border Collaboration
Our Stories Come As Code
Kaas & Mulvad: Semi-finished Content for Stakeholder Groups
Business Models for Data Journalism
Case studies
The Opportunity Gap
A 9 Month Investigation into European Structural Funds
The Eurozone Meltdown
Covering the Public Purse with OpenSpending.org
Finnish Parliamentary Elections and Campaign Funding
Electoral Hack in Realtime
Data in the News: Wikileaks
Mapa76 Hackathon
The Guardian Datablog’s Coverage of the UK Riots
Illinois School Report Cards
Hospital Billing
Care Home Crisis
The Tell-All Telephone
Which Car Model? MOT Failure Rates
Bus Subsidies in Argentina
Citizen Data Reporters
The Big Board for Election Results
Crowdsourcing the Price of Water
Getting Data
A Five Minute Field Guide
Your Right to Data
Wobbing Works. Use it!
Getting Data from the Web
The Web as a Data Source
Crowdsourcing Data at the Guardian Datablog
How the Datablog Used Crowdsourcing to Cover Olympic Ticketing
Using and Sharing Data: the Black Letter, Fine Print, and Reality
Understanding data
Become Data Literate in 3 Simple Steps
Tips for Working with Numbers in the News
Basic Steps in Working with Data
The £32 Loaf of Bread
Start With the Data, Finish With a Story
Data Stories
Data Journalists Discuss Their Tools of Choice
Using Data Visualization to Find Insights in Data
Delivering Data
Presenting Data to the Public
How to Build a News App
News Apps at ProPublica
Visualization as the Workhorse of Data Journalism
Using visualizations to Tell Stories
Designing With Data
Different Charts Tell Different Tales
Data visualization DIY: Our Top Tools
How We Serve Data at Verdens Gang
Public Data Goes Social
Engaging People Around Your Data
En ligne : http://datajournalismhandbook.org/1.0/en/ The Data Journalism Handbook : How journalists can use data to improve the news [document électronique] / Jonathan Gray, Editeur scientifique ; Lilianna Bounegru, Editeur scientifique ; Lucy Chambers, Editeur scientifique . - [S.l.] : Open Knowledge Foundation, 2012.
The Data Journalism Handbook can be freely copied, redistributed and reused under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Contributors to the Data Journalism Handbook retain copyright over their respective contributions, and have kindly agreed to release them under the terms of this license.
Langues : Anglais
Catégories : MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects généraux Tags : journalisme communication Index. décimale : 070.4 Journalisme Résumé : "What is data journalism? I could answer, simply, that it is journalism done with data. But that doesn’t help much.
Both ‘data’ and ‘journalism’ are troublesome terms. Some people think of ‘data’ as any collection of numbers, most likely gathered on a spreadsheet. 20 years ago, that was pretty much the only sort of data that journalists dealt with. But we live in a digital world now, a world in which almost anything can be — and almost everything is — described with numbers.
Your career history, 300,000 confidential documents, who knows who in your circle of friends can all be (and are) described with just two numbers: zeroes, and ones. Photos, video and audio are all described with the same two numbers: zeroes and ones. Murders, disease, political votes, corruption and lies: zeroes and ones.
What makes data journalism different to the rest of journalism? Perhaps it is the new possibilities that open up when you combine the traditional ‘nose for news’ and ability to tell a compelling story, with the sheer scale and range of digital information now available."Note de contenu : Sommaire :
Front Matter
For the Great Unnamed
Contributor List
What This Book Is (And What It Isn’t)
The Handbook At A Glance
Introduction
What Is Data Journalism?
Why Journalists Should Use Data
Why Is Data Journalism Important?
