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Mass Communication and Society 2008 Abstracts

March 10, 2011 by Kyshia

Mass Communication and Society Division

Television, perceptual filters, and personal politics: Examining public opinion toward gay marriage • Amy Becker, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Dietram Scheufele, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Using data from a nationally representative random-digit-dial survey collected prior to the 2004 presidential election (N=781), this study examines the ways in which predispositions, media use, and political inputs (political knowledge; political tolerance) influence public support for gay marriage. Our findings suggest that attitudes toward gay marriage were largely shaped by ideological orientations and religious predispositions during the course of the 2004 election cycle.

Generational Differences in Reactions to Aggressive Political Interviews • Eran Ben-Porath, University of Pennsylvania • This paper looks at the manner in which generational differences in news values, shape viewers’ reactions to aggressive interviews on television. Uncivil discourse has been found to translate into distrust of the social institutions facilitating this type of communication. However, the effect for younger viewers might be different since the entertaining and involved appearance of aggressive interviews answer to some of the unique expectations of a new generation of news consumers.

Kids say the darndest things, or don’t they? Television exposure and demographic variables in 3rd-6th graders’ implicit and explicit attitudes toward obesity • Kimberly Bissell, University of Alabama; Hal Hays, University of Alabama • This study of 601 3rd-6th grade boys and girls examined implicit and explicit attitudes of anti-fat bias along with media exposure variables, demographic variables, and measures of attitudes about healthy eating and exercise. In this study, predictors of implicit attitudes of bias were measured and then those same implicit measures were tested as possible predictors of more explicit measures of anti-fat bias.

Not Inevitable: Changing the Third-Person Effect Through Education • Stephen Banning, Bradley University • In an experiment, using a pretest and a posttest, the third-person perception was manipulated using education about the third-person effect as an intervention. Participants’ perceptions were significantly different after the intervention. Implications for reducing the third-person effect in order to avoid negative behavioral impacts are discussed.

You and the Tube: Perceptions of Non-Traditional Debate Credibility among New Voters • Pamela Brubaker, The Pennsylvania State University; Michael Horning, The Pennsylvania State University; Christopher Toula, The Pennsylvania State University • In the political arena, new developments in Web 2.0 have been recognized for their ability to provide opportunities for citizens to participate in the political process in ways which were not possible even a decade ago. Responsible for altering the political debate process, this change in technology now allows average citizens to pose questions to presidential candidates. This research examines ways in which the CNN/YouTube debates are affecting perceptions of debate credibility among young voters.

Substance Abuse in Teen-centered Film: 1980-2007 • Mark Callister; Tom Robinson; Chris Near, Brigham Young University • Current mass communication studies have focused on substance use in film; however, they have not focused on teen films over long periods of time. This study examines depictions of alcohol, illegal drugs, and tobacco in teen films from 1980-2007. Results indicate a decline in substance use portrayals. Also, males are shown using illegal substances more than females. These findings suggest that pressure from anti-drug groups may be influencing the presence of illegal substances in films.

Can we make a difference? A study of perceived collective efficacy, Political participation and media use • Sumana Chattopadhyay, Marquette University • Collectives matter in today’s politics. This paper looks at local collective efficacy and its relationship with media use and political participation (informal and electoral). It reveals that local collective efficacy for collective social action tasks has a significant relationship with informal participation in politics.

The Image-Setting Research of Candidates in 2006 Taipei’s Mayoral Election: From the Stimulus-Determined and the Perceiver-Determined Perspectives • Hsuan-Ting Chen, University of Texas at Austin; Meng-chieh Yang • Guided by the theory of second-level agenda-setting and the model of the funnel of causality, results revealed that the agenda of substantive attributes of candidates presented in the newspapers influences the agenda of substantive attributes defining the images of the candidates among the public. Interestingly, more positive reports about a candidate’s attributes can give voters more impression on the candidates’ attributes.

Exploring Characteristics of Three Kinds of Gated News for Three Mainstream Online News Sites • Ying-Ying Chen • This study builds the constructs of three kinds (four types) of gated news to explore how online users pay attention to three online mainstream news sites by defining online users from marketing and democrat perspectives. News characteristics of four types of gated news are examined in explaining online users’ most popular news attention.

Convergence of agenda setting and attitude change approaches: The role of message attributes and the nature of media issues • Gennadiy Chernov, University of Regina • The current experimental study simultaneously tests whether personal experience and the level of message specificity leads to agenda-setting and attitudinal effects. The results demonstrated overall perceived issue importance and attitude favorability increased after participants read the newspaper stories about selected issues of gas and oil prices and international trade with China. In addition, those who did not have personal experience with an issue described in a story with general attributes showed significant attitude change.

Campaigning on Social Networks: The Effects of Visiting MySpace Profiles of Political Candidates, Raluca Cozma, Louisiana State University; Monica Postelnicu • This study examines what uses and gratifications (U&G) compel voters to visit MySpace profiles of political candidates, what the perceived effects of those visits are, and how they related to voters’ preexisting political attitudes.

One More Reason for Women Not to Play: Gender Differences in the Perceptions about Video Game Influences on Body Image • Mark Cruea, Bowling Green State University; Sung-Yeon Park, Bowling Green State University • This study examined young women and men’s perceptions about the influence of hypermuscular and hypersexualized male and female images on others of same and opposite gender. The role of gender in the third-person perceptions has been examined in three ways. As the subject of perception, women’s estimate of the influence on other men was higher than men’s estimate.

Journalists and Framing of the Iraq Issue in the 2004 Presidential Campaign • Arvind Diddi, State University of New York at Oswego • For this study, in all 445 stories from three network and three cable television channels were content analyzed between Labor Day and election day during the 2004 presidential campaign. Derived from framing theory and the past literature, twelve frames for the Iraq issue were defined apriori for this study. The study data revealed that mostly negative frames were emphasized in the coverage of the Iraq issue.

Effects of Black’s Strength of Ethnic Identity on Consumer Attitudes: A Multiple-Group Model Approach • Troy Elias, The Ohio State University; Li Gong; Osei Appiah, The Ohio State University • This study examines the role of ethnic identity as a means of understanding Blacks’ responses to Black and White product endorsers on an e-commerce website, and also evaluates the race of a character in an ad as a moderator of consumer attitudes.

The Impact of the September 11 Tragedy on Regulations Governing International Students: A Framing Analysis of Coverage by The New York Times and The Washington Post • Ignatius Fosu, University of Arkansas • Investigations into the September 11 tragedy revealed that three of the hijackers had taken advantage of loopholes in regulations governing international students. This paper examines the dominant frames and sources used by The New York Times and The Washington Post in covering the issue over a 15-month period, and how these possibly contributed to the passing of new regulations to address these breaches.

Gender Diversity in Sourcing for Newspaper Coverage of 2006 U.S. Senate Elections • Eric Freedman, Michigan State University; Frederick Fico, Michigan State University • A content analysis of stories covering eleven races for U.S. Senate in 2006 showed an overwhelming reliance on male “horse race” and issue experts when nonpartisan experts appeared at all in the largest newspaper in each state. When female experts were cited, they were likely to receive less space and appear deeper in a story than male experts.

The Influence of News Coverage of the Virginia Tech Shootings on Perceived Threat, Stereotypes of South Korean Immigrants, and Avoidance of Intergroup Interaction • Yuki Fujioka, Georgia State University; Cynthia Hoffner, Gergia State University; Anita Atwell-Seate; Elizabeth Cohen • This study examines the influence of news coverage of the Virginia Tech shootings on perceived threat of gun violence, stereotypes of South Korean immigrants, and avoidance of interaction with out-group members. News exposure was associated with the greater perceived threat, more negative stereotypes, and greater avoidance of intergroup interaction. Perceived threat and stereotypes both predicted greater avoidance of intergroup interaction. Findings are discussed in light of integrated threat theory, exemplification theory and social identity theory.

Did the media help inflate the housing bubble? Media coverage of real estate markets in times of change • Carroll Glynn, The Ohio State University; Michael Huge, The Ohio State University; Lindsay Hoffman, University of Delaware • Economic issues offer communication scholars the opportunity to analyze media effects via widely available economic indicators, probing the relationship between objective conditions (i.e., economic indicators) and subjective evaluations (i.e., public perceptions of the economy). A content analysis of newspaper coverage from 1996 to 2007 was combined with national survey data. Findings indicate that there was indeed a relationship between both the amount and type of media coverage and public perceptions regarding the housing market.

Late-Night Iraq: Monologue Joke Content and Tone from 2003-2007 • Michel Haigh, The Pennsylvania State University; Joshua Compton, Southwest Baptist University; Aaron Heresco • The current study examines late-night comedy about the war in Iraq. A content analysis examined late-night comedy jokes about the war in Iraq from March 2003 – March 2007. Results indicate the jokes told (N = 986) about Iraq were anti-war, had a negative tone, and depicted the U.S. government negatively. The most common type of comedy employed to discuss Iraq was informative. The topics discussed in the jokes varied.

Nationwide Newspaper Coverage of Comprehensive Immigration Reform: A Community Structure Approach • Patrick Hall, The College of New Jersey; Steven Viani; Alexander Liberton; John Pollock, College of New Jersey • Utilizing the community structure approach, a research model developed by Pollock and others (1977, 1978, 1994-2002, 2007) that connects city characteristics with variations in newspaper coverage of significant events, a nationwide cross-section of 21 newspapers were sampled to analyze coverage of comprehensive immigration reform. The articles were chosen based on specific parameters, including a date range of November 28, 2005 to November 6, 2007 and a word-count of 250 or more.

Representation of Trauma and Collective Memory in Two Newspapers: Different Memories on Sex Slaves, or Comfort Women • Choonghee Han, The University of Iowa • This paper talks about the traumatic memory in the framework of collective memory and media representations, particularly rhetorics and themes of representation. The main focus is on how news media in Japan and South Korea tried to represent their own interpretation of the memory. Editorials from two newspapers, one in each country, that covered the international debate over the sex slaves, or “comfort women,” were analyzed.

Sex-typing of sports: The influence of gender, participation, and media on visual priming responses • Marie Hardin, Penn State University; Fuyuan Shen, Penn State University; Nan Yu, The Pennsylvania State University • Although men’s participation in sports that have traditionally been sex-typed as masculine, such as basketball, have received the lion’s share of media coverage, research shows that women’s interest and participation in these sports has steadily increased during the past decade. This study seeks to update research on the sex-typing of sports with an exploration of how visual priming, through sports images, may be influenced by participation, mediated sports consumption and gender of consumers.

Blogs and the Iraq War: A Time-Series Analysis of Intermedia Agenda Setting and Agenda Building • Kyle Heim, University of Missouri • This study used time-series analysis of news coverage and blog discussion about the Iraq War from mid-2006 through late 2007 to examine intermedia agenda setting and agenda building. The amount of newspaper and television coverage was positively correlated with the number of posts on “A-list” political blogs and personal blogs. Limited evidence was found that A-list political blogs influenced news coverage. Military deaths influenced news coverage, but White House news releases were less influential.

Framing Armed Conflict: A Field Study of Sri Lankan and Israeli-Palestinian Journalists • Anuradha K. Herath; T. Michael Maher; William R. Davie, University of Louisiana • This study applied framing analysis and a “snowball” interviewing technique to determine the relationship between journalists’ attitudes about armed conflict and their reporting. Twenty-four interviews with Sri Lankan and Israeli-Palestinian journalists were conducted, and their work samples were analyzed for the presence of pro-war frames developed using peace journalism guidelines. A definite relationship was detected between the frames created by the journalists’ writing and their attitudes toward the armed conflicts they were covering.

