J&MC Quarterly Index – International

Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: International

Australian Journalists’ Professional and Ethical Values (John Henningham) 73:1, 206-218.

Balancing Trust in Media and Trust in Government during Political Change in Taiwan (Albert C. Gunther, Yah-Huei Hong, and Lulu Rodriguez) 71:3, 628-636.

A Battle for Humor: Satire and Censorship in Le Bavard (Ross F. Collins) 73:3, 645-656.

Bridging Latin America’s Digital Divide: Government Policies and Internet Access (Eliza Tanner Hawkins with Kirk A. Hawkins) 80:3, 646-665.

Can a Single Incident Create an Issue? Exemplars in German Television Magazine Shows (Gregor Daschmann and Hans-Bernd Brosius) 76:1, 35-51.

Candidate Images in Spanish Elections: Second-Level Agenda-Setting Effects (Maxwell McCombs, Juan Pablo Llamas, Esteban Lopez-Escobar, and Federico Rey) 74:4, 703-717.

Constructing Public Opinion and Manipulating Symbols: China’s Press Coverage of the Student Movement in 1989 (Guo-Qiang Zhang and Sidney Kraus) 72:2, 412-425.

Contrast in U.S. Media Coverage of Two Major Canadian Elections (L. Paul Husselbee and Guido H. Stempel III) 74:3, 591-601.

Development News in Elite and Non-Elite Newspapers in Indonesia (Hemant Shah and Gati Gayatri) 71:2, 411-420.

Diversity versus Concentration in the Deregulated Mass Media Domain (Petros Iosifides) 76:1, 152-162.

The Ebb and Flow of the Liberalization of the Jordanian Press: 1985-1997 (Orayb Aref Najjar) 75:1, 127-142.

The Effectiveness of Locator Maps in Increasing Reader Understanding of the Geography of Foreign News (Jeffrey L. Griffin and Robert L. Stevenson) 71:4, 937-946.

Effects of U.S. Television Programs on Foreign Audiences: A Meta-Analysis (William Ware and Michel Dupagne) 71:4, 947-959.

Elite Press Coverage of the 1986 U.S.-Libya Conflict: A Case Study of Tactical and Strategic Critique (James K. Hertog) 77:3, 612-627.

Experts in the Mass Media: Researchers as Sources in Danish Daily Newspapers, 1961-2001 (Erik Albæk, Peter Munk Christiansen, and Lise Togeby) 80:4, 937-948.

Finding a New Way: Nicaraguan Newspapers in a Globalized World (Kris Kodrich) 79:1, 101-120.

Foreign Media Exposure and Perceptions of Americans in Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Singapore (Lars Willnat, Zhou He, and Hao Xiaoming) 74:4, 738-756.

From Afghanistan to Chechnya: News Coverage by Izvestia and the New York Times (Olga V. Malinkina and Douglas M. McLeod) 77:1, 37-49.

Front Pages of Taiwan Daily Newspapers 1952-1996: How Ending Martial Law Influenced Publication Design (Ven-Hwei Lo, Anna Paddon, and Hsiaomei Wu) 77:4, 880-897.

Global News, National Stories: Producers as Mythmakers at Germany’s Deutsche Welle Television (B. William Silcock) 79:2, 339-352.

Importing Foreign News: A Case Study of the German Service of the Associated Press (Jürgen Wilke and Bernhard Rosenberger) 71:2, 421-432.

Individual, Organizational, and Societal Influences on Media Role Perceptions: A Comparative Study of Journalists in China, Taiwan, and the United States (Jian-Hua Zhu, David Weaver, Ven-Hwei Lo, Chongshan Chen, and Wei Wu) 74:1, 84-96.

International Conflict Coverage in Japanese Local Daily Newspapers (Hiromi Cho and Stephen Lacy) 77:4, 830-845.

The Journalist’s Personality: An Exploratory Study (John Henningham) 74:3, 615-624.

Latino Media Use for Cultural Maintenance (Diana I. Rios and Stanley O. Gaines Jr.) 75:4, 746-761.

Licensing Journalists in Latin America: An Appraisal (Jerry W. Knudson) 73:4, 878-889.

Making a Difference: U.S. Press Coverage of the Kwangju and Tiananmen Pro-Democracy Movements (Sun Tae Kim) 77:1, 22-36.

Nation, Capitalism, Myth: Covering News of Economic Globalization (Elfriede Fürsich) 79:2, 353-373.

National News Cultures: A Comparison of Dutch, German, British, Australian, and U.S. Journalists (Mark Deuze) 79:1, 134-149.

New York Times and Network TV News Coverage of Foreign Disasters: The Significance of the Insignificant Variables (Douglas A. Van Belle) 77:1, 50-70.

News Agencies, National Images, and Global Media Events (C. Anthony Giffard and Nancy K. Rivenburgh) 77:1, 8-21.

Perceived Effects of Sexually Explicit Internet Content: The Third-Person Effect in Singapore (Wei Wu and Soh Hoon Koo) 78:2, 260-274.

Picturing the Gulf War: Constructing an Image of War in Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report (Michael Griffin and Jongsoo Lee) 72:4, 813-825.

Political Reality and Editorial Cartoons in Japan: How the National Dailies Illustrate the Japanese Prime Minister (Ofer Feldman) 72:3, 571-580.

The Potential of Online Media: A Coorientational Analysis of Conflict between PR Professionals and Journalists in South Korea (Jae-Hwa Shin and Glen T. Cameron) 80:3, 583-602.

Predicting News Flow from Mexico (Melissa A. Johnson) 74:2, 315-330.

Press and Political Liberalization in Taiwan (Kuldip R. Rampal) 71:3, 637-651.

Professional Roles of Russian and U.S. Journalists: A Comparative Study (Wei Wu, David Weaver, and Owen V. Johnson) 73:3, 534-548.

Proximity and Power Factors in Western Coverage of the Sub-Saharan AIDS Crisis (Kristen Alley Swain) 80:1, 145-165.

Reconstructing Suicide: Reporting Suicide in the Israeli Press (Gabriel Weimann and Gideon Fishman) 72:3, 551-558.

Regulation of Sexually Explicit Videotex Services in France (Michel Dupagne) 71:1, 121-134.

Reliability in Cross-National Content Analysis (Jochen Peter and Edmund Lauf) 79:4, 815-832.

Speaking Up and Silencing Out in Face of a Changing Climate of Opinion (Jacob Shamir) 74:3, 602-614.

State Control of Television News in 1990s Lebanon (Marwan M. Kraidy) 76:3, 485-498.

State and Media in the English-Speaking Caribbean: The Case of Antigua (Leara Rhodes and Paget Henry) 72:3, 654-665.

Toward an Understanding of Cultural Values Manifest in Advertising: A Content Analysis of Chinese Television Commercials in 1990 and 1995 (Hong Cheng) 74:4, 773-796.

U.S. Newspaper Coverage of Human Rights in Latin America, 1975-1982: Exploring President Carter’s Agenda-Building Influence (Catherine Cassara) 75:3, 478-486.

Violence against the Press in Latin America: Protections and Remedies in International Law (Michael Perkins) 78:2, 275-290.

When the News Doesn’t Fit: The New York Times and Hitler’s First Two Months in Office, February/March 1933 (Gary Klein) 78:1, 127-149.

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