Some Favorite Examples
Data Journalism in Perspective
In The Newsroom
The ABC’s Data Journalism Play
Data Journalism at the BBC
How the News Apps Team at Chicago Tribune Works
Behind the Scenes at the Guardian Datablog
Data Journalism at the Zeit Online
How to Hire a Hacker
Harnessing External Expertise Through Hackthons
Following the Money: Cross-Border Collaboration
Our Stories Come As Code
Kaas & Mulvad: Semi-finished Content for Stakeholder Groups
Business Models for Data Journalism
Case studies
The Opportunity Gap
A 9 Month Investigation into European Structural Funds
The Eurozone Meltdown
Covering the Public Purse with OpenSpending.org
Finnish Parliamentary Elections and Campaign Funding
Electoral Hack in Realtime
Data in the News: Wikileaks
Mapa76 Hackathon
The Guardian Datablog’s Coverage of the UK Riots
Illinois School Report Cards
Hospital Billing
Care Home Crisis
The Tell-All Telephone
Which Car Model? MOT Failure Rates
Bus Subsidies in Argentina
Citizen Data Reporters
The Big Board for Election Results
Crowdsourcing the Price of Water
Getting Data
A Five Minute Field Guide
Your Right to Data
Wobbing Works. Use it!
Getting Data from the Web
The Web as a Data Source
Crowdsourcing Data at the Guardian Datablog
How the Datablog Used Crowdsourcing to Cover Olympic Ticketing
Using and Sharing Data: the Black Letter, Fine Print, and Reality
Understanding data
Become Data Literate in 3 Simple Steps
Tips for Working with Numbers in the News
Basic Steps in Working with Data
The £32 Loaf of Bread
Start With the Data, Finish With a Story
Data Stories
Data Journalists Discuss Their Tools of Choice
Using Data Visualization to Find Insights in Data
Delivering Data
Presenting Data to the Public
How to Build a News App
News Apps at ProPublica
Visualization as the Workhorse of Data Journalism
Using visualizations to Tell Stories
Designing With Data
Different Charts Tell Different Tales
Data visualization DIY: Our Top Tools
How We Serve Data at Verdens Gang
Public Data Goes Social
Engaging People Around Your Data
En ligne : http://datajournalismhandbook.org/1.0/en/ Réservation
Réserver ce document
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 1003458 6 GRA DAT Document numérique Internet Documentaires Disponible The freedom and independence of public service media in Europe : International standards and their domestic implementation / Evangelia Psychogiopoulou in International Journal of Communication, 11 ([31/12/2017])
[article]
Titre : The freedom and independence of public service media in Europe : International standards and their domestic implementation Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Evangelia Psychogiopoulou, Auteur ; Dia Anagnostou, Auteur ; Rachel Craufurd Smith, Auteur Année de publication : 2017 Langues : Anglais Catégories : MEDIAS
MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects générauxTags : indépendance éditeurs Europe service public aspect socio-culturel journalisme éthique gouvernance liberté des médias Note de contenu : "This article explores the guidance that international and European organizations, such as the Council of Europe and the European Union, have developed regarding the remit, governance and funding of public service media. It argues that considerable work has now been done to identify concrete measures that can help to protect public service broadcasters from external political or commercial pressures and assist them in fulfilling their public service missions. Although these standards are by now well established they receive very variable recognition in the 14 Mediadem countries studied. The authors suggest that effective implementation of these international guidelines can help to support, even if they cannot guarantee, media independence over time. There is thus room for improvement and mutual learning across all systems, whether those emphasizing political pluralism or the virtues of a more technocratic, professional system of governance."
Source : 1ère page de l'articleEn ligne : https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/5966
in International Journal of Communication > 11 [31/12/2017][article] The freedom and independence of public service media in Europe : International standards and their domestic implementation [document électronique] / Evangelia Psychogiopoulou, Auteur ; Dia Anagnostou, Auteur ; Rachel Craufurd Smith, Auteur . - 2017.
Langues : Anglais
in International Journal of Communication > 11 [31/12/2017]
Catégories : MEDIAS
MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects générauxTags : indépendance éditeurs Europe service public aspect socio-culturel journalisme éthique gouvernance liberté des médias Note de contenu : "This article explores the guidance that international and European organizations, such as the Council of Europe and the European Union, have developed regarding the remit, governance and funding of public service media. It argues that considerable work has now been done to identify concrete measures that can help to protect public service broadcasters from external political or commercial pressures and assist them in fulfilling their public service missions. Although these standards are by now well established they receive very variable recognition in the 14 Mediadem countries studied. The authors suggest that effective implementation of these international guidelines can help to support, even if they cannot guarantee, media independence over time. There is thus room for improvement and mutual learning across all systems, whether those emphasizing political pluralism or the virtues of a more technocratic, professional system of governance."