News Leads and News Frames in Stories about Stem Cell Research • Elliott Hillback, UW-Madison; Anthony Dudo, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Rosalyna Wijaya; Sharon Dunwoody, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Dominique Brossard, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Furthering recent research on media framing, this study examines the extent to which “topical emphasis” (focus) and “meaning emphasis” (frames) are conceptually distinct entities. Specifically, we examine to what degree the distinction between foci and frames described by Brossard et al. (2007) in news leads is also present in the body of news stories, and we examine the patterns of association between particular foci and frames in new story leads and bodies, and across types of events.

Value Frames in Health Communication: Reframing and Media Effects • Lindsay Hoffman, University of Delaware; Michael Slater, The Ohio State University • Media frames that appeal to core values have been shown to activate individuals’ values. We argue that values can serve to “reframe” issues. Literature on persuasion, media priming, and framing help explicate the role that value frames play in activating individual values. An experiment exposed subjects to value frames about a smoking ban. Results demonstrated that value frames alone did not affect values, but when value frames were interacted with pre-existing orientations, significant results emerged.

Media Use and Perceptions of Citizen Activities: The Role of the Media in Socializing Active Democratic Citizens • J. Brian Houston; Michael Pfau • This study examined how the mass media depict citizen activities, how individuals think citizens should act, and how the two are related through a content analysis of media content and a national telephone survey. The content analysis found that citizens were frequently depicted as stating political opinions and as the object of government law, policy, or actions.

If it’s good enough for me, it’s good enough for my children: frequency of television viewing as a predictor of parental television monitoring • Stacey Hust, Washington State University; Joann Wong; Yvonnes Yi-Chun Chen, Washington State University • Parents have increasingly expressed concern about children’s media use, yet whether parent’s media use affects their attitudes toward children’s television use has rarely been explored. A survey of 462 parents indicated parents’ television viewing was associated with attitudes about parental mediation, and the frequency of parental TV viewing was positively associated with the frequency of children’s viewing. This study also produced three reliable scales of parents’ identification of scene-specific content as violent, sexual, or family-oriented

A Functional Analysis of the 2007 South Korean Presidential Campaign Blogs • Sungwook Hwang, University of Missouri at Columbia • This study content-analyzes the functions and topics on the 2007 South Korean presidential campaign blogs by employing the Functional Theory.

News Attitudes as Mediators in the Relationship between Political Extremity and Political Blog Use • Kideuk Hyun; Joon Yea Lee, University of Texas at Austin • This study examined the role of news attitudes-preference to attitude-consistent news and differential perception of media trust-as mediators in the relationship between the political extremity and political blog use. Using 2006 Pew Research Center data, initial regression equations revealed the significant relationships among the three sets of associations between political extremity and political blog use, political extremity and media attitudes, and media attitudes and political blog use.

You Can’t Take it With You? Comparing the Effects of Portable Handheld and Television-Based Media Consoles on Users’ Physiological and Psychological Responses to Video Game and Movie Content • James D. Ivory, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Robert Magee, Virginia Tech • Because portable media consoles are extremely popular, it is important to investigate how their physiological and psychological effects may differ from those of television-based consoles. This article reports a 2 (Console: Portable or Television-Based) X 2 (Medium: Video Game or Movie) mixed factorial design experiment with physiological arousal and self-reported flow experience as dependent variables, designed to explore whether console type affects media experiences and whether these effects are consistent with different media.

Blogs and Intermedia Agenda-Setting: A Study of Campaign and Political Blogs in the 2006 Pennsylvania Senate Race • Philip Johnson, Syracuse University; Jennifer Liebman, Syracuse University • Our study content analyzed candidate blogs and two popular political blogs from the 2006 Pennsylvania senate race in order to determine which issues were most salient during the election. Spearman’s rho was used to determine issue agenda consistency of candidate blogs and political blogs throughout September and October. These correlations showed that candidate blogs and political blogs maintained consistent issue agendas.

Can you Teach a New Blog Old Tricks? How Blog Users Judge Credibility of Different Types of Blogs for Information About the Iraq War • Thomas J. Johnson, Texas Tech University; Barbara Kaye, University of Tennessee • This study employed an online survey to examine the extent to which blog users judge different types of blogs as credible. More specifically, this study examines the extent to which blog users judge general information, media/journalism, war, military, political, corporate and personal blogs as credible. The study will also examine the degree to which reliance on blogs for war information predicts their credibility after controlling for demographic and political factors.

Going to the Blogs: Toward the Development of a Uses and Gratifications Measurement Scale for Blogs • Barbara Kaye, University of Tennessee • This paper investigates the uses and motivations for connecting to blogs. Rather than relying on motivations from pre-existing scales measuring traditional media or Internet use that must be adapted for blogs, this study relies on open-ended questions about blog use derived from a previous survey.

What do people do with ‘seed news’?: An exploratory case study of news diffusion in cyberspace • Kyungmo Kim, Yonsei University; Yung-Ho Im; Eun-mee Kim; Yeran Kim • This research examines the patterns of news diffusion process in cyberspace. Four news events in Korea were selected to show how each ‘seed news’ is diffused and also transformed along the process in cyberspace. The research especially focuses on transformation of news content and forms in the diffusion process, which the previous news diffusion study has neglected at the expense of concentrating on news awareness of the individual adopters.

The Irony of Satire: People See What They Want to See in The Colbert Report, Heather LaMarre • The Ohio State University; Michael Beam, The Ohio State University; Kristen Landreville, The Ohio State University • This study investigated biased message processing of political satire in The Colbert Report and the influence of political ideology on perceptions of Stephen Colbert. Results indicate that political ideology influences individual-level processing of ambiguous political comedy. Using data from an experiment (N = 332), we found that individual-level political ideology significantly predicted perceptions of Colbert’s political party identification and political ideology.

The Investigative Reporting Agenda in America: 1979-2007 • Gerry Lanosga; Jason Martin, Indiana University • This study is a content analysis of entries in the annual contest sponsored by Investigative Reporters and Editors, a Missouri-based industry association that provides training and recognition to investigative journalists from across the country. Analysis of a random sample of stories from the database’s 20,000 projects yields a systematic description of investigative reporting as it has been practiced in the United States since 1979, an increased understanding of the journalist-source dynamic as it pertains to investigative reporting, and a new perspective on investigative reporting in the context of agenda setting theory.

Ratings Creep and PG-13: A Longitudinal Analysis • Ron Leone, Stonehill College • Ratings creep” is the belief that adult concept escalates in films with the same rating over time. This study tests the “ratings creep hypothesis” in PG-13 films (1988, 1997, and 2006), and compares 1997 R films to 2006 PG-13 films. Sixty films were analyzed. Significant increases in violence among PG-13 films were found; increases in other adult content were not.

Issue Constraints and Gatekeeping:Limited Production Capacities of News Sites for Publishing Diverse Issues • Jeongsub Lim, Austin Peay State University • Traditional news media are unable to publish all news items because of structural constraints or limited capacities, such as the availability of news holes and staff reporters, resulting in issue constraints that favor a small range of issues over diverse alternative issues. This study explores the question of to what extent such issue constraints are present in news sites.

“Are all celebrity endorsements the same?” The impact of different spokespersons for mental illness campaigns • Yu-Jung Lin, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities • Whether all celebrities are equally useful as potential spokespersons for health campaigns is an open question. This study tested the potential impact of two different celebrities, a non-celebrity, and a control condition with no message on the perceptions of those with major depression among a population of undergraduates. Results suggest that while the endorsement message conditions did improve perceptions relative to the control condition, the two celebrities differed dramatically in their effect.

American and Japanese Viewpoints on Press Freedom/Civil Liberty Infringements within the Context of Terror • Catherine Luther, University of Tennessee • This study examined the potential influences of cultural values, perceived level of terrorism threat, interest in terrorism news, and mass media consumption habits on the degree of support or nonsupport given to antiterrorism strategies that infringe on civil liberties and press freedom. The impact of the above main factors was analyzed through a survey-based analysis of viewpoints expressed by American and Japanese college students.

Examining Narrative Engagement’s Influence on Entertainment-Education Campaigns for Organ Donation • Emily Garrigues Marett, Washington State University Edward R Murrow School of Communication; Rick Busselle • Organ donation consent rates are very low despite overwhelmingly positive attitudes toward organ donation. Because television is the primary source of information on organ donation, entertainment-education campaigns may be an effective strategy. Previous research has linked narrative engagement to changes in attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors. This study empirically tested the influence of narrative engagement on entertainment-education efforts. Results indicated that entertainment-education programming was more successful than standard entertainment programming at influencing organ donation attitudes.

Blogging the Horse Race: New Media and the Presidential Primary Campaign • Jason Martin, Indiana University; Gerry Lanosga • Horse-race campaign coverage has been a popular topic of communication research, but not yet for new media. This content analysis investigates how blogs covered the 2008 presidential primaries. Bloggers used the horse-race theme in reporting and focused on candidate performance more often than print media at rates that were statistically significant. Also, horse-race reporting in both media was found to include a more complex mixture of issue coverage than previous similar studies had indicated.

Voters’ Attention, Perceived Effects, and Voting Preferences: Negative Political Advertising in the 2006 Ohio Governor’s Election • Jennette Lovejoy, Ohio University; Hong Cheng, E.W. Scripps School of Journalism Ohio University; Daniel Riffe, E.W. Scripps School of Journalism Ohio University • Statewide survey (N=564) before Ohio’s 2006 gubernatorial election examined political interest, campaign news and advertising attention, and perceived effects of negative political ads. Interest was related to political and negative political advertising attention, which were in turn related to campaign news attention. Candidate preference predicted attention to political and negative political ads; attention to ads significantly predicted perceived effects on self and on others, while negative ad attention significantly predicted third-person differential (other minus self).

Values and media use in Germany, 1986-2005: An explorative analysis • Merja Mahrt, Zeppelin University, Germany; Klaus Schoenbach, Amsterdam School of Communications Research (ASCoR), University of Amsterdam • How is media use related to the personal values of audience members? This study explores for the first time historically whether an expanding media offer has been accompanied by a selection behavior more and more determined by individual values. Have people increasingly tended to use the media they assume to represent their values?

A Citizen-Eye View of Television News Source Credibility • Andrea Miller, Louisiana State University; David Kurpius, Louisiana State University • This experimental study used 244 participants to investigate citizen perceptions of news sources focusing on source credibility. Ten television news stories were created varying source affiliation (officials/citizens), source race (African-American/Caucasian), and type of story (hard/soft news). For the first time, results showed viewers do distinguish between the credibility of official and citizen sources. No difference was found in credibility based on race. Results are discussed within the frameworks of civic journalism and citizens sources.

Reporting Risk: Perceptions of fear and risk from health news coverage • Barbara Miller, Elon University; Alissa Packer, Susquehanna University; Brooke Barnett, Elon University • Using actual news coverage of an environmental health issue, this experimental study examined whether providing benchmarks – namely risk equivalents and comparisons – influenced individuals’ risk perceptions. The study suggests providing information on other sources of a contaminant may do little to reduce subjects’ estimates of risk; however, providing information about comparable, unrelated risks may lower concern associated with a particular hazard.

Understanding Media Satisfaction: Development and Validation of an Affect-based Scale • Padmini Patwardhan, Winthrop University; Jin Yang, University of Memphis; Hemant Patwardhan, Winthrop University • Media satisfaction is an important construct in the study of relationships between mass media and audiences. In mass communication literature, media satisfaction is a widely used construct in the study of media effects as a desired consumption outcome and likely predictor of future media-related behavior. From an industry perspective, creating satisfaction is central to the economic viability of media institutions and services.

Sexually Explicit Material on the Internet and Adolescents’ Sexual Preoccupancy: Assessing Causality and Underlying Mechanisms • Jochen Peter, University of Amsterdam; Patti Valkenburg • The main aim of this study was to investigate whether adolescents’ use of sexually explicit Internet material (SEIM) increased their sexual preoccupancy. Within one year, we surveyed 962 adolescents aged 13-20 three times. Structural equation modeling showed that exposure to SEIM stimulated sexual preoccupancy. This influence was mediated by subjective sexual arousal from SEIM. The effect of exposure to SEIM on sexual arousal did not differ between male and female adolescents.

