- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Business / Economics
Full Description
Bringing together contributing authors across six continents, this volume addresses critical questions around conceptualization, theorization, and ethics related to media and journalism research and practice along borders and around the Majority World.
In the twenty-first century, notions of borders, globalization/deglobalization, and transnationalism would not be possible without media and journalists/journalism and the research that centers them. Media, large and small, through the work of journalists, yet also through the activities of other types of media producers, such as filmmakers, social media influencers, activists and artists, contribute to the ways in which we understand or sometimes misunderstand the people and places around us and those in distant spaces and environments. The chapters map the spaces in which media and journalism is being redefined, reimagined, and reinvented around the world, and point to lessons learned as well as possibilities for ongoing collaboration. Authors reflect critically on how, by whom, and for whom, news media are created as well as their impacts locally, regionally, nationally, globally, and along various types of borders including geopolitical, cultural, and ideological.
This book is an essential companion for advanced undergraduates, graduate students, scholars, journalists and general audience members who are interested in deepening their understanding of the complex media ecosystems in regions across the world.
Contents
Introduction Section 1: Pushing the Boundaries of Border and Global Journalism and Media 1. How (Not) to Decolonize: Theorizing Media and Communication from the Majority World 2. "African Journalism Fields: What's Bourdieu got to do with Them?" 3. Border Narratives: How Overseas Online Discourses are Reshaping Domestic Journalism Practice in Ethiopia 4. Beyond Geographic Binaries: Epistemic Bordering and Western Media Control of Social Movement Coverage 5. Emotional Labor and News "Fixing": A Decolonial Approach 6. Led by Line: Pacific Indigenous Storytelling as Decolonial Journalism Beyond Western Media Borders Section 2: Problematizing Geographies, History, Culture, and Media 7. In-between Scholarship in Communication/Media Studies: Beyond the Global North-global South Lens 8. Bordering and Debordering Ethnic Media: Structural Constraints, Strategic Innovations, and Future Considerations 9. The Border 'Invasion' in Public Memory 10. Asserting a Regional Approach to the Global South: The Complex Cases of Latin American and South Asian Media/Journalism 11. "Storytelling is our inherent right:" How the Indigenous Journalists Association is Working to Protect Indigenous Media on a Global Scale 12. Challenging Hegemonic and Normative Ideas about Journalism: Strategies for Covering Communities on the "Periphery" Section 3: Expanding the Boundaries of Methodologies and Approaches 13. Expanding the Boundaries of Methodologies and Approaches for AI in Media 14. Towards an International Feminist Ethics of Care: Exploring Feminist Journalism Research Trends in the #MeToo Era 15. Trauma-informed Journalism Studies and Practice: Reviewing and Interrogating Scholarly Debates 16. Beyond Borders: The Imperative of Interdisciplinary and Collaborative Research in Media and Journalism 17. Towards a Global and Holistic Approach to Studying the Relationship between Journalism and Backlash Movements 18. The Ethics of Border and Global Journalism and Media Research 19. Reporting in Exile and Within Diasporic Communities Section 4: From Conflicts to Collaborations 20. Supporting Resilience in the Journalism Profession: Violence, Conflict, in and along the Peripheries 21. Violence and Conflict, in and along the Peripheries 22. Transnational Collaboration in Hostile Latin American Environment as Safety and Press Freedom Opportunities 23. Boundaryless Initiatives to Support Journalists and Media Workers in Latin America 24. Decolonising war and conflict reporting through peace journalism Section 5: Geopolitical Forces and Media Engagement in Uncertain Times 25. Geopoliticization of Journalism 26. Chinese Media Engagement in Africa: South-South Collaboration or Colonial Ambition? 27. The Geopolitics of Information after U.S. International Broadcasting Cuts 28. Application of solutions approach by media in deconstructing negativity bias: People, power, perception 29. Western Balkans and Resilience-building Efforts via Cross-border Fact-checking Capabilities 30. An Intersectional Approach in Journalism Practice and Media Research Needs to be a Norm Section 6: Power, Media, and Counterpublics and New directions in Border and Global Environments 31. Towards a 'Rhizomatic Organic Counter-Hegemonic Public Sphere' Framework in Africa: Journalism Reconfigurations through Networked Social Movements 32. The State of AI-Driven Journalism in Sub-Saharan Africa: Transforming Newsrooms and Redefining Media Ethics 33. Analyzing Power Imbalances in Cross-border Collaboration Projects Involving Local and Hyperlocal News Organizations 34. Media and Social Change: A Latin American Perspective on Participatory Communication 35. Bullets for Bylines in Balochistan 36. From the Neighborhood to the Cloud: How Syrian Communities Built a Cross-Border Investigative Model 37. Empowering Grassroots Journalism: Bridging the Rural-Urban Divide for Inclusive Media Coverage Conclusion