Source : 1ère page de l'articleEn ligne : https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/5966 The handbook of gender, sex and media / Karen Ross
Titre : The handbook of gender, sex and media Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Karen Ross, Auteur Editeur : Oxford [Grande-Bretagne] : Wiley-Blackwell Année de publication : 2011 Importance : 576 p. Format : 24 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-4443-3854-6 Prix : 139,90-€ Langues : Anglais Catégories : MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects généraux Tags : sexisme discrimination médias égalité hommes-femmes Index. décimale : 177.5 Pratiques discriminatoires Résumé : Présentation par l'éditeur :
"The Handbook of Gender, Sex and Media offers original insights into the complex set of relations which exist between gender, sex, sexualities and the media, and in doing so, showcases new research at the forefront of media and communication practice and theory.
• Brings together a collection of new, cutting-edge research exploring a number of different facets of the broad relationship between gender and media
• Moves beyond associating gender with man/woman and instead considers the relationship between the construction of gender norms, biological sex and the mediation of sex and sexuality
• Offers genuinely new insights into the complicated and complex set of relations which exist between gender, sex, sexualities and the media
• Essay topics range from the continuing sexism of TV advertising to ways in which the internet is facilitating the (re)invention of our sexual selves.
Source : http://eu.wiley.com (Consulté le 16/11/2011)
Note de contenu : TABLE OF CONTENTS
Notes on Contributors.
Editor’s Introduction.
Part 1: Mediated Women.
1. The geography of women and media scholarship (Carolyn Byerly).
2. Chilean Women in Changing Times: Media Images and Social Understandings (Claudia Bucciferro).
3. The Girls of Parliament: A Historical Analysis of the Press Coverage of Female Politicians in Bulgaria (Elza Ibrosheva and Maria Stover).
4. Gossip Blogs and “Baby Bumps:” The New Visual Spectacle of Female Celebrity in Gossip Media (Erin Meyers).
5. Fanfiction and webnovelas: the digital reading and writing of Brazilian adolescent girls (Ilana Eleá).
6. Virtually blonde: Blonde jokes in the global age and post-feminist discourse (Limor Shifman and Dafna Lemish).
Part 2: Rugged masculinity and other fables.
7. Men, Masculinitie and the Cave Man (Jeffery P. Dennis).
8. Rhetorical Masculinity: authoritative utterance and the male protagonist (Stuart Price).
9. Conan the Blueprint: The construction of masculine prototypes in genre films (Guido Ipsen).
10. Save The Cheerleader, Save the Males: Resurgent Protective Paternalism in Popular Film and Television After 9/11 (Sarah Godfrey and Hannah Hamad).
11. Fucking Vito: Masculinity and Sexuality in The Sopranos (Lynne Hibberd).
12. Studio5ive.Com: Selling Cosmetics To Men And Reconstructing Masculine Identity (Claire Harrison).
Part 3: Queering the pitch.
13. No Hard Feelings: Reflexivity and Queer Affect in the New Media Landscape (Katherine Sender).
14. The L Word: Producing Identities Through Irony (Julie Scanlon).
15. Andro-phobia?: When Gender Queer Is too Queer For L-Word Audiences (Rebecca Kern).
16. Questioning queer audiences: Exploring diversity in lesbian and gay men’s media uses and readings (Alexander Dhoest and Nele Simons).
17. ‘In Touch’ With the Female Body: Cinema, Sport and Lesbian Representability (Katharina Lindner).
18. Why Doesn’t Your Compass Work?: Pirates of the Caribbean, Fantasy Blockbusters and Contemporary Queer Theory (Martin Fradley).
19. Raised Voices: Homophobic Abuse as a Catalyst for Coming Out in US Teen Television Drama Series (Susan Berridge).
20. Transmen On The Web: Inscribing Multiple Discourses (Matthew Heinz).
21. Transgendered Saints and Harlots: reproduction of popular Brazilian transgender stereotypes through performance on stage, screen and in everyday life (Johannes Sjöberg).
Part 4: Women, men and gender.