The role of media literacy in adolescents’ understanding of and responses to sexual portrayals in media • Bruce Pinkleton, Washington State University; Erica Austin, Washington State University; Marilyn Cohen, University of Washington; Yvonnes Yi-Chun Chen, Washington State University • Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and teen pregnancy rates are at an all-time high in the United States and sexual behavior is prevalent in the mass media. The purpose of this study pretest-posttest quasi-experiment conducted in the field to determine whether or not a theory-based media literacy curriculum focusing on sexual portrayals in the media would positively influence adolescents’ decision making regarding sex.

How Media Audiences Spontaneously Articulate the Third-Person Effect in Naturalistic Conversation: A Qualitative Look at the Form and Content of Self-Other Comparisons • Jennifer Rauch, Long Island University • This study enhances the external validity of third-person effect (TPE) research by showing how audience members spontaneously compare themselves to others while talking about media messages. Focus groups of political activists watched and discussed a television news program, responding to non-directional questions in a naturalistic setting, a qualitative approach that contrasts with the surveys and experiments of most TPE research.

Nationwide Newspaper Coverage of the No Child Left Behind Act: A Community Structure Approach • Janna Raudenbush, The College of New Jersey; Alyssa Conn, The College of New Jersey; Gina Miele, The College of New Jersey; John Pollock, College of New Jersey • Utilizing the community structure approach, as developed in nationwide studies by Pollock and others (1977, 1978, 1994-2002), this study investigated links between city characteristics and nationwide newspaper coverage of the No Child Left Behind act. A national cross-section sample of 21 newspapers was selected from the NewsBank database.

Citizen Journalism as Third Places: What makes people contribute information online (or not) • Sue Robinson, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Cathy DeShano • Informed by literature on the public sphere, community and the Internet, this research represents a qualitative ecological reconstruction of a particular communicative niche, Madison, WI. Depth interviews with trained-but-non-practicing citizen journalists as well as with established local news bloggers formed this case study of a single community.

Georgia Peach: How the Press Shaped the National and Regional Memory of Ty Cobb • Lori Roessner, University of Georgia • This article examines the national and regional memory of Ty Cobb, often hailed as the greatest baseball player of the Deadball Era. The demon of the diamond’s feats and antics have been recounted in newspapers, magazines, film and sports history books for more than a century, and local and national museums celebrate his legend, as much as his legacy on the field.

From Junkies to Avoiders: How using traditional and nontraditional forms of TV news is related to political attitutdes and behaviors in emerging adults • Kathleen Schmermund, U.S. Congressman Phil English; Anne Johnston, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This research examines how use of traditional and nontraditional TV news is related to measures of high or low political trust, cynicism, political participation, efficacy and interpersonal political communication. An Internet survey of 884 college students indicated that slightly more than a third of the respondents could be classified as TV news Junkies and another third as Avoiders of all TV news.

“I hate Jack Thompson”: Exploring third-person differences between gamers and non-gamers • Mike Schmierbach, Penn State University; Michael Boyle, West Chester University; Qian Xu; Douglas McLeod, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Numerous studies have demonstrated a third-person perception, but many aspects of the origins and consequences of this remain unaddressed. In this study, we use the topic of video game effects to assess how differences in an individual’s use of a medium and between positive and negative effects shape the third-person effect. Although games are subject to clear third-person perceptions and subsequent support for censorship, these patterns are greatly diminished for heavy players and positive effects.

Professionalization in Political Online Communication? German Party Web Sites in the 2002 and 2005 National Elections • Eva Johanna Schweitzer, University of Mainz, Germany • This paper examines the development of e-campaigning in a party-centered democracy. Based on theoretical concepts of political communication research that are applied to explain recent changes in online campaigning, the study compares German party Web sites in two national election cycles by a quantitative content and structure analysis. The results show that major and minor parties fall more and more apart in cyberspace and that traditional offline trends in political communication are disregarded online.

Flame On! Sports Fans and Online Aggression • Brad Schultz, University of Mississippi; Mary Lou Sheffer, Texas Tech University • Studies have shown that highly identified sports fans often engage in aggressive physical behavior, however, little is known about aggression in terms of non-physical Internet communication. This study applied Wann’s self-esteem maintenance model to examine how sports fans use online message boards. A content analysis was conducted to analyze message board communication before, during and after a championship football game.

Staying Alive: The Impact of Media Coverage on Candidacy Attrition in the 1980-2004 Primaries • Fei Shen, The Ohio State University • This study proposed a “media momentum model”, arguing that the amount of news coverage candidates receive might influence their candidacy duration. The two mechanisms that drive this process are rational choice on the candidates’ side and cue-taking on the voters’ side.

Pluralistic Ignorance and Social Distance of Public Relations Practitioners and Journalists in the Source-Reporter Relationship • Jae-Hwa Shin, University of Southern Mississippi; Jongmin Park, Kyung Hee University; Glen Cameron • A Web survey of 206 public relations practitioners and journalists in South Korea showed both false dissensus and social distance among public relations practitioners and journalists enacted through the source-reporter relationship. Coorientational analysis simultaneously demonstrated that members of each profession disagreed with and inaccurately predicted responses of the other. Their inaccurate projection of the views of the other profession was greater than their disagreement, resulting in false dissensus, on two dimensions of conflict and strategy.

Soldiers of Misfortune: How Two Newspapers Framed Private Security Contractors In Iraq • Mark Slagle • Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the U.S. military’s use of private security contractors has grown enormously. Concomitant with that increase has been an increase in media coverage of these contractors and how they are used in conflict areas. This paper examines how two newspapers, one national and one local, framed one private security company in two separate incidents.

Comparing Media Effects on Perceived Issue Salience across Different Media Channels and Media Types • Jesper Stromback, Mid Sweden University; Spiro Kiousis, University of Florida • Although agenda-setting research is one of the most widely investigated theories in mass communication, it is still not clear whether newspapers or television are more powerful in terms of salience transfer from the media to the public. In addition, most agenda-setting studies are content- rather than attention-based, and use cross-sectional rather than panel data.

Local Media, Public Opinion, and State Legislative Policies: Agenda Setting at the State Level • Yue Tan; David Weaver • This study aims to explore first-level agenda setting at the state level. In particular, it examines the relationships among media coverage of local newspapers, state-level public opinion and state legislative policies, in order to better understand mass media’s role in state policymaking. In addition, it also tests the intervening impact of two state level factors: state legislative professionalism and state political culture on the agenda setting effects.

Attribute Agenda Setting and Images of Hillary Clinton, a Retrospective Case Study • Hai Tran, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This research attempts to provide some new evidence that links public opinions and attitudes about presidential candidates in direct proportion to cognitive and affective attributes presented in media coverage. The study also investigates the relative power of the various mass media in setting the public agenda.

Is It Frames or Facts? Testing Internally vs. Ecologically Valid Frames on Risk Perceptions • Emily Vraga; D. Jasun Carr; Jeffrey Nytes, UW Madison; Dhavan Shah, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Research on framing remains fractured. The focus of this experiment examines the division between idealistic (internally valid) and pragmatic (externally valid) approaches to framing within the domain of risk perceptions. Our study suggests that both conceptions of framing have merit. Specifically, we find that while both idealistic and pragmatic frames produce differences in total risk perceptions between gain and loss frames, it is idealistic frames that produce effects on comparative judgments.

The Effects of Strategic News Coverage on Political Cynicism: A Content Analysis of Online Interactions • Weirui Wang, The Pennsylvania State University • A content analysis of online interactions was conducted to examine the effects of strategic news coverage on political cynicism among audiences. News stories from the websites of ABC News, CBS News, USA Today, and The Washington Post were analyzed for the uses of media frames in the coverage of the embryonic stem cell research controversy (n = 49).

Exploring “Positive” Effects: College Students’ Media Exposure and Exercise Intentions • Xiao Wang, Eastern Connecticut State University • Previous research in body image mainly focused on the disordered eating attitudes and behaviors. This current study sought to explore the potential positive effects resulted from exposure to a variety of media outlets and to provide a mediating analysis on how media exposure shaped individuals’ attitudes toward good body image and self-efficacy to perform a target behavior.

The Effects of Homophily, Identification, and Violent Video Games on Players • Kevin Williams, Mississippi State University • After an experiment with 148 male participants, results indicated skinning a video game character to physically resemble the player led to greater identification and psychological involvement with the game’s character, but did little to impact the feeling of presence. Exposure to violent content also led to greater physical hostility than exposure to nonviolent content. An interaction effect revealed playing a violent game with a character physically resembling the player led to even greater hostility.

Surviving Survivor: A Content Analysis of Antisocial Behavior and its Context in a Popular Reality Television Show • Christopher Wilson, Brigham Young University; Tom Robinson; Mark Callister • Since the debut of Survivor in 2000, reality programs have become a staple on American television. Critics have argued that reality programming represents the bottom rung of television programming promoting antisocial behavior, exhibitionism, and voyeurism. This content analysis examines types, frequency, and context of antisocial behavior on seven seasons of Survivor from 2000 to 2007.

Agenda Building and Setting in a Referendum Campaign. Investigating the Flow of Arguments among Campaigners, the Media, and the Public • Werner Wirth, U of Zurich; Jorg Matthes, U of Zurich; Christian Schemer, U of Zurich; Martin Wettstein, U of Zurich • This study is the first of its kind to test second level agenda building and setting effects in the course of a referendum campaign. Personal standardized interviews with 47 different campaign managers are linked to a content analysis of TV and newspaper coverage, and a three-wave public opinion survey. The results demonstrate the dynamic flow of arguments in the agenda building and setting process; top-down from the campaigners to the news media, and the public.

College Students’ Self-Concepts and Attitude toward Advertising; -The Relationships among the Body-Esteem, Social Comparison, and the Perception about Diet Advertising • Hyunjae (Jay) Yu, Louisiana State University; Gevorgyan (George) Gennadi, Louisiana State University; Hoyoung Ahn, University of Georgia • There have been many studies dealing with the relationships between self-perceptions and the perceptions of advertising. However, research that focused specifically on diet advertising, which has recently seen a dramatic increase in our society, has been scarce. One can assume that people’s perceptions of diet advertising may be influenced by how they think about their own bodies or by the extent to which they compare their own bodies with those of others.

The Effects of Media Use, Trust, and Political Party Relationship Quality on Political and Civic Participation • Weiwu Zhang, Texas Tech University; Trent Seltzer, Texas Tech University • This study used data from a telephone survey of 998 residents of a midsized city during early 2008 to examine the interaction among interpersonal communication, media use, interpersonal trust, relationships with political parties, civic and political participation, and confidence in government. Results indicated that interpersonal communication, new media use, and relationship with political parties were related to increases in civic and political participation. Strong relationships with parties were also related to increased confidence in government.

Seeing is Believing? An Explorative Study of News Credibility in China • Yunze Zhao; Wenjing Xie • This study aims at evaluating media credibility in contemporary China and exploring what factors will influence people’s perceptions of media credibility. A survey was conducted in Beijing and found that the newly-emerged professional media outlets have evolved into a strong competitor of the traditional party-organ news media and were viewed as more credible than the party mouthpiece.

“I feel happy today so I care less about news details:” The impact of mood on processing news information • Bu Zhong, Pennsylvania State University • This study is an experiment (N = 87) that investigated the impact of three mood states – happy, sad or neutral – upon the way people process news information. After an effective mood induction procedure, the experiment discovers that changes of mood states produce significant differences in processing news information. The data also suggest that mood directs people’s attention and valence cues to different types of information in the news – global or local information.

