22 results
Search Results
2. A parametric environmental life cycle assessment of newspaper making in Spain.
- Author
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Lozano-Medina, Alexis, Pérez-Báez, Sebastián Ovidio, Alamo, Antonio Luis, and Blanco-Marigorta, Ana María
- Subjects
PRODUCT life cycle & the environment ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,PRODUCT life cycle assessment - Abstract
Purpose: Most LCAs estimate environmental impacts for a specific situation (industry, sector or location) in a generic way, without considering the specific characteristics of the product or service being evaluated. This paper outlines the relevance of the use of parameters and scenarios in environmental assessment for a daily newspaper considering multiple factors. The results of the different environmental impacts were compared with a baseline reference scenario.Methods: Different product specifications, sources of raw materials, manufacturing technologies, energy mix, locations of the printing plant, and distribution possibilities of the newspaper have been taken into account. The unit processes and the amounts allocated for each resource may vary depending on the scenarios. Inventory data were obtained directly from measured data for consumption in the printing plant located in Gran Canaria (Spain) and internal inventories and indirectly from information of existing processes and products. As functional units, both 1 kg of printed newspaper and 1 unit of printed newspaper have been used. The environmental impact assessment methodology ReCiPe has been applied in this study. Also endpoint indicators are shown as score (Pt) for different areas of protection.Results and discussion: For variations in the number of printed copies, the results show that environmental impacts are very high for small runs. For large runs, the impacts decrease between −14 and −16% with respect to the baseline scenario. The environmental impact of paper in the final product depends on several variables including the use of recycled fiber, the papermaking technology and the energy used in the paper plant. For airlifted daily newspapers, this means an increase of over 98% in the Climate Change impact if it is not printed in the same place of distribution. The electricity mix also depends on the geographical location and significantly affects the impacts, especially in the case of an isolated territory with increments of over 12% compared to interconnected systems.Conclusions: An impact assessment should take into account the suppliers and the characteristics of the raw materials the equipment, the technology, the energy mix, and all the variables that may affect the product. From the analysis of the scenarios, it is obtained that the low runs as well as the high pages and weights produce the greatest impacts. The use of recyclable paper, the shorter distance to the printing plant from the raw materials factories as well as the use of renewable energy sources considerably reduce the impacts generated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Insider Trading in News Deserts.
- Author
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Kyung, Hangsoo and Nam, Jonathan Sangwook
- Subjects
INSIDER trading in securities ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,LOCAL mass media ,SMALL business ,PROFIT ,INFORMATION dissemination - Abstract
This study examines the informational value of local news outlets and how they affect insider trading. We hypothesize that local news coverage is a critical channel through which outsiders acquire local information, which restricts insiders' ability to profit from their information advantage. We argue that a loss of local news coverage increases information opacity faced by outsiders, while making it easier for insiders to seize profitable trading opportunities. Exploring the staggered shutdown of local newspapers, our difference-in-differences estimation presents novel evidence that insiders from closure counties trade more profitably after local newspaper closures, particularly in small firms that lack alternative news sources. Further analyses reaffirm that the post-closure increase in trading profits is unlikely to be wholly driven by regional economic conditions and is likely driven by increased information costs. Our results highlight that local newspapers play a meaningful role in mitigating information asymmetry between insiders and outsiders. Data Availability: Data used in this study are available from the sources identified in the paper. JEL Classifications: G14; G30; L82. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Homing and platform responses to entry: Historical evidence from the U.S. newspaper industry.
- Author
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Park, Kyeonggook Francis, Seamans, Robert, and Zhu, Feng
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing ,MARKET entry ,HETEROGENEITY ,KOREAN War, 1950-1953 ,ECONOMIC competition ,NEWSPAPER subscriptions - Abstract
Research summary: We examine how heterogeneity in customers' tendencies to single‐home or multi‐home affects a platform's competitive responses to new entrants in the market. We first develop a formal model to generate predictions about how a platform will respond. We then empirically test it, leveraging a historical setting: TV station entry into local U.S. newspaper markets from 1945 to 1963. A notable feature of this setting is a quasi‐natural experiment: the staggered geographic and temporal rollout of TV stations that was temporarily halted during the Korean War. We find that platform firms indeed take their customers' homing tendencies into account in their responses to competition: after a TV station enters the newspaper market, newspaper firms with more single‐homing consumers had lower subscription prices, circulations, and advertising rates. Managerial summary: The theoretical and empirical results in our paper suggest that platform firms operating in multi‐sided market settings need to consider their customers' single‐homing and multi‐homing tendencies. Heterogeneity in these tendencies is an important demand‐side factor to consider when formulating responses to a competitor's entry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Innovators and innovated: Newspapers and the postdigital future beyond the "death of print".