22. Sex/Gender and the Media: From Sex Roles to Social Construction and Beyond (Cynthia Carter).
23. Colin won’t drink out of a pink cup (Barbara Mitra and Jenny Lewin-Jones).
24. Postfeminism Meets Hegemonic Masculinities: Young People Read The ‘Knowing Wink’ In Advertising (Sue Abel).
25. Communication As Commodification: Video Technology and the Gendered Gaze (Corinna Chong, Heather Molyneaux and Hélène Fournier).
26. Dutch-Moroccan girls performing their selves in Instant Messaging spaces (Koen Leurs and Sandra Ponzanesi).
Part 5: All about sex
27. Sex and the Media (Feona Attwood).
28. Deliciously Consumable: the Uses and Abuses of Irony in ‘Sex-Trafficking’ Campaign Films (Jane Arthurs).
29. The Sex Inspectors: Self-help, Makeover and Mediated Sex (Laura Harvey and Rosalind Gill).
30. Enacting bodies: online dating and new media practices (Begonya Enguix and Elisenda Ardévol).
31. Gender and sexuality in the Internet era (Panayiota Tsatsou).
32. Gay for Pay: The Internet and The Economics of Homosexual Desire (John Mercer).
Acknowledgments.
Index.
The handbook of gender, sex and media [texte imprimé] / Karen Ross, Auteur . - Oxford (9600 Garsington Road, OX4 2DQ, Grande-Bretagne) : Wiley-Blackwell, 2011 . - 576 p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN : 978-1-4443-3854-6 : 139,90-€
Langues : Anglais
Catégories : MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects généraux Tags : sexisme discrimination médias égalité hommes-femmes Index. décimale : 177.5 Pratiques discriminatoires Résumé : Présentation par l'éditeur :
"The Handbook of Gender, Sex and Media offers original insights into the complex set of relations which exist between gender, sex, sexualities and the media, and in doing so, showcases new research at the forefront of media and communication practice and theory.
• Brings together a collection of new, cutting-edge research exploring a number of different facets of the broad relationship between gender and media
• Moves beyond associating gender with man/woman and instead considers the relationship between the construction of gender norms, biological sex and the mediation of sex and sexuality
• Offers genuinely new insights into the complicated and complex set of relations which exist between gender, sex, sexualities and the media
• Essay topics range from the continuing sexism of TV advertising to ways in which the internet is facilitating the (re)invention of our sexual selves.
Source : http://eu.wiley.com (Consulté le 16/11/2011)
Note de contenu : TABLE OF CONTENTS
Notes on Contributors.
Editor’s Introduction.
Part 1: Mediated Women.
1. The geography of women and media scholarship (Carolyn Byerly).
2. Chilean Women in Changing Times: Media Images and Social Understandings (Claudia Bucciferro).
3. The Girls of Parliament: A Historical Analysis of the Press Coverage of Female Politicians in Bulgaria (Elza Ibrosheva and Maria Stover).
4. Gossip Blogs and “Baby Bumps:” The New Visual Spectacle of Female Celebrity in Gossip Media (Erin Meyers).
5. Fanfiction and webnovelas: the digital reading and writing of Brazilian adolescent girls (Ilana Eleá).
6. Virtually blonde: Blonde jokes in the global age and post-feminist discourse (Limor Shifman and Dafna Lemish).
Part 2: Rugged masculinity and other fables.
7. Men, Masculinitie and the Cave Man (Jeffery P. Dennis).
8. Rhetorical Masculinity: authoritative utterance and the male protagonist (Stuart Price).
9. Conan the Blueprint: The construction of masculine prototypes in genre films (Guido Ipsen).
10. Save The Cheerleader, Save the Males: Resurgent Protective Paternalism in Popular Film and Television After 9/11 (Sarah Godfrey and Hannah Hamad).
11. Fucking Vito: Masculinity and Sexuality in The Sopranos (Lynne Hibberd).
12. Studio5ive.Com: Selling Cosmetics To Men And Reconstructing Masculine Identity (Claire Harrison).
Part 3: Queering the pitch.
