The three main contributors to the war on Iraq in March 2003 (the United States, United Kingdom and Australia) are also the three most significant countries in which Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation operates. This article examines the degree of editorial conformity (or otherwise) that existed across the news media of News Corporation in six months leading to the invasion. It compares the framing of the arguments for war and finds significant similarities across the three countries, especially in the output of columnists and commentators employed by News Corporation. While generally pro-war, however, News Corporation outlets also displayed local variations in the caution or stridency of their editorial pitch as well as the degree of tolerat...
Throughout the coverage of Iraq since the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s and especially since September ...
In this February 20, 2003 conversation on the Global Journalist, Stuart Loory interviews several jou...
This thesis examines the politics of conflict reporting by exploring the role of U.S. state-media re...
This article explores the relationship between ideology and media representations. It seeks to (1) r...
On March 19, 2003, the United States military led a "pre-emptive" strike on Iraq, thrusting media in...
The New Zealand news media have covered Iraq War II extensively, and from different perspectives, s...
This comparative study conducted within the framework of world system theory aimed to analyse the in...
In this paper we compare the newspaper attention for and framingof the Iraq issue in four Western co...
Contemporary researches on news coverage of Persian Gulf Wars have shown many controversial results ...
The BBC and its coverage of the 2003 Iraq War have received much criticism as well as much praise ar...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The purpose of this pr...
This dissertation investigated how The New York Times, The Arab News, and The Middle East Times ref...
Television audiences around the world were gripped by television news reporting of the events in Ira...
This study uses the thematic analysis developed by the Glasgow University Media Group to explore how...
Models of mass media and democracy, as commonly discussed by media theorists, suggest there is a tig...
Throughout the coverage of Iraq since the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s and especially since September ...
In this February 20, 2003 conversation on the Global Journalist, Stuart Loory interviews several jou...
This thesis examines the politics of conflict reporting by exploring the role of U.S. state-media re...
This article explores the relationship between ideology and media representations. It seeks to (1) r...
On March 19, 2003, the United States military led a "pre-emptive" strike on Iraq, thrusting media in...
The New Zealand news media have covered Iraq War II extensively, and from different perspectives, s...
This comparative study conducted within the framework of world system theory aimed to analyse the in...
In this paper we compare the newspaper attention for and framingof the Iraq issue in four Western co...
Contemporary researches on news coverage of Persian Gulf Wars have shown many controversial results ...
The BBC and its coverage of the 2003 Iraq War have received much criticism as well as much praise ar...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The purpose of this pr...
This dissertation investigated how The New York Times, The Arab News, and The Middle East Times ref...
Television audiences around the world were gripped by television news reporting of the events in Ira...
This study uses the thematic analysis developed by the Glasgow University Media Group to explore how...
Models of mass media and democracy, as commonly discussed by media theorists, suggest there is a tig...
Throughout the coverage of Iraq since the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s and especially since September ...
In this February 20, 2003 conversation on the Global Journalist, Stuart Loory interviews several jou...
This thesis examines the politics of conflict reporting by exploring the role of U.S. state-media re...