- Author
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O'Sullivan, John, Fortunati, Leopoldina, Taipale, Sakari, and Barnhurst, Kevin
- Subjects
DIGITAL media & society ,NEWSPAPERS ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,INNOVATION adoption ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,AUTOMATION - Abstract
Along with other cultural organizations, newspapers, through waves of digital disruption, have become subject to a dominant narrative of crisis. But newspapers have long participated in change. A constructivist approach, qualified by consideration of media materiality, draws attention to diverse but essential processes of innovation around them. We see a contraflow of migration from digital to print, opening up a shared media space; bonding strategies are bringing multimedia to ink on paper, while bridging via boundary objects such as QR (Quick Response) codes are connecting the two. Among other initiatives, development of automation of news production and experiments with transparency are further evidence of an active embrace of change by newspapers that calls into question the discourse on their demise. This analysis inductively develops a nuanced account of the role of the newspaper as an object and as an institution. It suggests a hybrid, multifaceted, enduring presence of print in the complex media ecology of the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Gannett Looks to Spare Journalists' Jobs After Big Newspaper Merger: Deal to combine USA Today publisher Gannett with GateHouse Media closes, forming company with 30% of papers sold daily in U.S.
- Author
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Alpert, Lukas I.
- Subjects
- *
LAYOFFS - Published
- 2019
7. Towards a broadloid press approach: The transformation of China’s newspaper industry since the 2000s.
- Author
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Huang, Chengju
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing ,JOURNALISM ,PRESS ,TABLOID newspapers ,MASS media - Abstract
This study examines the changes and challenges of China’s newspaper industry by focusing on the popular press sector that has dominated the daily newspaper market since the early 2000s. Specifically, the study investigates three key issues: (1) the dramatic expansion of the popular press sector at the expense of the Party organ sector in the early and mid-2000s, (2) the stagnation of the popular press sector since then despite its efforts to experiment with a so-called mainstream press in the second half of the decade and (3) this study’s call for a ‘broadloid’ press approach in response to this stagnation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The Lowlands Newsroom Model.
- Author
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Vandendaele, Astrid and Jacobs, Geert
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER editors ,NEWSROOMS ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,BELGIAN newspapers ,DUTCH newspapers ,JOURNALISM ,JOURNALISTS ,PRESS employees - Abstract
This paper sheds light on newspaper sub-editors, the “forgotten stepchildren of the newsroom” and considers their position within the larger organizational model of the newsroom. In order to explore the sub-editor's position in the news production chain, we take an ethnographic approach. We draw on participant observation in the newsrooms of a Belgian broadsheet and a broadsheet from the Netherlands. In our study of the sub-editor, we observe how at both newspapers the newsroom model differs from those previously described by Esser, and we propose the term “Lowlands newsroom model”. At the same time, we demonstrate how, although the same Lowlands newsroom model is applied in both newsrooms, the spatial setting, division of workload and the sub-editor's profile impact on the sub-editor's ability to intervene in the news production process. We argue that exploring this newsroom model is necessary, not only considering the general newsroom flow, but also the much debated future of the newspaper “subber”. Furthermore, we aim to open the door to future journalism studies research of the sub-editor and hope to move towards a more complete definition of the sub-editor as a—in the language of Gieber—genuine “newspaperman”. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Look No Further for Your Afternoon Newspaper.
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPERS , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Published
- 2022
10. FIGHTING FOR VICTORY THROUGH WORD AND IMAGE: National Salvation Daily--A Chinese Wartime Newspaper in Guangzhou.
- Author
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BEVAN, PAUL
- Subjects
CHINESE language ,WOMEN in war ,SALVATION ,SINO-Japanese War, 1937-1945 ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong is the property of Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
11. Man of Letters, Literary Lady, Journalist or Reporter?
- Author
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Lonsdale, Sarah
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing ,FREELANCE journalism ,JOURNALISTS -- Biography ,PRESS - Abstract
The enormous changes wrought in the British newspaper industry during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries brought about a revolution in newspaper reading habits, financing and influence, all aspects of which have been well documented by historians of the press. But what of the contributor, particularly the freelance whose millions of words formed, mostly anonymously, the content of the new mass market press? How did writers negotiate changes in the literary marketplace during this time as editors demanded more ‘news’ and less in the way of whimsical paragraphing, and sketches, the traditional newspaper output of the professional man, or woman, of letters? Through the study of memoirs, correspondence and the fictional output of contributors to the press during this time, it is possible to discern the often fraught relations between writers and their most lucrative market. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The disappearance of provincial printed press: analysis of the causes and consequences based on the case study of Castile-La Mancha.
