Despite the potential for conflict between news media’s idealised socio-political role and its practical commercial role, a qualitative content analysis of the coverage of the 2012 Libor scandal in four newspapers, The Times (London), The Financial Times, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal, revealed that these aspects of news media are in fact complementary. Although it is often argued that the commercial function of news media is prioritised over its social and political roles, the commercial aspects of the coverage of the Libor scandal did not overwhelm or significantly compromise the political watchdog role of the media. In fact, the unexpectedly large divide in coverage between the UK newspapers and the US newspapers signif...
In the wake of the financial crisis, journalists were criticized for failing in their coverage of th...
This Introduction provides the conceptual and theoretical context for a Special Section on political...
However, the mere receipt of scandalous information and its dissemination is not enough to provoke c...
Financial scandals and controversies have recently attracted much attention in the British press. Th...
The study focuses on two Slovak corruption cases, both well-documented and of similar social releva...
The paper deals with the issue of the supervision of the media that frequently exceed the standards ...
This chapter investigates to what extent leading news media advocate investigative journalism and pe...
Much of the recent public outcry over the phone hacking scandal has been over the relative unaccount...
This article examines the distribution of sources in journalistic metadiscourse (media coverage of j...
The reporting of news is now commodified; the market for gossip and scandal has grown greatly with t...
This project examines the social construction of corporate scandals in France and the U.S. The main ...
This article examines the roles of the media in the process of political agenda setting. There is a ...
Legal factors do not alone explain why journalists and the media avoid the publication of particular...
As part of a larger European Union (EU)-funded project, this paper investigates the coverage of corr...
The idealized view of the press as an institution that operates independently from private and polit...
In the wake of the financial crisis, journalists were criticized for failing in their coverage of th...
This Introduction provides the conceptual and theoretical context for a Special Section on political...
However, the mere receipt of scandalous information and its dissemination is not enough to provoke c...
Financial scandals and controversies have recently attracted much attention in the British press. Th...
The study focuses on two Slovak corruption cases, both well-documented and of similar social releva...
The paper deals with the issue of the supervision of the media that frequently exceed the standards ...
This chapter investigates to what extent leading news media advocate investigative journalism and pe...
Much of the recent public outcry over the phone hacking scandal has been over the relative unaccount...
This article examines the distribution of sources in journalistic metadiscourse (media coverage of j...
The reporting of news is now commodified; the market for gossip and scandal has grown greatly with t...
This project examines the social construction of corporate scandals in France and the U.S. The main ...
This article examines the roles of the media in the process of political agenda setting. There is a ...
Legal factors do not alone explain why journalists and the media avoid the publication of particular...
As part of a larger European Union (EU)-funded project, this paper investigates the coverage of corr...
The idealized view of the press as an institution that operates independently from private and polit...
In the wake of the financial crisis, journalists were criticized for failing in their coverage of th...
This Introduction provides the conceptual and theoretical context for a Special Section on political...
However, the mere receipt of scandalous information and its dissemination is not enough to provoke c...