Media and Social Inequality

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Blau's Index
Blau’s Index
Category=JBCT
Category=JBFA
Category=JHB
Citizen Journalism Website
City's Murder Rate
City’s Murder Rate
Community Stress
Community Structure Approach
Community Structure Model
Community Structure Research
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Inequality
Intermedia Agenda Setting
Journalism
Lifestyle Market Analyst
Linear Development Model
Local Daily Newspapers
Mass Communication and Society
Media
Media Vectors
National Media Agenda
Negative Relationship
Occupational Pluralism
Occupy Wall Street
OLS Regression
Percent Hispanic
Place Blogs
Pluralistic Community
Political Change
Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey
Social Change
Social Trust
Stakeholder Hypothesis
Structural Pluralism
Watch Tv News

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138806764
  • Weight: 294g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jun 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book is among the first to systematically explore the impact of community inequality on reporting political and social change. Although most journalism scholars are still fascinated by the impact of media on society, Media and Social Inequality explores the reverse perspective: the impact of society on media. Using a 'community structure' approach, and rejecting the perspective that studies of media and audiences can be reduced to the individual level of psychological phenomena, all contributions examine connections between community-level 'macro' characteristics and variations in the coverage of critical issues. This innovative book differs from previous community structure volumes in two ways. First, contributions explore a far wider range of community characteristics by employing creative methodologies, modern archives, and databases that facilitate larger, more diverse samples; multilevel and longitudinal analyses; composite measures of both 'content' and editorial judgment; new technologies; and social network analysis. Second, a traditional emphasis on media as instruments of political and social 'control' is replaced by media as potential mirrors of social 'change,' exploring 'bottom-up' measures of 'vulnerability', 'concentrated disadvantage', and 'ethnic diversity/pluralism'. The volume contains two original chapters: one on nationwide US coverage of the "Occupy" movement in the expanded introduction, and another on nationwide US coverage of universal health care.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Mass Communication and Society.

John C. Pollock (Ph.D., Stanford) is a Professor in the Communication Studies Department at The College of New Jersey, USA. He was Senior Fulbright Scholar, Argentina, 2010 and is the author of Tilted Mirrors: Media Alignment with Political and Social Change – A Community Structure Approach (2007). His major research and teaching interests include health communication, journalism, and mass communication, in particular comparative methologies (cross-national or multi-city) exploring the impact of society on media.