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Magazine 2008 Abstracts

March 10, 2011 by Kyshia

Magazine Division

Satiric Magazines in Latin America: Two Case Studies on Hybrid Alternativeness • Paul Alonso, University of Texas • This research explores the cases of two satirical publications—The Clinic (Chile), and Barcelona (Argentina). Through critical humor, parody and satire, these independent magazines challenged official discourse and offered alternative interpretations about the ruling class and society after a traumatic historical period. The Clinic was founded in Santiago, Chile, in 1998, when former military dictator Augusto Pinochet was arrested in London as a result of charges related to violations against human rights.

Unexamined Sensibilities: A Content Analysis of the Portrayal of Race in The Dixie Sunday Supplement Magazine, 1981-1986 • Mary Blue, Tulane University • Locally produced Sunday magazines have rarely been viewed as an integral part of the newspapers in which they appeared. Seen as a breed apart, not quite newspapers but not exactly real magazines either, they have floundered in search of an identity that would justify their place in the Sunday package. As a result, there are only 12 left today.

Looking into the Past, Present, and the Future: Frames of Presidential Spouses in Popular News Magazines • Naeemah Clark, University of Tennessee, and Carolyn Lepre, Marist College • This manuscript uses articles in Newsweek, Time, and U.S. News and World Report to consider the portrayal of the two most recent first ladies (Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush) and then determine how these frames may impact how the public may evaluate the spouses of the current presidential candidates. After the analysis of Mrs. Clinton and Mrs. Bush, three distinct frames (adviser, homemaker, and proxy) emerged.

Framing the Visual Coverage of the 2006 Lebanon War • Shannon Dougherty, Arizona State University • This study examined the visual coverage of the 2006 Lebanon War in the three major U.S. news magazines—Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News and World Report. A quantitative content analysis revealed that the human interest and military conflict frames dominated coverage of the seven-week war. This study also found disproportionate rather than balanced visual coverage that emphasized the war’s negative effect on Lebanon and its people.

Athlete as “Model” or Athlete as “Power”? Gender Stereotypes of Athletic Women in Magazine Photographs • Andrea Duke and Jennifer Greer, University of Alabama • To examine media framing of female athletes as either masculine or feminine, 669 athletic women in photographs in entertainment/fashion and health/fitness magazines were content analyzed. The study found that both genres included more masculine than feminine stereotypes, and that health/fitness magazines were more likely to present stereotypes. Additionally, women in ads were depicted as more masculine than those in editorial photographs and women engaged in masculine sports were framed with masculine attributes.

International Women’s Magazines and Transnational Advertising in China • Yang Feng and Lan Ye, Nanyang Technological University • International women’s magazines have been expanding into China for the past few decades. This expansion is, in large part, driven by global brands in need of advertising vehicles for their transnational products. In this paper, we look at the growth of international women’s magazines in China, and the role advertising plays in these magazines.

Innocence in Iraq: A Content Analysis of Youth, Gender, and Agency in Canadian and U.S. Newsmagazine War Photography • Amanda Hinnant, University of Missouri • Representations of innocence are pertinent in times of war, yet they are under-studied in research on visual storytelling in magazines. This research examines the degree to which indicators of innocence in war photography compare between U.S. News and World Report and the Canadian newsmagazine Maclean’s. A content analysis of Iraq War images from the first year reveals children, women, and civilians populated pictures in Maclean’s significantly more than in U.S. News and World Report.

Global Magazines and Local Content: Globalization and Localization of Women’s Magazines in China • Karita Karan and Yang Feng, Nanyang Technical University • Unlike other global media products that are imported from overseas, international women’s magazines in China are published via licensing agreement or joint ventures with local companies. These ownership patterns allow local editions of international women’s magazines to negotiate the tensions and contradictions between the global players and local publishers.

Magazines on a Mission: Taking a Closer Look at Nonprofit Publications • Miles Maguire, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh • The nonprofit sector of the American media is a vast but little-explored and little-understood segment of the industry. This paper begins to map the landscape of nonprofit media by examining the magazine publishing activities of tax-exempt organizations in the United States. This study provides comparisons of advertising revenues and editorial content at for profit and nonprofit magazines and presents observations from editors about differences between the two sectors.

Selected Black Magazines’ Mental Health Coverage, 2000-2007 • Teresa Mastin and Shalane Walker, Michigan State University • In 2001, Mental Health: Culture, Race, and Ethnicity—A Supplement to Mental Health, which addresses mental health services disparities in minority communities, was released. In this study media advocacy theory is used to examine four Black magazines’ mental health coverage, 2000 – 2007. Forty-nine articles were printed during that timeframe. Mental health coverage decreased in the post-report years. Advocacy groups are encouraged to work with the media to educate Black communities about mental health.

Genetically Modified Foods: A Typology of Frames in U.S. News Magazines • Joan Price, Ohio University • This study presents a typology of frames associated with genetically modified foods based on an analysis of articles published in news magazines from 1995 through 2004. The condensational symbols chosen, the foods referenced, and the sources cited in frame construction were analyzed.

Visually Framing the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq in Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report • Carol Schwalbe, Arizona State University • A content analysis of 2,369 images revealed that the three major U.S. news magazines—Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report—framed the first 16 months of the Iraq War from a patriotic, American-centered perspective focusing on conflict and human interest rather than showing alternative perspectives, such as the impact on Iraq’s infrastructure, environment, and civilians. Iraqi and American females, children, and the injured and dead appeared in less than 12% of the images.

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Law and Policy 2008 Abstracts

March 10, 2011 by Kyshia

Law and Policy Division

Broadcast Fairness as a Public Interest Principle: Finding Intent in the 1927 and 1934 Acts • Mark R. Arbuckle, Pittsburg State University • For four decades the Fairness Doctrine required broadcasters to air important controversial public issues and provide opportunity for opposing views. In 1987 the FCC cited technological advances and increased media voices as its chief justification for eliminating the doctrine.

Crowdslapping the Government: First Amendment Protections for the Crowd in Government Crowdsourcing Ventures • Daren Brabham, University of Utah • Crowdsourcing is an online, distributed problem solving and production model already in use by Web-based businesses such as Threadless, iStockphoto, and InnoCentive. Part of the so-called Web 2.0 era, the crowdsourcing model harnesses the collective intelligence of an online community to solve problems and supply creative labor for an organization.

Freedom of Speech & the High Price of College Textbooks: Do New Laws Affecting Disclosure of Textbook Information Go Too Far and Violate the First Amendment? • Clay Calvert, Pennsylvania State University • This paper examines the First Amendment freedom of expression issues raised by a wave of new state laws designed to make college textbooks more affordable for students by mandating that publishers and their representatives disclose certain price and content-based information to professors and others. After describing the evolution, purpose and terms of these compelled-speech laws, the paper then analyzes their constitutionality under the commercial speech doctrine, exposing multiple problems that likely render them unconstitutional.

What is News?: The FCC and the New Battle Over the Regulation of Video News Releases • Clay Calvert, Pennsylvania State University • This paper analyzes and critiques the Federal Communication Commission’s troubling recent efforts to regulate news and, in particular, its new foray in 2007 into policing and punishing the use of materials gleaned from video news releases (VNRs) for which absolutely no money or other form of consideration has changed hands between the VNR producers and the television stations that incorporate them into newscasts. The paper examines the First Amendment issues raised by the FCC’s efforts.

The Human Right to Information, the Environment, and Information About the Environment: From the Universal Declaration to the Aarhus Convention • Benjamin W. Cramer, Pennsylvania State University • Access to government-held information and the amelioration of environmental problems are considered statutory matters in the United States, but at the international level these are seen as human rights to be enjoyed by all the world’s peoples. In recent years two relatively new categories of human rights demanded by activists, the right to government information and the right to environmental protection, have converged into a new human right – the right to government information about the environment.

Packing Heat: A Gun Battle Between Privacy and Access • Aimee Edmondson, University of Missouri • After the Virginia Tech massacre, university students across the country strapped on empty gun holsters and wore them to class for a week to protest school policies prohibiting students from carrying concealed weapons on campus. If a gunman bursts into one of their classrooms, they said, they want to be able to shoot back. The carrying of concealed weapons has become a major public issue.

Shades of Truth, Harm, and Malice: The Emergence of the Subsidiary Meaning Doctrine • Carolyn Edy, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • First described and applied in 1986 by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Herbert v. Lando, the subsidiary meaning doctrine holds that a defamatory statement is not actionable if it is subsidiary in meaning to other, nonactionable statements included in the same publication.

Advertising Parody, Intellectual Property and Defamation in the United States and France • Leo Eko, University of Iowa • International politico-cultural controversies involving mass mediated cartoons, caricatures and parodies provided an opportunity to compare and contrast how courts in the United States and France manage the tensions between advertising parody, defamation, freedom of speech and respect for religion.

Equal Protection Challenges to Legal Protections for Newsgathering: Would Bloggers Have a Claim? • Laura J. Hendrickson, Texas House Research Organization • As the proliferation of blog journalism calls into question who is a journalist, who should benefit from legal press protections, and whether unique press protections are constitutionally sustainable, one area of law that could potentially be called on to address these questions is Equal Protection doctrine. This paper examines fundamental interest analysis under the Equal Protection Clause and whether it might apply to bloggers or other non-institutional journalists seeking legal protection for newsgathering.

No Two States Alike: A Statutory Analysis of Survivor Privacy Rights • Ana-Klara Hering, University of Florida • This article explores the concept of post-mortem relational privacy − the idea that family members have a right of privacy in information about deceased relatives. The researcher presents the first-ever conceptual model of post-mortem relational privacy theory, explaining in four phases how access to government-held information about the dead is dependent on the status of the record at issue in relation to the person’s death.

A Question of Where in Cyberspace: Background and Conflicts of Jurisdiction Online • Lynette Holman, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • In discovering what factors that courts have considered in determining whether there are sufficient minimum contacts for purposes of establishing personal jurisdiction over the defendant in civil lawsuits arising from online defamation, this analysis of relevant cases will focus on the development of law over the past ten years.

In the Zone: Forum Analysis and Free Speech Zones on College Campuses • Michele Jones, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • This research examines the legal issue of “free speech zones” on public college and university campuses. Speech zones are physically defined, outdoor areas where members of the college or university community or the public may speak, hand out literature or leaflet, demonstrate, or display signs or banners. Policies that create these zones place varying limitations on their use including requiring permits or restricting their use to members of the college community at the exclusion of others.

The Functional Equivalent of Ultimate Victory for the Corporate Free-Speech Movement: The Watershed Significance of FEC v. WRTL • Robert Kerr, University of Oklahoma • This paper examines the new test for determining the “functional equivalency of express advocacy” established by Chief Justice John Roberts in a 2007 principal opinion. That test could very well represent the ultimate victory at the Supreme Court for what can reasonably be characterized as the corporate free-speech movement — efforts to develop First Amendment protection for corporate political media spending since the mid 1970s.

Friends of the First Amendment? Amicus Curiae Briefs in Free Speech/Press Cases During the Warren and Burger Courts • Minjeong Kim, Colorado State University; Lenae Vinson, Hawai’i Pacific University • This study, relying upon a pre-existing data set complied by other researchers, quantitatively examines the trends and effect of amicus curiae brief filing in free speech/press cases decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in the years between 1953 and 1986. Out of 4,441 cases analyzed in this study, 231 cases were in the free speech/press topic area, and 150 of them had at least one amicus brief filed.

Perfect 10 v. Visa, MasterCard, et al: A Full Frontal Assault on Copyright Enforcement in Digital Media or a Slippery Slope Diverted? • Pamela Laucella, Indiana University; Ryan Rodenberg, Indiana University • This case comment analyzes the Ninth Circuit’s Perfect 10 v. Visa, MasterCard, et al opinion, a case of first impression that tested the limits of contributory and secondary copyright infringement in a digital world. Instead of suing direct infringers, adult content publisher Perfect 10 sued credit card companies that facilitated payments on behalf of websites purportedly featuring stolen photographs. This case comment also discusses the implications of the decision on digital media.

