Second prize winner of the Emerald Publishing Best Article of the Year award for 2011. Purpose: to understand how, in tough economic times, British-owned, English-language newspapers such as The Pioneer received and filtered news, especially gender-related and nationalist-related events and thinking. Design/methodology: using qualitative and quantitative methods to assess communications by and about pro - nationalist women, coverage of female activities was categorised into two groups: firstly educational, social and peaceful campaigns and secondly direct action such as strikes, burning of British cloth and business /land rent boycotts. Findings: direct action provided ‘bad news’ coverage, but it simultaneously gave a small window for ...
This project looks at the influence and exchange between the British women’s rights movement and the...
This paper sets the issues and questions for interdisciplinary academic study of local protest with ...
PhDThis thesis studies the West Indian press from three perspectives. The fIrst examines newspapers...
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to understand how, in tough economic times, British-owned, Englis...
ABSTRACT : Press, Protest and Freedom Movements in British and French India 1928-48 - do subalterns ...
Purpose: to reveal the contribution of counter-hegemonic communications towards the origins of anti-...
India is the world’s largest democracy, one of the fastest growing economies and an enormous market ...
An exploration of how gendered considerations emerged from the simultaneous rise of the early mass m...
The civil disobedience campaign is traditionally viewed as a turning point when women participated i...
The civil disobedience campaign is traditionally viewed as a turning point when women participated i...
The article examines the performance of press in Pakistan with regard to the issues central to women...
The long and checkered past of India is not only a story of her political struggle to gain freedom f...
By 1928 women had achieved many of the objectives of the first-wave of the feminist movement. They h...
This article provides the first comprehensive study of the British press’s reporting of, and discuss...
Areas that remain understudied on female infanticide in India are information-gathering and the coll...
This project looks at the influence and exchange between the British women’s rights movement and the...
This paper sets the issues and questions for interdisciplinary academic study of local protest with ...
PhDThis thesis studies the West Indian press from three perspectives. The fIrst examines newspapers...
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to understand how, in tough economic times, British-owned, Englis...
ABSTRACT : Press, Protest and Freedom Movements in British and French India 1928-48 - do subalterns ...
Purpose: to reveal the contribution of counter-hegemonic communications towards the origins of anti-...
India is the world’s largest democracy, one of the fastest growing economies and an enormous market ...
An exploration of how gendered considerations emerged from the simultaneous rise of the early mass m...
The civil disobedience campaign is traditionally viewed as a turning point when women participated i...
The civil disobedience campaign is traditionally viewed as a turning point when women participated i...
The article examines the performance of press in Pakistan with regard to the issues central to women...
The long and checkered past of India is not only a story of her political struggle to gain freedom f...
By 1928 women had achieved many of the objectives of the first-wave of the feminist movement. They h...
This article provides the first comprehensive study of the British press’s reporting of, and discuss...
Areas that remain understudied on female infanticide in India are information-gathering and the coll...
This project looks at the influence and exchange between the British women’s rights movement and the...
This paper sets the issues and questions for interdisciplinary academic study of local protest with ...
PhDThis thesis studies the West Indian press from three perspectives. The fIrst examines newspapers...