Global Newsworthiness and Reversed Domestication (original) (raw)

International News Production and Globalization

2011

A growing number of books have been published in the past decade addressing broadcasters' international news corporation production strategies, directions, challenges, and the content that emerges from the news production. These books have been highly sceptical of previous international communication theories based on a first trend about the emergence of a global public sphere (e.g., Volkmer, 1999): this trend being mainly influenced by Jürgen Habermas' concept of public sphere (1960; 1991) and Marshall McLuhan's (1962) concept of "global village". The contemporary works that will be addressed in this review article are works that additionally nuanced the second trend, which concerns the homogenization of news worldwide, advancing primarily that structural economic imbalances leads to a flow of news from richer to poorer countries (e.g.,

Do the Contents of Foreign News on Television Match Viewers’ Interests? A 12-Nation Study of Topics and Countries of Interest

This article draws upon content analytic and survey data from a 12-nation comparative study to examine the question of content-interest correspondence (CIC) regarding foreign news on television. That is, to what extent do the contents of foreign news aired on television match the interests that viewers have regarding foreign news? Treating CIC as a variable, the data show that, among the nations studied, CIC concerning foreign countries covered in the news is generally stronger than CIC regarding news topics. At the same time, the analysis examines whether the level of CIC relates to several national, media system, and viewer characteristics. The analysis shows that larger nations exhibit higher levels of CIC regarding topics and lower levels of CIC regarding countries. Also, CIC regarding news topics is lower in countries where the ownership and revenue structure of the television system leans toward commercialism and where television news focuses more heavily on soft news. Implications of the findings and directions for further research are discussed.

Studying Global News: Methodological Issues

2016

This paper reports on the processes, challenges, and results of a study of news consumers in 16 countries: Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Egypt, France, Germany, India, Italy, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine, United Kingdom, and the United States. This study employed a 10-minute, online survey measuring media consumption, news topic preference, news values and demographic information. The results of the primary study will be reported in later papers; the purpose of this analysis is to address the issues and challenges in conducting cross-national research, including language and idiom, sampling issues, data collection procedures, incentives, and time. The analysis begins with a brief overview of methodology, followed by discussion of each of these issues

Is “Global Journalism” Truly Global?

Journalism Studies, 2018

An acute debate has arisen among some journalism scholars as to whether or not a brainchild of the age of globalization was born in the media world: global journalism. This study introduces the debate and conceptually clarifies the points of disagreement between the two camps including the side that denies its emergence. In a parallel quantitative study, measures developed to capture the concepts, "stereotypes" and "domestication" whose existence in news journalism is viewed as inconsistent with the tenets of global journalism, were employed, and found that such content has increased in major international news media in the last 30 years.

Perceptional Differences of International News: Western Media Influence on Non-Western Media

China Media Research, 2009

The purpose of this research is to present the role of the Western media on non-Western public perceptions. This research focuses on Turkish image and identity in the Korean media. For this study, South Korean English dailies, The Korea Herald and The Korea Times, were classified for three months in 2007 by using content analysis. This period is an appropriate time scale to identify Turkish image in the Korean media. In this research, we used content analysis technique to classify newspaper articles according to mentioned impact types. Our findings indicate that Western media has profound effects on Korean news media and extensively exerts cultural imperialism. Moreover, we found that Western originated news, published in Korean media, communicate less positive message about Turkey. This research clearly indicates that non-Western (Korean) people learn and inquire about another non-Western nation (Turkey) and its identity via Western cultural representation.

Variations in Media Systems and News Values of the Three Worlds: An In-Depth Analysis

Differences and inequalities characterize the social, political and economic structures and institutions of the world. These disparities vary from region-to-region and from one country to another. The same way these differences and inequalities exist in the structures and institutions around the world, so there are differences in the social, political and economic strengths of nations. The unequal strengths of nations result to domination of the less powerful nations by the powerful ones. The less powerful countries or regions of the world depend on the powerful ones for survival politically, socially and economically. In fact, the world (global system) is characterized with imbalances and inequalities. How this imbalances and inequalities affect international news and information flow among other issues, is the thrust of this paper.

The Effect of Increased Media Coverage on Political Reporting by International Television Channels

The role of media in gathering and conveying information to the people is increasingly becoming appreciated in many parts of the world. Many people across the world are relying on different news channels to receive news from different parts of the world. One of the most conspicuous roles of the media in the world of communication is reporting on the political events across the globe. Major international news channels such as CNN, BBC, Aljazeera, sky news, France 24, CNBC, and Voice of America, are easily notable when it comes to the coverage of global political news. Given the sensitivity in geopolitics and global political dynamics, these television news channels have adopted strong reporting techniques to compete and at the same time avail important information to the entire world. Reporting on political issues by these international news channels influences the society in a huge way especially when it comes to adopting geopolitical stands. In this regard, different assertions can be made from observing how these news channels report on global politics. There are conspicuous differences in how different channels report of global politics. The quality of reporting by international television channels is biased in various ways owing to a number of factors that have altered how information is gathered and reported at the international stage. The question that comes in mind in this regard is how do global television news networks handle political reporting with respect to safeguarding of the quality and accuracy of the news and validity of their reporting? In order to answer this question and establish how international news channels are reporting on global politics, it is important to consider a number of factors. This paper looks into these factors and evaluates how various news channels are affected by the existing differences in the world of international politics journalism.