The Cherokee Nation Freedom of Information Act: Context and Analysis for an Open-Records Law in Indian Country • Dan Lewerenz, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Last year, the Better Government Association and the National Freedom of Information Coalition released their second report card evaluating each of the 50 states’ open-records laws. Left out of the analysis, however, was any discussion of what might be the only open-records law in Indian Country.

COPA’s Last Stand? Revisiting the Child Online Protection Act Following the 2007 ACLU v. Gonzales Ruling • Christina Malik, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • This research examines the legislative history of the Communication Decency Act (CDA) and the Child Online Protection Act (COPA). Both the CDA and COPA, which were created with the intent of protecting children from harmful Internet content, have been challenged in the courts and, to date, found unconstitutional. This paper explores how the federal courts have decided the constitutionality of these statutes at all court levels, with an emphasis on the 2007 ruling regarding COPA.

A Model Law to Prosecute Information Society Libels • Nikhil Moro, Central Michigan University • One of the problems facing libel litigants in Internet cases is multiple personal jurisdictions. This paper proposes a model law by which a suggested transnational agency would execute a normative, libertarian, Theory of Freedom of Expression in the Information Society. The author presented such a theory at an earlier conference; the current paper attempts to operationalize that theory.

Inclusion or Illusion? An Analysis of the FCC’s Public Hearings on Media Ownership 2006-2007 • Jonathan Obar, Pennsylvania State University • Amit Schejter, Pennsylvania State University • In 2006-2007 the FCC held six public hearings across the country in an attempt to fully involve the public in a re-evaluation of the rules governing media ownership in the United States. This study addresses whether the FCC did indeed fully involve the public in their deliberations, what was said at the hearings, and whether public input contributed to the design of the policy.

Transforming Productive Use: The Ninth Circuit’s Fair Use Analysis of Visual Search Engines in Kelly and Perfect 10 • Kathy Olson, Lehigh University • This paper examines the Ninth Circuit’s fair use analysis of visual search engines in Kelly v. Arriba Soft Corp. and Perfect 10 v. Amazon.com, Inc. and concludes that the court departed significantly from the Supreme Court’s conception of “transformative use” set forth in the Campbell case in 1994.

The Politics of Power: A Social Architecture Analysis of the 2005-2007 Federal Shield Law Debate in Congress • Cathy Packer, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • The Congressional debate over a proposed federal shield law has centered primarily on disagreements over the proper distribution of power among the three branches of the federal government and on the powers of the U.S. Department of Justice and the media. This is revealed through a social architecture analysis of the Congressional hearings and debate.

Privacy and Accountability: Reexamining Bartnicki v. Vopper • Rich Powell, Indiana University • In 2001, a fractured Supreme Court ruled in Bartnicki v. Vopper that a journalist could not be held responsible for disseminating illegally obtained information. The decision was met with heavy criticism from scholars who worried about its potentially chilling effect on private discourse.

University Foundations, Donors and Open Records: A 50-State Study of Access to Foundation Records • Adrianna C. Rodriguez, University of Florida • Access to public college and university foundation and donor records varies widely throughout the country. Central to the access debate is whether foundations, established as private, nonprofit corporations, should be subject to state public records laws because of their role as the fundraising arm of public institutions of higher education. The purpose of this paper is to create a national picture of the public records status of public college and university foundations and donor records.

Defining Defamation: Plaintiff Status in the Age of the Internet • Amy Kristin Sanders, University of Minnesota • This public person/private person dichotomy plays an important role in modern defamation litigation. Courts often use a plaintiff’s status to make several determinations critical to the litigation. First, the evaluation of the plaintiff’s status determines the level of fault he must prove to succeed in a defamation action. Second, courts may look to the plaintiff’s status to determine his or her proper community.

The Beginning of the End?: The Federal Reporter’s Privilege Five Years After McKevitt v. Pallasch • Jason Shepard, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Subpoenas issued to three Chicago journalists in the summer of 2003 set in motion a cascade of legal developments that five years later have significantly weakened the federal common law reporter’s privilege. This paper deconstructs the influence of Judge Richard’s Posner’s decision in McKevitt v. Pallasch on the federal reporter’s privilege and explores the limits of Posner’s decision as persuasive precedent.

First Amendment Reporter’s Privilege: Interpretation and Application of the Exhaustion Requirement • Kristin Simonetti, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • This research examines the exhaustion requirement, part of a three-part test derived from Justice Potter Stewart’s dissent in Branzburg v. Hayes. A version of this requirement is included in each of the multi-part tests adopted by the nine federal circuits that recognize a First Amendment reporter’s privilege, as well as the Free Flow of Information Act of 2007. This research seeks to determine how these nine federal circuits have interpreted and applied the exhaustion requirement.

Preventing the Next Price v. Time: Legal and Historical Arguments for Action • Dean C. Smith, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • This paper is not about blogging, the proposed federal shield law or even future state statutes, though those discussions play a role. This paper pinpoints existing problems in existing state shield laws and lays out arguments to bolster lobbying for legislative action to prevent the next, inevitable Price v. Time. …

Managing Conflict Over Access: A Typology of Sunshine Law Dispute Resolution Systems • Daxton Stewart, Texas Christian University • Freedom of information laws struggle to manage disputes over access to government records and meetings in an effective manner. This study applied principles of Conflict Theory and Dispute Systems Design to examine the dispute resolution systems in place in open government laws across the United States. Five models emerged from this study: Multiple Process, Administrative Facilitation, Administrative Adjudication, Advisory and Litigation. This typology may aid the design of dispute resolution systems in the future.

Newsgathering, Autonomy and the Special-Rights Apocrypha: Supreme Court and Media Litigant Conceptions of Press Freedom • Erik Ugland, Marquette University • This article addresses the validity of several long-standing assumptions about the Supreme Court’s free-press jurisprudence and about the arguments made by the media litigants in those cases. It analyzes more than three decades of court opinions and litigant briefs and finds no support, for example, for the abiding accusation that the press litigants have claimed an elite or preferred constitutional position, or that they have sought judicial recognition of a framework of special rights.

Deciphering Dun & Bradstreet: Does the First Amendment Matter in Private Figure-Private Concern Defamation Cases? • Ruth Walden, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • Derigan Silver, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • This research analyzes the extent to which lower federal courts and state appellate courts have been able to decipher the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Dun & Bradstreet v. Greenmoss Builders, Inc. to determine whether and how constitutional protections apply in private plaintiff-private issue defamation cases. It discusses the impact of the Supreme Court’s convoluted reasoning and offers a solution that would conform to the original opinion without compromising First Amendment values.

The “Neutral Reportage” Doctrine in English Law • Kyu Ho Youm, University of Oregon • In recent years, the neutral reportage doctrine has suffered a series of significant setbacks in the United States. It is hardly an exaggeration to state that neutral reportage is floundering in American libel law, if not necessarily foundering. By contrast, in England neutral reportage has quickly emerged as a new libel defense since 2001, when it was first accepted by English courts.

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International Communication 2008 Abstracts

March 10, 2011 by Kyshia

International Communication Division

Bob Stevenson Faculty Paper Competition
The Iraq War on Al-Jazeera Websites: Did the English- and Arabic-language users experience different online coverage? • Mohammed Al-Emad, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale and Shahira Fahmy, University of Arizona • This study examined the online coverage of the Iraq War in the English-and Arabic-language Al-Jazeera websites. By content analyzing prominence of news stories, use of sources, and tone of coverage, this study tested whether Al-Jazeera news websites significantly differed in covering the conflict. Results showed a significant difference regarding the proportion of Iraqi news stories between the two websites. By and large, however, our analysis suggested no differences between the English-and Arabic-language Al-Jazeera websites.

Problematizing “media development” as a bandwagon gets rolling • Guy Berger, Rhodes University and Jude Mathurine, Rhodes University • International initiatives have gained momentum around analysing “media development” – a notion related to, but generally distinct from, media’s contribution to “development”. The focus on the “development” of media largely concerns international support of media in non-dense media environments. The normative character of work done to date can however be interrogated, and located against historical backdrop. Critical theorization of “media” and “development” shows the need to go beyond the legacy of old thinking about old media.

Americanized Beauty? Predictors of Perceived Attractiveness in U.S. and Korean Participants Based on Media Exposure, Ethnicity, and Sociocultural Attitudes Toward Attractiveness Ideals • Kimberly Bissell, University of Alabama and Jee Young Chung, University of Alabama • The objective of this project was to identify themes, patterns and predictors related to attractiveness ideals and appearance norms in other women among a sample of men and women in the U.S. and Korea.

Political Contest, News Bias and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict • Kuang-Kuo Chang, Michigan State University and Eric Freedman, Michigan State University • Guided by the political contest model, along with the indexing and cascading notions, this research examined how and why news bias—rival Israeli and Palestinian official sources were treated unevenly—occurred in four major U.S. newspapers coverage of the long-lasting conflict. The findings suggest that press access to rival official news sources, U.S. foreign policy, and the ratios of local Arab-American to Jewish-American population are strong predictors of the occurrence of news imbalance.

Job Influences of Indian Journalists: What pushes and pulls their pens • Bridgette Colaco, Troy University and Jyotika Ramaprasad, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale • This paper reports the results of a survey of job influences on Indian journalists, primarily modeled after Weaver and Wilhoit’s (1996) study. The influences, rated for importance, coalesced into seven factors – Public/ Government, Organization, Extra Media, Political/ Religious Beliefs, Media Routines, Personal Values/ Opinions, and Career Advancement.

Exploring Coverage of Global Warming in North America, Europe and Asia • Joan Deppa, Syracuse University and Dan Rowe, Syracuse University • A study of nine elite newspapers on three continents shows that news coverage of global warming has increased considerably toward the end of the 10 years from 1997 to 2007. The study identified a significant new cycle of global warming coverage, which could continue into the future, although it slight dipped slightly at the end of 2007. The study also identifies many potential subjects for future studies using this method and data.

Local Media in a Global World: The Framing of Saddam’s Execution in the U.S. Press • Daniela Dimitrova, Iowa State University and Kyung Sun Lee, Iowa State University • One of the major international events at the end of 2006 was the execution of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. The rushed execution sparked a controversy around the world and provided national media with an opportunity to frame the event in ways that resonate with their local audiences. This paper focuses on the framing of the execution in elite newspapers in the United States. Using a content analysis methodology, the study examines the news framing of the event in the U.S. press.

Event perception, issue attitudes and the 2004 presidential election in Taiwan: Issue familiarity and framing effects of online campaign coverage • Gang Han, State University of New York at Fredonia and Pamela Shoemaker, Syracuse University • This study applies framing analysis to online news by examining how two distinguishable news frames identified from the coverage on Taiwan’s 2004 presidential election in two leading news websites in Mainland China influence the audience’s perception of this political event as well as their attitudes toward Mainland-Taiwan relations. Two 3×2, two-wave, between-subject experiments were designed and conducted to test framing effects of online campaign coverage.

Culture and International Flow of Movies: Proximity, Discount or Globalization? • Yejin Hong, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities and Tsan-Kuo Chang, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities • The purpose of this study is to determine how and why the international flow of cultural products appears the way it does and what may influence the direction of the flow. Through a comparative investigation of consumption patterns of American movies in the United States, Korea and the United Kingdom, this study tested competing hypotheses derived from the perspectives of globalization, cultural proximity, and cultural discount.

Logistics vs. gatekeeper perspective: Models to predict AP and US news coverage of significant world events • Beverly Horvit, Texas Christian University and Peter Gade, University of Oklahoma • The study tested the relative impact of logistics vs. gatekeeper variables as predictors of the international news coverage of major world events by The Associated Press and 10 US newspapers that depend upon the AP. The logistics variables included characteristics of the country where the event occurred, such as proximity, GDP, status, population and US relations. The gatekeeper variables included the deviance of the event and the involvement of the US.