- Author
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Galletero-Campos, Belén
- Subjects
PRINTING presses ,NEWSPAPERS ,JOURNALISM ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
The current context and changes in the communicational paradigm in the last ten years lead to think we are experiencing a moment of transition that entails the end of mass media, like different studies have concluded. Among them, the most vulnerable product is the printed newspaper, which disappearance generates few doubts. However, immersed in this moment of change, we cannot yet evaluate what means to lose a journalistic model that has prevailed for over two centuries and a half as informational reference. From this perspective, the province of Cuenca, in Castile-La Mancha, one of the two in Spain which today no longer has a printed newspaper, offers us a unique scenario to approach what kind of medium positions as leader in its place. Using a mixed methodology, based on the review of documentary sources and contents analysis, we analyse a case study that aims to collect tendencies regarding proximity media. In this case, the switching from one platform to another has devaluated very relevant journalistic genres, such as the photo news or the editorial, but also some core practices in the journalism, like the editing task on the material that arriving to the editorial offices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Violation of orthographic norms in the daily newspaper "Bota Sot".
- Author
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Duraj, Petrit and Dulaj, Fridrik
- Subjects
ALBANIAN language ,ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling ,PHONETICS ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
This study aims at expressing the difficulties that the media have in the spelling of the Albanian language. More precisely, the written media, that is, the newspapers that are published in physical form and those that are only found in the online version. The unified orthography of a language, in our case of the Albanian language, is a term of the crystallization of the national literary norm in all the main chains of the phonetic, word formation, grammatical, and lexical structure. It reflects the current state and general trends of the development of our literary language. Today's orthography aims for further unification of the national literary language norm on the basis of the common forms that have been adopted and are being adopted by it. Given that the basic principle of Albanian orthography is the phonetic principle followed by the grammatical one, and seeing the constant spelling errors of the speakers and those who write in the Albanian language, we examined a daily newspaper, which has many readers and has a huge impact on Albanian speakers. In order to see the most frequent spelling errors, we will outline and analyse the wrong cases and give the correct forms based on the Albanian standard. Thus, from the results that will be brought, we will see the greatest difficulties faced by journalists of this daily newspaper, as well as their challenges on using the correct forms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Newsrooms accommodate data-based news work.
- Author
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Boyles, Jan Lauren and Meyer, Eric
- Subjects
- *
NEWSROOMS , *BROADCASTING studios , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *JOURNALISTIC ethics , *ACCURACY in journalism , *AMERICAN journalism - Abstract
Similar to prior cycles of newsroom specialization, news organizations must integrate the expertise of data journalists. Based upon 18 in-depth interviews with data journalism leaders within American newspapers, this study examines how newsrooms are restructuring to accommodate data news work. More specifically, the research identifies four “critical junctures” by which newspapers expand data journalism operations. The interviews establish that expanding a paper’s commitment to data journalism requires reorganizing the newsroom with new layers of structural complexity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Selection of the Best Forecasting Method for Newspaper Demand Based on Special Event (Case Study: PT. XYZ).
- Author
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Hakim, Eka Anasrul, Munthe, Kyrie Anggito, Rinjani Hananta, Shafa Keysa, Khofiyah, Nida An, Sutopo, Wahyudi, and Yuniaristanto
- Subjects
NEWSPAPERS ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,PHYSICAL distribution of goods ,DIGITIZATION ,ELECTRONIC newspapers - Abstract
The development of technology and information has a significant impact on society, both positively and negatively. Digitalization has resulted in many people switching from printed newspapers to digital newspapers. This could lead to demand uncertainty in the newspaper industry. At PT.XYZ, the number of newspapers produced and distributed to realtors often exceeds customer demand. In 2017, the company's return rate reached 5%. However, every January, March, and April where the Chinese New Year Festival, Dalang Cilik Festival, and World Dance Day are held, the demand will increase. This surge in demand, if not anticipated properly, can result in unfulfilled customer demands. For this reason, in this research, forecasting is carried out by considering special event factor using Holt-Winter's, Decomposition, and Exponential Smoothing Event-Based method. To decide which method is the best, the MAPE value was used as criteria. The MAPE value for Holt-Winter's, Decomposition, and Exponential Smoothing Event-Based method respectively are 0,92%, 1,05%, and 3%. Based on the MAPE value for each method, it can be seen that the most effective forecasting method is Holt's-Winter method with a MAPE value of 0.92%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
16. How are newspaper companies using social media to engage and connect with their audiences? characteristics and forms of Korean newspapers' YouTube use.
