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Modeling Perceived Influences on Journalism: Evidence from a cross-national survey of journalists
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Modeling Perceived Influences on Journalism: Evidence from a cross-national survey of journalists

T Hanitzsch, M Anikina, R Berganza, I Cangoz, M Coman, B I Hamada, Folker Hanusch, C D Karadjov, C Mellado, S V Moreira, …
Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, Vol.87(1), pp.5-22
2010
url
https://doi.org/10.1177/107769901008700101View
Published Version

Abstract

journalism
Surveying 1,700 journalists from seventeen countries, this study investigates perceived influences on news work. Analysis reveals a dimensional structure of six distinct domains - political, economic, organizational, professional, and procedural influences, as well as reference groups. Across countries, these six dimensions build up a hierarchical structure where organizational, professional, and procedural influences are perceived as more powerful limits to journalists' work than political and economic influences.

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Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Web Of Science research areas
Communication
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