Marketing Leisure in the Global Village: Culture Counts • Doo Syen Kang, Michigan State University and Lucinda Davenport, Michigan State University • A foremost issue in international marketing planning is the cultural understanding of a target audience. The body of literature for leisure studies is mostly from Western viewpoints, despite growing awareness of value from Eastern perspectives. Even the notion of “leisure” itself is Western-based. This research documents different leisure patterns in the East and West, and examines the differing philosophical traditions as a schematic.

Functional Analysis of Televised Political Spots and Debates in Korean Presidential Elections, 1992-2007 • Chunsik Kim, Hyoungkoo Khang, University of Florida and Younghwa Lee, University of Kansas • Utilizing the functional approach, this study explores similarities and differences between televised political spots and presidential debates in Korean presidential elections. Overall, the study found that there were clear differences in the use of theme functions, utterances, and types of each function between televised political debates and spots. In addition, the results of this study were consistent with findings of previous studies that acclaims were the most common discourse function, followed by attacks, and defense.

AIDS Communication Campaigns in Uganda: Organizational factors and campaign planning as predictors of successful campaign execution • James Kiwanuka-Tondo, North Carolina State University, Mark Hamilton, University of Connecticut and Jessica Jameson, North Carolina State University • About 60% of all the HIV/AIDS cases worldwide are found in sub-Saharan Africa (UNAIDS, 2007). While a few countries in the region have shown a decline in prevalence rates, most countries in southern Africa have made little progress in their fight against AIDS.

Facing the Pluralistic Television Age in Korea: Competition between Local Broadcast Stations and New TV Media • Joon-Ho Lee, Dong-Eui University, Seung-Kwan Ryu, Tongmyong University and Jong-Sang Koo Dongseo University • The study examines Korean TV media industries that are becoming pluralistic and explores competition among three media (local stations, multi-channel TV, and mobile television). Based on uses and gratification and niche theories, competitive indices are computed and compared. The findings from a survey with 469 respondents show local stations have widest niche breadths in information dimension and share much resource with mobile media, but have less competitive superiority than multi-channel and the mobile counterparts.

A new way to look at culture and its influence on advertising around the world • Pamela Morris Loyola University Chicago • Research investigates culture and its influencing role. With anthropological theories, a model is created to show how cultural dimensions influence media and advertising content. Encompassing 108 countries, a factor analysis of 71 country characteristics finds four dimensions: Egocenteric, Nationalistic, Feminine and Masculine. A content analysis of magazine advertisements provides data of images that are tested for correlations with cultural dimensions. The study updates cultural literature with new social phenomena data, like cell-phone and Internet users.

Realities of journalism trainers overseas; A phenomenological study • Nurhaya Muchtar, University of Tennessee and Eric Haley, University of Tennessee • Professional journalism training in developing countries has been an important element in the US democracy assistance program since the late 1980’s. Previous studies tend to focus primarily on the effectiveness and short-term evaluations of the projects from the funders’ perspectives. This article looked at the perspectives of training from the trainers’ side. A phenomenological approach is used in order to understand how trainers make sense of their experiences working with journalists from other countries.

The Extreme Right and Its Media in Italy • Cinzia Padovani, Southern Illinois University Carbondale • Various factors are at the origin of the resurgence of racist, neo-fascist and neo-nazi movements in Europe. Fast-paced social and cultural changes due to globalization of economics and communications; intensification of migration fluxes from former Soviet republics, North African countries, and the Balkans, into Western Europe; the process of European unification and expansion; the crisis of traditional systems of political representation, have nourished, since the early 1990s, the re-birth of far right movements and parties.

The Role of Civil Society in Transforming the Local Politico- and Mediascape: The Case of South Korea • Woongjae Ryoo, Honam University • In the South Korean context, the question of civil society formation is closely connected to the broader issue of communication globalization and the interaction of global- and local forces. In this essay, I thus examine how the South Korean civil society emerged as a social force in transforming the local politico- and mediascape, and how it developed a regionally distinctive relationship with the state.

Global Media and Cultural Identities: The Case of Indians in Post-Amin Uganda • Hemant Shah University of Wisconsin • The unprecedented global movement of money, media and people has had profound consequences for formations and transformations of cultural identities. In this context, the ostensibly stable links between identity and a place called “home” are more modulated and less certain. This paper is a case study, based on depth interviews, participant observation, and archival research, which examines how a diasporic community of Indians in Uganda negotiates cultural identities.

Online Network Size, Efficacy, and Opinion Expression: Tracking the Pro-civic Functions of Internet Use in China, 2003-2007 • Fei Shen, The Ohio State University, Ning Wang, Hong Kong Baptist University and Steve Guo, Hong Kong Baptist University • This study garnered initial evidence for the pro-civic impact of the Internet in mainland China by analyzing three cross-sectional datasets collected in 2003, 2005, and 2007. Results revealed positive relationships between the two dimensions of Internet use (i.e., informational and entertainment use) and online expression. Our model explains the positive associations as being partially conditioned by two mediators, online network size and Internet efficacy.

The State of Public Service Broadcasting in the 21st Century in the Caribbean • Juliette Storr, Pennsylvania State University • Before the turn of the twenty-first century, media systems scholars (Raboy, 1997; Tracey, 1998) predicted the demise of public service broadcasting in the face of new global economic realities. Despite their dire predictions, public service broadcasting continues to survive at the start of the twenty-first century amidst hopes of advancing its public services and fears of destruction by competitive private enterprises. Caribbean broadcasting systems were inherited from their European colonizers.

The second casualty: Effects of conflict on press freedom • Fred Vultee, Wayne State University • This study seeks to build on recent work that emphasizes the importance of press freedom in restraining international conflict by examining the reverse relationship: Whether conflict has an impact on individual nations’ levels of press freedom. It finds that in general, civil wars have a greater negative impact than interstate wars, press systems in democracies are more affected than those in autocracies, and level of conflict is more relevant than the mere presence of conflict.

Marginalizing Voices: Newspapers framing of the Mothers of Beslan • Christa Ward, University of Georgia • This article analyzes media framing of the Mothers of Beslan and the group’s activities for a period of two-years. The textual analysis led to the emergence of several key themes within the marginalization frame. The analysis showed that the newspapers coverage positioned the mothers in direct opposition to the government(Putin) but not as political actor but as mothers. The second marginalizing frame to emerge was that of direct invalidation of the Mothers’ plight.

Framing the War Ethnocentrically • Jin Yang, University of Memphis • Adopting framing scheme and using computer-assisted text analysis software, this study compared the press coverage of the 2003 Iraqi War by the United States and China. The study found that the U.S. zoomed in on the specifics of the war and adopted episodic frames in its coverage of the war and China adopted thematic frames in its coverage and zoomed out to focus on the peripheral issues related to the war.

Markham Student Paper Competition
Media Frames and Terror: US Print Media Representation of Pakistan • Hena Bajwa, University of Texas at Austin • This paper content analyzed 225 stories mentioning Pakistan from the New York Times and Washington Post to determine the context in which US print media framed stories about Pakistan. Findings suggested a strong correlation between stories mentioning Pakistan and terrorism, especially after the “War on Terror” declared by the Bush administration after September 11, 2001. Frames here were categorized as dominant or minor to also account for other subjects referring to Pakistan.

Foreign News and Public Opinion: Attribute Agenda-Setting Theory Revisited • Asya Besova, Louisiana State University and Skye Cooley, Louisiana State University • This research found a strong support for the attribute agenda setting theory by examining the media coverage of nine foreign countries in The New York Times and The Times. Media coverage and the public opinion were strongly correlated. Specifically, negative coverage tends to have more agenda-setting effects than neutral and positive coverage. Also, media portray foreign countries stereotypically, by limiting the coverage around a few issues.

Culture, Internet and Gratifications: Do you see the Connection? • Tulika Biswas, University of Tennessee, Knoxville • This paper presents a pilot study focusing on gratifications sought and obtained by international students from the Internet. The study suggests that for immigrants and sojourners such as international students the need to get in touch with their native culture may form an important factor driving their gratification needs while surfing the Internet.

Media Framing through Stages of a Political Discourse:International News Agencies’ Coverage of Kosovo’s Status Negotiations • Lindita Camaj, Indiana University • This study examined framing in international coverage of Kosovo’s status negotiations and whether the stage of the negotiations affected choice of frame. The results indicate that overall international news agencies reported on this issue with an “episodic frame” emphasizing mostly the “conflict” nature of the issue. However, a major difference emerged between Western and non-Western agencies, as ITAR-TASS employed “attribution of responsibility” frame more commonly that Reuters, AFP, and AP.

Destiny, Dynasty and Death: Pakistani Press Reports Frame Benazir Bhuto’s Assassination • Tania Cantrell, The University of Texas at Austin and Ingrid Bachmann, The University of Texas at Austin • Using framing theory, this textual analysis investigates how more than 200 stories from three Pakistani English dailies portrayed the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. National press used three death frames—the devastating effects of her death, the fulfillment of a prophetic demise, and efforts to keep the details of the murder under wraps. Also, it employed two trump frames—obscured gender and religion, and candidate without an election—to organize the information.

Generation Y and the Post 80s’ Culture Identity: A Cross Cultural Perspective • Huan Chen, University of Tennessee, Knoxville • The study examined culture identification of Generation Y and the Post 80s with measurements integrating Western mindsets as well as Oriental wisdom. The findings of this study demonstrate the cultural differences in Generation Y and the Post 80s’ cultural identification as well as in measurements.

Global Risk, Domestic Framing: How U.S., China and South Korea News Agencies Cover the North Korea Nuclear Test • Jia Dai, University of Texas and Kideuk Hyun, University of Texas • Comparative framing analysis on coverage of the North Korea nuclear test in U.S. Associated Press, Chinese Xinhua news agency and South Korean Yonhap news agency identified four major media packages. First, a common “threat” frame dominates in the coverage of all news agencies, represented by a reconfiguration of geopolitics and an emphasis on global cooperation in the perception and resolution of the nuclear test.

No News is Bad News:NGOs, the News Media, and State-imposed Limits on Free Press • Patrick File, University of Minnesota • This paper examines reporting by international human rights NGOs and news organizations during constitutional crises in Sri Lanka and Nepal. The central research question is whether state-imposed restrictions on press freedom and the free flow of information affect NGOs’ ability to raise awareness through the news media. The findings suggest censorship might have the opposite of its intended effect; but more scholarship on NGO-news media relationships and censorship could provide a better, more comprehensive theoretical explanation.

Framing the headlines: Comparative and inter-language framing of Al-Jazeera’s Arabic and English news websites • Stephen Hetzel • This study used quantitative content analysis to capture the lead stories of Al-Jazeera’s Arabic and English news websites and explain the effect of language on lead stories and frames. The findings suggest that the international lead stories on Al-Jazeera and the BBC are influenced by the languages of their websites. In addition, both Al-Jazeera and the BBC rely upon similar sources for stories with matching datelines.

Painful Pictures: Photojournalism and Reconciliation in Peru • Robin Hoecker, University of Missouri • Sponsored by Peru’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Yuyanapaq photography exhibit documents the country’s armed internal conflict from 1980 to 2000. This study examined the effects of seeing the photographs on viewers’ readiness to reconcile. A post-test only experiment (n=109) found that the exhibit increased viewers understanding of the conflict, but had no effect on their faith in the national government or resentment. For viewers who experienced traumatic events, seeing the photographs helped them to forgive.

Culture & Technology in South Korean and U. S. Online Military Strategic Communications • Sungwook Hwang, University of Missouri at Columbia • This study conducted a cross-cultural comparison in measures of interactivity and vividness of South Korean and the U. S. online military strategic communications based on Hall’s high- and low-context communication and Hofstede’s power distance and individualism/collectivism. Considering contradictory literature regarding the influence of culture on the Web, this study examined the applicability of the cultural lens on the technological features of non-commercial Web sites.

