journalists

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12 headnotes for journalists (see all)
More than 10.000 documents for journalists
  • Burnout is caused by stress that can lead to a depletion of emotional resources that affect a person's behavior and motivation. 24 Burnout can affect job performance,25 job satisfaction,26 work and family relationships,27 diminished productivity and employee turnover.28 The purpose of this study is to examine burnout and job satisfaction among female newspaper journalists and the life issues, such as work-family conflict, perceived organizational support, role overload and job demands, which might affect burnout and satisfaction. [...] some of the issues in this study are addressed, women will continue to be underrepresented in newspaper newsrooms.

  • While female sports journalists have made their way onto sports desks and into locker rooms, some say they have not gained acceptance. Many do not feel the rewards of staying in the business compensate for the on-the-job discrimination and the sacrificing of time and family relationships. Here, Hardin and Shain tackle issues facing female sports journalists.

  • Burgess the case of lobbyists Keith Weissman and Steve Rosen who are charged with conspiring to release national security information. She says that the indictments of Weissman and Rosen jeopardize journalism because the activities the two were engaged in are similar to the acts reporters perform every day in Washington and details particular dates on which they allegedly communicated with journalists about foreign intelligence they received from a Pentagon analysts. She notes that the case shows that Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act searches may play a role in how the government keeps its eye on journalists.

  • This study has provided empirical evidence that will help journalism educators make informed decisions about how to teach media convergence in their curricula and courses. A national survey was conducted among college professors, news professionals, and news editors. The study found strong support for training generalists and teaching new technology while continuing to emphasize critical thinking in journalism schools. It concludes that dealing with media convergence in college journalism education is an urgent necessity.

  • With funding from the Freedom Forum, Feinstein surveyed 140 war journalists from news organizations such as the BBC, CNN, NBC, Associated Press Television News, and the Independent Television News (ITN). From there, he conducted face-to-face interviews with twenty-eight of the respondents, who had covered such hot spots as the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, Chechnya, Bosnia, Afghanistan, and El Salvador, to name just a few. After a decade or more in combat zones there was much to tell," he explained, and "every journalist had, in his repository of literally hundreds of traumatic memories, a particular event that stood out with an eidetic quality.

  • [...] you should pay attention to them - not only on Twitter, but In the wider Industry. Online managing editor for McG rawHill's Aviation Week business aviation channel, where I write for The Weekly of Business Aviation, the business channel of the online premium Aviation Week Intelligence network. In order to be at the forefront of online media, journalists and newsrooms need to harness the resources they have to create a better, more immersive experience for their audiences.

  • More journalists were killed last year than ever before. No doubt the world has become a more dangerous place for journalists, but not necessarily in ways that people might expect. The risks to foreign journalists, especially for (but hardly limited to) Western correspondents, have risen dramatically. There is another trend that is even more disturbing. When it comes to journalists, the killers get away with the murders in nearly nine out of ten cases. In no less than 89% of journalist murders worldwide, there has been little or no prosecution whatsoever. At the same time, combat journalists and other reporters who cover dangerous situations still face great risks. No less than 18% of the journalists killed on the job in all circumstances since 1992 died covering combat or some other fo...

  • The practice of embedding journalists in military units has a long history, dating to the Civil War. However, the scope of embedding in Operation Iraq...

  • THE VERY definition of what it is to be a journalist in the rapidly changing age of the Internet was put to a test this week when the New Jersey Supreme Court issued its ruling in a case involving a blogger from Washington State. In a long-awaited decision, the court ruled unanimously that the blogger, who had been sued for defamation by Too Much Media LLC, a New Jersey-based software company, was not protected under the state's shield law that allows journalists to keep their sources confidential. The defamation suit was brought over comments the blogger posted on an Internet message board.

  • WASHINGTON - NPR, PBS and local public broadcast stations around the country are hiring more journalists and pumping millions of dollars into investigative news to make up for what they see as a lack of deep-digging coverage by their for-profit counterparts. Public radio and TV stations have seen the need for reporting that holds government and business accountable increase as newspapers and TV networks cut their staffs and cable television stations have filled their schedules with more opinion journalism.



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