13. No Hard Feelings: Reflexivity and Queer Affect in the New Media Landscape (Katherine Sender).
14. The L Word: Producing Identities Through Irony (Julie Scanlon).
15. Andro-phobia?: When Gender Queer Is too Queer For L-Word Audiences (Rebecca Kern).
16. Questioning queer audiences: Exploring diversity in lesbian and gay men’s media uses and readings (Alexander Dhoest and Nele Simons).
17. ‘In Touch’ With the Female Body: Cinema, Sport and Lesbian Representability (Katharina Lindner).
18. Why Doesn’t Your Compass Work?: Pirates of the Caribbean, Fantasy Blockbusters and Contemporary Queer Theory (Martin Fradley).
19. Raised Voices: Homophobic Abuse as a Catalyst for Coming Out in US Teen Television Drama Series (Susan Berridge).
20. Transmen On The Web: Inscribing Multiple Discourses (Matthew Heinz).
21. Transgendered Saints and Harlots: reproduction of popular Brazilian transgender stereotypes through performance on stage, screen and in everyday life (Johannes Sjöberg).
Part 4: Women, men and gender.
22. Sex/Gender and the Media: From Sex Roles to Social Construction and Beyond (Cynthia Carter).
23. Colin won’t drink out of a pink cup (Barbara Mitra and Jenny Lewin-Jones).
24. Postfeminism Meets Hegemonic Masculinities: Young People Read The ‘Knowing Wink’ In Advertising (Sue Abel).
25. Communication As Commodification: Video Technology and the Gendered Gaze (Corinna Chong, Heather Molyneaux and Hélène Fournier).
26. Dutch-Moroccan girls performing their selves in Instant Messaging spaces (Koen Leurs and Sandra Ponzanesi).
Part 5: All about sex
27. Sex and the Media (Feona Attwood).
28. Deliciously Consumable: the Uses and Abuses of Irony in ‘Sex-Trafficking’ Campaign Films (Jane Arthurs).
29. The Sex Inspectors: Self-help, Makeover and Mediated Sex (Laura Harvey and Rosalind Gill).
30. Enacting bodies: online dating and new media practices (Begonya Enguix and Elisenda Ardévol).
31. Gender and sexuality in the Internet era (Panayiota Tsatsou).
32. Gay for Pay: The Internet and The Economics of Homosexual Desire (John Mercer).
Acknowledgments.
Index.
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 1003078 722 ROS HAN Livre Bibliothèque Documentaires Disponible The importance of freedom of expression for democratic societies in the enlarged European Union - Press conference on the occasion of the conclusion of a Framework Agreement between the International Federation of Journalists and WAZ Mediengruppe : Brussels, 9 July 2007 / Viviane Reding
Titre : The importance of freedom of expression for democratic societies in the enlarged European Union - Press conference on the occasion of the conclusion of a Framework Agreement between the International Federation of Journalists and WAZ Mediengruppe : Brussels, 9 July 2007 Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Viviane Reding, Auteur Editeur : Bruxelles : Commission Européenne - European Commission Année de publication : 2008 Format : Document électronique Note générale : SPEECH/07/478
Voir : Chartre des droits fondamentaux de l'Union européenne:
http://www.ladocumentationfrancaise.fr/rapports-publics/064000135/index.shtmlLangues : Anglais Catégories : AUTRES:Discours
CONGRES, SYMPOSIUMS, JOURNEES D'ETUDES, COLLOQUES, MANIFESTATIONS DIVERSES, ....
EUROPE
MEDIAS: COMMUNICATION & JOURNALISME - Aspects générauxTags : Europe discours Reding information communication liberté d'expression liberté des médias journalisme Index. décimale : 070.4 Journalisme En ligne : http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/07/478&format=HTM [...] The importance of freedom of expression for democratic societies in the enlarged European Union - Press conference on the occasion of the conclusion of a Framework Agreement between the International Federation of Journalists and WAZ Mediengruppe : Brussels, 9 July 2007 [document électronique] / Viviane Reding, Auteur . - Bruxelles : Commission Européenne - European Commission, 2008 . - ; Document électronique.
SPEECH/07/478
Voir : Chartre des droits fondamentaux de l'Union européenne:
http://www.ladocumentationfrancaise.fr/rapports-publics/064000135/index.shtml
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