- Author
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Heo, Yun and Park, Han
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing ,SOCIAL media ,STRATEGIC planning ,WEBOMETRICS - Abstract
The present study classifies the characteristics of YouTube use by South Korean newspapers in terms of both 'local proximity' and 'reported them' of news content. Several kinds of data related to news production and consumption were collected from the opening of the YouTube account to October 11, 2012. Findings suggest that news content strategies for YouTube are different across newspapers. National newspapers are likely to perceive YouTube as a new medium, whereas local newspapers tend to perceive it as an extension of the existing newspaper. The results also reveal that YouTube strategies based on strongly partisan or critical reports or oppositional parodies can work better than those providing a diverse and universally appealing range of content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A Long-term View on the Business Model of Newspaper Publishing: International Comparison and Quantitative Modelling for Germany as Case in point
- Author
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Castulus Kolo
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Engineering ,050801 communication & media studies ,Business model ,newspaper crisis ,lcsh:Communication. Mass media ,simulation ,Newspaper ,Newspaper publishing ,0508 media and communications ,0502 economics and business ,Profit margin ,Marketing ,Speculation ,business.industry ,Communication ,Communication. Mass media ,05 social sciences ,Digital transformation ,Subsidy ,Advertising ,P87-96 ,lcsh:P87-96 ,media management, newspaper publishing, digital transformation ,Publishing ,business model ,digital transformation ,050211 marketing ,Journalism ,business - Abstract
Although consequences are still debated, financials in several countries indicate that the traditional newspaper publishers’ business is not sustainable in the long term. To overcome speculation we built a quantitative model for newspapers’ profit margins to derive ten-year scenarios in a systematic way. The simulation is based on a conceptualisation of a ‘business model’ that can be operationalized. It was designed and tested for specific newspapers in Germany, but is based on general assumptions and of international applicability. Even with optimistic values for print-online substitution, online usage still on the rise, and mobile devices becoming widespread, additional digital revenues of newspapers’ brands most likely cannot compensate for losses in print. In addition to exploiting editorial content across multiple platforms, publishers should explore options beyond these: developing ‘dynamic capabilities’ and possibly setting-up ‘ambidextrous’ organizations. (Unless, of course, they wait for subsidies to manifest or rely on an engagement of civil society for financing journalism.)
- Published
- 2016
18. Basın Kuruluşlarında Sahiplik Yapısı ve Misyon-Vizyon İlişkisi: Türkiye'de Yayımlanan Ulusal Gazeteler Üzerine Bir Analiz.
- Author
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GÜREL, Emet and ÇETİN, Büşra
- Subjects
VISION statements ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,WEBSITES ,IMPACT craters ,MISSION statements - Abstract
Copyright of EUL Journal of Social Sciences / LAÜ Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi is the property of EUL Journal of Social Sciences and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
19. Media views of the Stromboli 2002–2003 eruption and evacuation: a content analysis to understand framing of risk communication during a volcanic crisis.