Political Implications of International Satellite Broadcasting: A Case Study • Foad Izadi, Louisiana State University • The present study attempts to address the state of pro-American attitudes and pro-American policy positions in Iran. Using hierarchical OLS regression, the study addresses the influence of satellite TV use – as an indicator of access to U.S. sponsored international broadcasting – on the degree of pro-American opinion, above and beyond individual level demographic factors.

Framing a political Issue: Coverage of 2007 Constitutional Referendum by Kyrgyzstan’s Print and Internet-Based Media • Svetlana Kulikova, Louisiana State University • The paper examines media coverage of a national referendum in Kyrgyzstan on adoption of a new version of the Constitution and Elections Code in terms of good governance.

News Coverage of Breast Cancer Awareness Campaign: A Comparative Study of News Coverage of The U.S. And South Korean Newspapers • Joon Yea Lee, University of Texas at Austin and Jooyun Hwang, University of Florida • This study examined the uses of issue, source, framing, and overall news coverage in the U.S. and South Korea before and after the breast cancer awareness month campaign was initiated in each country. A content analysis of the New York Times and two most circulated Korean newspapers was conducted. The findings show an increase in the amount of coverage after campaigns were launched. However, the issue and source types show no significant difference after campaign.

Sex and the City in Seoul: An Incomplete Project • Kyung Lee, University of Pennsylvania • This paper analyzes the cultural background in which Sex and the City attracts female audience in Korea. A textual analysis of 39 newspaper articles was conducted to explore how the audience consumes the image and the text of the show in various realms. What follows is a discussion of a post-Sex and the City social phenomenon called “Denjang Girl syndrome” and how it reflects sociocultural tensions between different groups and between different values in Korea.

Motivations for Communicating over Mobile TV and its Social Impacts in Everyday Life • Seung-Hyun Lee, University of Wisconsin-Madison• This study examines why people use mobile TV-DMB as a new communicating medium, how the dimensions of motivational factors influence mobile TV-DMB use behavior in everyday life, and whether demographic variables have impacts on the motivations and mobile TV-DMB use. This study is an exploratory attempt that empirically investigates motivational dimensions of mobile TV-DMB use among current DMB users, employing the Uses and Gratifications theory.

Starbucks as the Third Place: Glimpses into Taiwan’s Consumer Culture and Lifestyle • En-Ying Lin, University of Florida and Marilyn Roberts, University of Florida • Starbucks dominates Taiwan’s coffee consumption. Starbucks’ unique style and established trend of high-quality coffee from different regions has attracted people’s attention and commingled with their lifestyles. Starbucks locations appear to serve as a third place in the lives of consumers.

What’s in a name: The reputation of Al Jazeera English in the United States • Ronnie Lovler • Al Jazeera English is the Qatar-founded international news network that launched in November 2006 as the first English-language global news channel not based in the West. It came into being ten years after its sister channel, the Arabic language Al Jazeera.

Responses of Middle Eastern Governments to Danish Cartoons Depicting the Prophet Mohammed • Justin D. Martin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • In January and February 2006, governments all across the Middle East recalled ambassadors from Denmark, announced official boycotts of Danish goods, and called for a handful of Danish newspaper editors to be jailed, all for the publication of cartoons critical of Islam and its prophet. This paper analyzes the responses of these governments as a standardized way of looking at different Middle Eastern nations’ stances toward free expression.

Political Socialization to the Near East: Media Reliance & Feelings toward Muslims, Arab Leaders & Al-Qaida • Justin D. Martin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Jennifer Kowalewski, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This paper examines the association between several media reliance variables and feelings toward Muslims of the world, Arab leaders, and members of the terrorist outfit Al-Qaida among a sample of North Carolinians (N=526) polled in 2005. The relationships among these variables are explored through the lens of political socialization research, and the need for more mass communication and political socialization scholarship addressing international topics is discussed.

Collective Memory through Fidel: The Construction of Collective Memory through the news coverage of Fidel Castro’s Resignation • MaryAnn Martin, University of Iowa • Collective memory works as a means of cultural survival for the Cuban diaspora in the United States. Using a textual analysis, this study examines the collective memory constructed from news coverage of Fidel Castro’s resignation as president of Cuba. The analysis shows that news coverage maintains that neoliberal economic reforms will save Cuba, assert the longstanding connections between Cubans and the U.S. government, and position Castro as a permanent obstacle to democracy.

Framing the Death of Investigative Journalism: Anna Politkovskaya’s Murder in the NYT and Izvestiya • Susan Novak, University of Kansas • The October 2006 murder of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya brought international attention to the dangers of investigative journalism in Russia. Media framing of this event in Izvestiya and the New York Times shows that each framed the tragedy differently. The Times elaborated on Russia’s political failings; Izvestiya focused on Politkovskaya and the crime with some commentary on a free press. Cold War rhetoric may be returning to U.S. news coverage of Russia.

Chips and curry; Kraut and kebabs: Exploring multiculturalism through comedy • Rosemary Pennington, Indiana University • European public broadcasters have a mandate to communicate the importance of multiculturalism to society, which is becoming increasingly difficult as they fight with private broadcasters for audience. This study compared two television comedies, from Great Britain and Germany, looking for similarities in how multiculturalism and minorities were portrayed to mainstream audiences. The comparison found that, even with the different histories of the two nations, the programs approached multiculturalism in very similar ways.

Japan’s “Baby Bust” in the Daily Yomiuri: Newsworthiness of International Experiences of a Domestic Issue • Sheila Peuchaud, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • This qualitative content analysis applies Shoemaker and Cohen’s (2006) deviance and social significance model of newsworthiness to coverage of the international experience of declining birth rate in Japan’s leading Daily Yomiuri. Declining birthrate is a dramatically important public issue in Japan, and a demographic challenge it shares with most industrialized nations.

Corporate Social Responsibility in China: Perspectives from a Developing Country • Hongmei Shen, University of Maryland, College Park • Amongst heated discussions of multinational companies’ social responsibilities, the study examined a three-dimensional model (Arthaud-Day, 2005) of social responsibility management by multinational corporations operating in a developing country—China. Results from 18 interviews of employees identified two types of strategic orientations—global and transnational and four universal CSR issues (the underprivileged, education, environment, and community). Other cultural nuances and implications were also discussed.

‘Who you are’ versus ‘who you think you are’ • Tsung-Jen shih, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Using a PPS sample of 612 citizens drawn from Taipei County, Taiwan, this study examines the interactive role of national identity, personal identity, and party identification as heuristics that provided simplified guidance for voters in the context of the 2005 mayoral and magistrate election in Taiwan. The results confirmed previous research findings that ethnicity has conceded to “identity” as a determinant of voting.

Information Appropriateness and Health Risks to Consumers: A Content Analysis of Chinese Dietary Supplement Company Websites • Song Tian • The purpose of this study is to assess the extent of appropriateness and potential health risks of Chinese dietary supplement company websites as sources of information for consumers. Based on a content analysis of 120 business websites, this research has revealed that Chinese health food company websites did contain low-level overall appropriate information to the consumer.

International Newspaper Coverage of Muslim Immigration: A Community Structure Approach • Joshua Wright, The College of New Jersey • A study compared hypotheses connecting variations in international demographics with differences in international newspaper coverage of Muslim immigration using an extended form of the “community structure approach” developed in international studies by Pollock and others (1977, 1978, 1994-2002, 2007). A sample of 15 newspapers from every major world region was acquired from NewsBank/LexisNexis yielding 370 articles of 250+ words (9/11/2001 to 9/11/2007).

How people’s words find their way to mainstream media: online discussion and news in China • Di Zhang, Syracuse University and Jinghui Hou, Syracuse University • This study examines how online discussion in Chinese internet forums influences Chinese mainstream news content from the perspective of gatekeeping. Through content analysis, we analyze 88 issues discussed in internet forums in 2007 and mainstream media stories originating from them. We find that deviance and intensity of online discussion positively predict media coverage prominence, while social significance forms a negative correlation, and the moderating effect of sensitivity of issue topic is not significant.

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History 2008 Abstracts

March 10, 2011 by Kyshia

History Division

Cold War Hot Water: The Espionage Case Against AP Correspondent William Oatis • Edward Alwood, Quinnipiac University • This study explores the 1951 arrest and conviction of William N. Oatis, an Associated Press correspondent, in Czechoslovakia. Oatis served more than two years in a secret Czechoslovakian prison where he endured psychological torture as the State Department, the AP, and his family pleaded for his release. His experience illustrates the often overlooked dangers that were faced by American foreign correspondents who covered Eastern Europe following World War II.

The Emergence and Characteristics of Journalists’ Culture: 1880-1940 • John Bender, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lucinda Davenport, Michigan State University, Michael Drager, Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania, and Fred Fedler, University of Central Florida • Culture influences journalists’ attitudes and actions; thus, knowledge of its primary elements can explain and predict journalists’ behavior. Researchers examined autobiographies and biographies of hundreds of journalists, every issue of The Journalist, and 300 articles by and about early reporters, from 1880 to 1940, when newspapers began hiring reporters full-time. Results show that by the 1940s journalists’ basic beliefs about themselves and their work were developed and universal. Once established, journalists’ culture seemed remarkable resilient.

William Worthy: The Man and the Mission • Jinx Broussard and Skye Cooley, Louisiana State University • This article examines the career of William Worthy, an influential but overlooked African-American foreign correspondent, and the oppositional perspectives he presented on issues of international imperialism, communism, equal rights, and freedom of the press from the 1950s through the 1980s. Worthy successfully challenged contemporary notions of the functions of the press through defiance of government ordered travel bans abroad, thereby helping to transform the role of modern foreign correspondence.

A Black Newspaper in Wartime: The Iowa Bystander’s Coverage of the Spanish-American War and World War I • David Bulla, Iowa State University • The Iowa Bystander began as a party newspaper at the end of the nineteenth century. Its editor, John Lay Thompson, was an advocate of the principles of Booker T. Washington. Thompson believed the road to racial equality in the United States was through diligence and achievement, especially in business. Thompson’s newspaper steadfastly supported Republican candidates for office.

Of Mobsters, Molls, and ‘Murder for Love’: The Life of a Chicago ‘Sob Sister’ in the 1920s • Stephen Byers, Marquette University and Genevieve McBride, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee • Two decades before “Dear Abby” or “Ann Landers,” Ione Quinby Griggs began an advice column for the Milwaukee Journal. For 51 years, she wrote six columns a week before retiring at age 94.

Chicago’s “Perfect Baseball Day”: Black Press Coverage of the Negro Leagues’ East-West Classic • Brian Carroll, Berry College • This paper charts and analyzes black press coverage of and involvement in the East-West Classic, an all-star game of professional black baseball players held annually in Chicago, an event that pre-dates major league baseball’s version. Tracking how the press covered the Classic and to what extent it collaborated with Negro league owners to make the summer event a success are useful ways to mark shifts in press coverage of black baseball overall.

Flashes From The Nation: E. L. Godkin’s Reflections on the Cultural Antecedents for American Privacy Law • Erin Coyle, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • Legal historians trace the right of privacy to Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis’s 1890 Harvard Law Review essay that called for judges to develop privacy law in the United States. Most note the attorneys’ disdain for the prying practices of the nineteenth century press as sensation-seeking editors transformed newspaper journalism. Few explore the similarities between that essay and commentary that Edwin Lawrence Godkin, editor of The Nation, published in 1880 and 1890.

Using Student Media to Market Cigarettes on Campus: A Case Study of the Orange and White at the University of Tennessee, 1920-1940 • Elizabeth Crawford, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh • The purpose of this article is to demonstrate how cigarette advertisers established their presence on campus using advertising in student newspapers as an essential part of their innovative integrated marketing strategy during the 1920s and 1930s. The Orange and White at the University of Tennessee will serve as a case study for this research. The research findings are analyzed using a deductive approach that uses Taylor’s Strategy Wheel.

