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Parry-Giles, Shawn J. – Western Journal of Communication, 1996
Reports that the domestic news media became part of the United States Government's propaganda scheme during the Truman and Eisenhower presidencies. Suggests that the strategizing of both administrations and the employee interchange between America's propaganda program and the private news arena created a press that became outspoken advocates of…
Descriptors: Government Role, News Media, Press Opinion, Propaganda
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Picard, Robert G. – Journalism Quarterly, 1987
Reviews the record of the 98th Congress (1983-1984) relating to freedom of information concerns by focusing on legislation proposed during its two sessions. Indicates that, although some significant exemptions from the Freedom of Information Act were considered, generally the proposed legislation supported openness and availability of information.…
Descriptors: Confidential Records, Freedom of Information, Government Role, Legislation
Paraschos, Manny – 1981
The purpose of this paper is: (1) to present and analyze the most important laws, along with the most prominent court cases, that affected free expression and the press in post-junta Greece (1974-1977), and (2) to describe the media system of Greece for the same period in order to offer a better perspective on the Greek press in those crucial…
Descriptors: Censorship, Court Litigation, Foreign Countries, Freedom of Speech
Zerbinos, Eugenia – 1978
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has paid journalists, used information from unpaid journalists, owned foreign media outlets, planted stories, and put the lid on other stories throughout its 30-year history. Journalism makes a good cover for agents because journalists can ask questions without arousing suspicion. It has been estimated that…
Descriptors: Federal Government, Foreign Countries, Government Role, Information Utilization
Barrett, Marvin, Ed. – 1971
The major topic is the running battle between news media and the government, as reflected in documentary exposes like "The Selling of the Pentagon,""Migrant," and "Banks and the Poor." The best examples of broadcast journalism during the year are reviewed, along with the response they got from the press, the…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Cable Television, Commercial Television, Documentaries
Warden, Michael L. – 1988
Exclusion of the press from the first days of the American invasion of Grenada dramatically brought into focus the fundamental conflict between the military's need for secrecy and the press's need to publish information. From the viewpoint of the press, the decision to exclude reporters from the island until the third day of the invasion denied…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Freedom of Information, Government Role, Intervention
Barrett, Marvin; Sklar, Zachary – 1980
This book, the seventh in a series surveying broadcast journalism, provides behind-the-scenes details of news coverage during 1978-79, evaluating the growth and sophistication of the news media. The first section of the book discusses the treatment of major issues and news events, including the "odd couple" of politics and broadcasting,…
Descriptors: Government Role, Journalism, News Media, News Reporting
Twentieth Century Fund, New York, NY. – 1973
This report considers the feasibility of establishing a press council or councils in the United States. The purpose of this council would be to report to the public both on the accuracy of news coverage and on threats, real and potential, against the freedom of the press to fulfill its responsibility of providing information to its readers and…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Freedom of Speech, Governing Boards, Government Role
Rivers, William L., Ed.; Nyhan, Michael J., Ed. – 1973
The objective of the Aspen Program on Communication and Society is to identify issues dealing with communication in a free society and to develop policy and actions in four areas: 1) government and media; 2) public broadcasting; 3) television and social behavior; and 4) cable television and other new technologies. In accordance with this goal, a…
Descriptors: Cable Television, Communications, Conference Reports, Freedom of Speech
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Okihiro, Gary Y.; Sly, Julie – Phylon, 1983
A study of the wartime press suggests that the plan to incarcerate Japanese Americans (under Executive Order 9066) was government-initiated, that the public and the press initially disapproved of such treatment, and that events emanating from the government influenced shifts in press and public opinion that allowed implementation of the plan.…
Descriptors: Ethnic Bias, Ethnic Discrimination, Government Role, Japanese Americans
Haler, Michael – 1982
The Basic Law of Press Freedom in West Germany that forbids censorship in any form is the subject of this booklet. The first section defines freedom of opinion as a basic right and presents the relationship of the press to the state. The role and structure of radio and television are described in the second section, which stresses the independence…
Descriptors: Censorship, Communications, Foreign Countries, Freedom of Speech
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Altbach, Philip G. – Change, 1987
A scandal relating to examination-fixing in the University of Bombay led to the resignation of its vice chancellor, followed by the chief minister of the state of Maharashtra. The intersection of politics and education, and the use of educational institutions for political or patronage purposes was at the heart of the problem. (MLW)
Descriptors: Certification, College Governing Councils, Foreign Countries, Government Role
Gibson, Dirk C. – 1983
A Study investigated the informal methods of governmental information control used in four countries--the United States, Great Britain, West Germany, and the Soviet Union--to determine how the governments discretely and quietly limited unfavorable publicity. The examination revealed seven possible control methods: (1) preemptive leaks, (2)…
Descriptors: Censorship, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries, Government Role
White, Rob – 1984
An analysis is presented of the media and public reaction to a strike by state school teachers in New South Wales in 1981. It is pointed out that the media, intentionally and/or unintentionally, provided a biased view of teacher-related issues, which operated at an ideological level against the immediate and long-term interests of teachers.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Government Role, Mass Media Effects, Negative Attitudes
McLeod, Douglas M.; Craig, Bob – 1987
A study examined the influence of nation states' self-interests on their media's coverage of a major news event, in this instance, the Soviet shooting down of a Korean airliner. It was hypothesized (1) that there would be discrepancies between different accounts of the KAL 007 incident, a complex news event with international political…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Foreign Countries, Government Role, Ideology
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