This case was written for the Aga Khan University Graduate School of Media and Communications. Responding to grim pandemic patterns of shootings that have menaced New York and and nation, Gov. This case can be used in a class/course on journalism ethics, editorial management, reporting conflict, ethnicity and race in journalism, or reporting elections and politics.
What should be the goal of a news outlet during a conflict-promote stability or report the unvarnished truth? Finally, how credible are sources in a situation of conflict?
How should a news manager reconcile conflicting factions, especially when the manager may have personal views of his/her own? How much does editors’ own personal background, or others’ perception of that background, influence the news organization’s reputation as well as editorial decisions? The case also raises questions about how to cover conflict. Use the case as a basis for discussing how personal political views can boil over into the workplace. The editorial director had to develop a strategy to address the rising tension within the organisation. Suspicion greeted most editorial decisions. Reporters who only weeks earlier had been friends and colleagues were tense and barely speaking to one another. The Star brings you breaking news, developing stories, politics, entertainment, lifestyle, sports and much more from Kenya and around the world, throughout the day. How a Texans stories teach a nation to be vulnerable. Newsroom was splitting along tribal lines. In-depth reporting, commentary on breaking news, political analysis, and opinion from The New. Anchorage Daily News Tribal-recognition ballot measure gets 250,000 donation from dark-money group Ballot Measure 2, passed last year, requires extra disclosure for these types of donations, but. Newspaper, had a crisis on his hands: the The Daily Nation is Kenyas newspaper with the highest circulation. The editorial director of Nation Media Group, which included the Monthly magazine of politics, culture and progressivism. In mid-January 2008, post-election tribal violence in Kenya was making international headlines. In other cases, "fake news" articles may be generated and disseminated by "bots" - computer algorithms that are designed to act like people sharing information, but can do so quickly and automatically.This case examines what happens when personal bias affects the newsroom. In some cases, the articles are designed to provoke an emotional response and placed on certain sites ("seeded") in order to entice readers into sharing them widely. The technological ease of copying, pasting, clicking and sharing content online has helped these types of articles to proliferate. The message was simple but grim, the Daily Nation newspaper reported on Wednesday: Kenyans must not tear the country apart in the struggle for power. Trita Parsi, Beatrice Geaghan-Breiner and Artin Dersimonian. Fourteen doctors were briefly licensed in an effort to meet COVID-19 demands but none practiced medicine in Alaska before losing their licenses or agreeing to.
Poor or untrained journalists - the pressure of the 24 hour news cycle as well as the explosion of news sites may contribute to shoddy writing that doesn't follow professional journalistic standards or ethics.Satirists who want to either make a point or entertain you, or both.Someone wanting to make money, regardless of the content of the article (for example, Macedonian teenagers).
How misinformation and disinformation is produced is directly related to who the author(s) is and the different reasons why it is created.