Cross, Simon and Lockyer, Sharon (2006) Dynamics of partisan journalism: journalist–source relations in the context of a local newspaper's anti-paedophile housing agenda. Journalism studies, 7 (2). pp. 274-291. ISSN 1469-9699
Full content URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700500533585
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
This article explores the influence of partisanship on the framing of a local news agenda. Using a case study approach, it explores how one local newspaper in the East Midlands of England, the Nottingham-based Evening Post, reacted with hostility to leaked Home Office plans housing high-profile paedophiles in its locality (albeit inside the grounds of the local jail). Within weeks, though, the paper's news frame had shifted from hostility toward the Home Office to a more sympathetic news frame reporting how local professionals would manage risks posed by paedophiles in Nottingham. In order to make sense of the local dynamic underpinning this changing news frame, the paper uses interview data to explore interactions between local journalists and key protagonists to understand the predictable and unpredictable factors that shaped the terms of their reporting. The article concludes by discussing the significance of partisan dynamics on the framing of a highly charged local and national paedophile-related issue
Additional Information: | This article explores the influence of partisanship on the framing of a local news agenda. Using a case study approach, it explores how one local newspaper in the East Midlands of England, the Nottingham-based Evening Post, reacted with hostility to leaked Home Office plans housing high-profile paedophiles in its locality (albeit inside the grounds of the local jail). Within weeks, though, the paper's news frame had shifted from hostility toward the Home Office to a more sympathetic news frame reporting how local professionals would manage risks posed by paedophiles in Nottingham. In order to make sense of the local dynamic underpinning this changing news frame, the paper uses interview data to explore interactions between local journalists and key protagonists to understand the predictable and unpredictable factors that shaped the terms of their reporting. The article concludes by discussing the significance of partisan dynamics on the framing of a highly charged local and national paedophile-related issue |
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Keywords: | Local press, Framing, Local news agenda, Journalist-source relations, Paedophiles |
Subjects: | P Mass Communications and Documentation > P500 Journalism |
Divisions: | College of Arts > Lincoln School of Film & Media > Lincoln School of Film & Media (Media) |
ID Code: | 629 |
Deposited On: | 22 Jun 2007 |
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