- Author
-
Calabrò, Laura, Harris, Andrew J. L., and Thouret, Jean-Claude
- Subjects
VOLCANIC eruptions ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,RISK communication ,MASS media ,EMERGENCY management ,NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
The 2002–2003 eruption of Stromboli (Aeolian Islands, Italy) was one of Stromboli's most important effusive events of the last two centuries and began on 28 December 2002. On 30 December 2002, two days after the beginning of the eruption, a landslide entered the sea and caused a tsunami that struck Stromboli's coastal areas. The events of 30 December led to a "voluntary evacuation" by Stromboli's inhabitants. To understand the role of the media in framing risk and the evacuation, we analyzed the content of five newspapers, including two national newspapers (Il Corriere della Sera and La Repubblica) and three regional newspapers (La Gazzetta del Sud, La Sicilia and Il Giornale di Sicilia), published during the period covering the onset of the eruption, the tsunami and the voluntary evacuation (28 December 2002–18 January 2003). Our aim was to assess the type of hazard information given, how it was delivered, and how this may have helped (or not) with the population's resilience, especially in regard to viewing a potential need to evacuate in a favorable light. News regarding the eruption covered a total area of 12,000 cm
2 for the national newspapers (~ 6000 cm2 /paper) against 41,700 cm2 for the regionals (14,000 cm2 /paper); making the regional newspapers the more important sources by quantity. For both newspaper categories, most of this area was occupied by interviews with experts, followed by quotes from residents and tourists, and, finally, those involved in the response (i.e., hazard managers, including civil protection and local government). Out of a total of 9286 words analyzed, the most popular was "tsunami" (426 cases), with the word "volcano" being repeated 315 times (the 6th most popular word); so it would have been difficult for the population not to have known there was a potential risk of tsunami associated with the volcano. In texturally framing the eruptive crisis, negative words, such as "fear", "terror" and "apocalypse", were much more frequent than positive words, which were rare and even not present in some newspapers. The reporting focused on the tsunami threat with little link back to the eruption and other hazards, and contrasted with imagery (that took up 41% of the reporting space) which comprised relaxing pictures of a tranquil island surrounded by a calm blue sea. This, coupled with a confused message through selection of quoted expert sources, may have led to an exaggerated and alarmist frame for the eruption and attendant hazards. This was in spite of widespread use of scientific sources, as well as pleas from the population itself, to the journalists and published in the newspapers themselves, to tone the reporting down. The newspaper agenda was, thus, plainly not compatible with effective communication in support of disaster management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Editorial Representations of the National Standards Education Policy: Populism, the journalistic identity and the citizen-consumer.
- Author
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Salter, Leon A.
- Subjects
EDITORIAL writing ,EDUCATION policy ,PARENTS ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,JOURNALISM - Abstract
This article analyses newspaper editorial representations of the New Zealand education policy National Standards. Following Laclau, it argues that the coverage constructed a populist articulatory logic where "parents" functioned as a synecdoche (a part representing the whole) for "the people". "Parents" became the hegemonic name for the alignment of demands between the media and government fields, an identificatory signifier which partly required the exclusion of educationalists for its cohesion. Overwhelming newspaper support in the 42 editorials analysed is argued to be strongly linked to the policy's carving out of a niche for the New Zealand journalistic identity in its traditional role as liberal democracy's fourth estate. This is a form of political agency which uniquely affords its disavowal, permitting its deferral to a constructed public, who desires the neutral transmission of data in order to make informed consumer choices. Hence, the analysed discourse exhibited significant boundary-crossing between the concepts of the parent, the citizen and the consumer. The article concludes by considering the benefits of furthering dialogic, rather than instrumental, relations between journalism and their publics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. PRINT MEDIA STANDARDISATION AND PROFESSIONALISM: Determinants of independence of Ghanaian media.
- Author
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Nyarko, Jacob and Teer-Tomaselli, Ruth E.
- Subjects
PRESS ,PROFESSIONALISM ,NEWSPAPERS ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,PROVOCATION (Behavior) - Abstract
The independence of the media under Ghana's Fourth Republic is assessed from the perspective of standards and professionalism. Using a qualitative method, the study shows that unethical practices are evident in the print media landscape in Ghana, and argues that this can be traced to four major spheres: educational qualification, existence of several professional associations, a weak regulatory body and "money matters". Overall, the study argues that legalities form a minimal part of the independence of the Ghanaian media but concerns about freedom seem to be self-inflicted by the very media practitioners through their actions and sometimes questionable reportage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Structural equation modelling of determinants of consumer-based brand equity of newspapers.
- Author
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Bakshi, Madhupa and Mishra, Prashant
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER circulation ,PAY equity ,READERSHIP ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,NONFICTION reading materials - Abstract
In an increasingly competitive media market, branding is a potent tool in the hands of media firms. Though significant developments have taken place in the realm of practice, there is sparse research in the academic domain on consumer-based brand performance drivers in the media industry. The objective of this article is to establish the variables that affect the customer-based brand equity (CBBE) of newspaper brands. A survey of local newspapers was undertaken, among consumers in India, to establish a brand equity model for newspapers, based on Aaker’s CBBE theory. Data were collected through survey, and factor analysis of the data indicated that localisation, ideology, credibility, and entertainment are the variables that influence CBBE. Subsequently, structural equation modelling revealed that all the variables had positive impact on brand equity. For marketers of newspapers, this study identifies the factors that they need to focus on if they want to garner the equity of the brand. For the first time, a model is being proposed to predict the CBBE of newspapers, and this can be the basis for further research into whether this model is feasible for other media products as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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