The Stars and Stripes: A Unique American Newspaper’s Historic Struggle against Military Interference and Control • Cindy Elmore, East Carolina University • The Stars and Stripes is a unique newspaper with a distinctive mission, ownership, and staff of journalists unlike any other in the U.S. Despite its parentage in the U.S. Department of Defense, the newspaper’s directives give it editorial independence. Even so, military commanders and Pentagon overseers have challenged and interfered with those rights from the time of the newspaper’s beginnings during World War I in Europe on up through the early years of the 21st century.

The Idea of the News Report in American Print Culture, 1885-1910 • Kathy Forde and Katie Foss, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities • This paper explores what producers and observers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century American print marketplace understood an appropriate report of the world to be and how contemporaneous social attitudes and cultural values shaped this understanding. The purpose is to understand more fully how, why, and when American journalism adopted the objective, fact-centered news report as the socially preferred and valued form of journalistic expression.

Beyond sombreros, gangs, and aliens: Positive framing of Hispanic immigration in the Garden City (Kan.) Telegram • Michael Fuhlhage, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill • The Garden City Telegram was an early and heretofore unacknowledged leader in contesting negative stereotypes about Hispanics and Hispanic immigration. This study used archive research, interviews of journalists and newsmakers, and textual analysis of news and opinion pieces in the Telegram to examine news production surrounding watershed events in the city’s history of inter-ethnic relations.

“Keep Up the Good Work”: Popular Response to Westbrook Pegler’s Anti-Unionism • Philip Glende, University of Wisconsin-Madison • Newspaper columnist Westbrook Pegler, a writer for Scripps-Howard and the Hearst newspapers from the mid-1930s through the 1950s, often was the target of complaints from labor leaders who insisted the press was trying to undermine the union movement. But to many of his readers, Pegler was a courageous fighter who could use the newspaper to challenge the growing power of organized labor. This paper examines grassroots anti-union themes that emerge in Pegler’s mail from readers.

The Future Will Be Televised: Newspaper Industry Voices and the Rise of Television News • Kristen Heflin, University of Georgia • In the mid-1950s newspapers were the primary source of news for most Americans. By the 1970s television had taken over as the primary source of news. Through a narrative analysis of Nieman Reports and Editor & Publisher from 1954 to 1974, this study examines how newspaper representatives characterized television news as a competitor and how they addressed competition in a time of technological change. This study provides context for today’s news media dealing with convergence technologies.

Portrait of a Pioneer: Local Newspaper Coverage of Ryan White 1985-1990 • Andy Heger, Ohio University • Ryan White was one of the first major advocates of AIDS education and brought a new face to the disease in the 1980s. Ryan contracted the disease through a faulty blood transfusion that was supposed to help treat his hemophilia. After it was discovered that he had the disease, a legal battle ensued over whether or not he should be allowed to attend school.

Surviving Sherman’s torch: Press, public memory and Georgia’s salvation mythology • Janice Hume and Lori Roessner, University of Georgia • General William Tecumseh Sherman’s 1864 “March to the Sea” is seared as if by flame into the collective consciousness of Georgians, yet the publicly-shared memories of this devastating and demoralizing Civil War campaign are complex, myth-laden, and contradictory. Among the most fascinating are memories not of what was destroyed, but what was saved.

Liberty Hyde Bailey, Agricultural Journalism, and the Making of the Moral Landscape • James Kates, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater • Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858-1954) was a prominent horticulturist, professor, rural reformer and author. As an agricultural journalist, he championed the American farmer. His hopes of fostering an autonomous, prosperous rural society would be frustrated by economic upheaval in the farm sector after 1920. But Bailey’s writings, particularly in the areas of nature appreciation and amateur gardening, helped set the stage for the emergence of the U.S. environmental movement after World War II.

Psychological Warfare: Textual-Visual Analysis of Korean War Leaflets • Yeon Kyeong Kim, University of Iowa • Through examination of primary and secondary sources, this study analyzed propaganda war leaflets from the Korean War produced and distributed by the United Nations (UN) forces and the Communist forces to look for strategies or themes used to persuade the enemy soldiers. Textual-visual analysis revealed that UN forces used surrender, nostalgia, and food/war situation themes, while the Communist forces focused on uncertainty and homesickness.

Upton Sinclair and the Los Angeles Times • John Kirch, University of Maryland-College Park • On August 28, 1934, Socialist Upton Sinclair shocked the political world by winning the Democratic nomination for governor of California. His campaign drew attention from across the Depression-weary nation and scared the state’s business establishment into organizing a major media campaign to destroy Sinclair’s chances of victory. This paper analyzes how one player in that campaign, the Los Angeles Times, covered Sinclair’s candidacy. This research concludes that the Times portrayed Sinclair in a negative light.

Cab Rides and Cold War: The New Yorker’s Look at Washington, 1925-1954 • Julie Lane, University of Wisconsin-Madison • The New Yorker carried pieces about Washington, D.C., since the magazine’s inception in 1925. These pieces were mostly light-hearted fare written for the amusement of New York readers. In 1948 the magazine added a regular “Letter from Washington” written by Richard Rovere. This feature tackled more substantial matters of postwar politics and contributed to the perpetuation of the Cold War consensus and to the New Yorker’s reputation as a powerful player in postwar political culture.

Royal Images and Revolutionary Ideals: Loyalist Symbols in Rebel Newspaper Nameplates before American Independence • Autumn Linford, Brigham Young University • Patriot printers of the American Revolution are discussed in most literature as staunch and unfailing in their crusade towards independence. And yet, many of them used pro-British symbols in their nameplates as late as 1775. This paper examines five of these newspapers from a cross section of the American Colonies in attempt to understand why Loyalist engravings were used and what, if anything, this information says about the political standings of colonial printers.

Setting up Standard: How Objectivity Was Exemplified in the New York Times Coverage of the Spanish-American War • Zhaoxi Liu, University of Iowa • The ideal of objectivity became the professional ideology of American journalism after World War I, and The New York Times is a noteworthy figure during the process of the evolution of journalistic objectivity. Using textual analysis method, this paper examines The New York Times’ coverage of the Spanish-American War, and reveals how it adopted the “information model” in the competition with other newspapers, setting up the standard for journalistic objectivity.

The Western Outlook, 1894-1928: A Newspaper “Devoted to the Interests of the Negro on the Pacific Coast” • Kimberley Mangun, University of Utah • The Western Outlook kept African American readers living in San Francisco and other California communities connected and informed for more than three decades. Yet scholars of the black press have overlooked the weekly publication, founded September 1, 1894, and its editors, John Lincoln Derrick and Joseph Smallwood Francis.

Friend, Foe, or Freeloader? Cooperation and Competition Between Newspapers and Radio in the Early 1920s • Randall Patnode, Xavier University • In the 1920s, the newspaper industry had to come to grips with an upstart medium, radio. Initially, newspapers saw natural synergies with radio and became radio’s primary booster. However, the newspaper industry’s enthusiasm for radio quickly peaked, and for the latter half of the Twenties, newspapers resisted the encroachment of broadcasting. This cooperation-competition dialectic predates and provides a pretext for the so-called “press-radio war” of the 1930s, in which newspapers and radio battled over the right to deliver news and sell advertising.

Corporations, Grassroots Organizations, and Public Relations in Newspaper Coverage of the Nestle Boycott • Sheila Peuchaud, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • This paper examines newspaper coverage of the 1977-1984 boycott against Nestle S.A. That boycott sought to change the company’s infant formula marketing practices that were believed to discourage breastfeeding and increase infant disease and mortality in developing countries. Fifty-four articles from the Boston Globe, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post were analyzed, along with first-person published accounts of the controversy written by key players in the years following the end of the boycott.

‘Regeneración’ and the Spanish-language Anarchist Press in the US: Challenging U.S. Exceptionalism • Illia Rodriquez • The period between 1900-1918 earned its relevance in journalism historiography as one of the most dramatic chapters in the history of censorship of radical ideas and struggle over the meaning of freedom of the press in the United States. In particular, historians have underscored how government repression of anarchist publications placed anarchists at the forefront in the defense of the First Amendment.

Tracking Innovation: A Historical Analysis of Factors Associated with Beef Magazine Start-ups from 1850 to 1990 • Jennifer Scharpe, Iowa State University • This historical study explores forces that led to innovation in agriculture journalism, particularly what caused beef publication start-ups from 1850 to 1990. The research compares start-ups of beef magazines to agriculture publications, beef industry influences, societal and technical trends. This study used the Watson Database of over 9,500 agriculture publications. Findings show that while innovations in the general agriculture press are important, beef publication startups are more influenced by developments in the beef industry.

The Chicago Defender, the Korean War, and the End of Military Segregation • Mark Slagle, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill • The Korean War, which saw the end of racial segregation in the U.S. armed forces, was a period of change for black Americans. This paper examines how the Chicago Defender, one of the nation’s largest and most influential black newspapers, covered the conflict and the beginning of complete integration in the military.

Weekly Sabbath School: The Farm Press as a Pulpit for “Uncle Henry” Wallace’s Progressive Moral Reform and Instruction • Kevin Stoker, Brigham Young University and James Arrington, Pukrufus-Advertise Brand Communicate Design • Henry Wallace founded Wallace’s Farmer in 1895 and transformed farm journalism. Much has been written about Wallace, his son Henry C., and his grandson Henry A., VP under FDR. But little about his “best work” of journalism, “Our Weekly Sabbath School Lesson.”

Claiming Journalistic Truth: Press Guardedness Against Edward L. Bernays and Propaganda as the Minority Voice • Burton St. John, Old Dominion University • The press’s struggle in America to affirm its ability to accurately portray reality has its roots in journalism’s drive to heighten its legitimacy after World War I. Disillusioned with both the war and its own earlier credulity regarding the propaganda of the Committee on Public Information (CPI), the press gradually professionalized during the 1920s. Journalism’s efforts to enhance its credibility focused on developing work routines that allowed it claim it was more accurately reporting the “truth.”

The Forgotten Censorship of Scientific American in 1950 • Wendy Swanberg, University of Wisconsin-Madison • In 1950 the U.S. government destroyed a full issue of Scientific American magazine, to suppress information about the hydrogen bomb. The censorship animated a simmering discourse among scientists, journalists, and government officials about the parameters of scientific and press freedoms in the uncertain peacetime after World War II. In light of Cold War tensions between liberty and security, this essay explores print accounts, congressional testimony, personal interviews, and ASNE records to revive this near-forgotten episode of prior restraint.

“Salesmanship-in-Print” and the Ownership of Consumer Desire: Lessons from Judicious Advertising, 1915-1925 • Rebecca Swenson and John Eighmey, University of Minnesota • This article examines the often-ignored period of transformation within advertising from “salesmanship-in-person” to “salesmanship-in-print.” We illustrate how advertising leaders adapted face-to-face selling techniques to promote their craft within house organ Judicious Advertising from 1915-1925 in ways that made their control over consumer desire seem natural. These constructions shaped advertising’s definition and practice for most of the twentieth century, and this article serves as a basis for reflection about the current transition in advertising to “salesmanship-with-peers.”

Virtual Museums and Digital Archives: Nostalgia for a Digital Future • Christopher Vaughan, Dominican University of California, and Daniel Kim, University of Massachusetts-Amherst • The creation of national digital memory archiving projects in Canada and the United States offers an instructive cautionary tale about the processes employed and the outcomes becoming evident in terms of nationalism, the contours of national identity, questions of minority groups’ belonging, and what events are seen as crucial to the formation, preservation, and challenging of national identity.

Explaining Objectivity as an Occupational Norm: The Role of Education • Tim Vos, University of Missouri • This study highlights how additional theoretical and empirical steps are necessary to account for how objectivity not only emerged but became an occupational norm within the institution of journalism. The study examines one logic of explanation, an ideational argument, as a basis for an exploratory study of how journalism education played a role in bringing about a collective norm.

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