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E-raamat: Reporting Islam: International best practice for journalists

  • Formaat: 162 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Apr-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351780520
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  • Formaat: 162 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Apr-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351780520

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Reporting Islam argues for innovative approaches to media coverage of Muslims and their faith. The book examines the ethical dilemmas faced by Western journalists when reporting on this topic and offers a range of alternative journalistic techniques that will help news media practitioners move away from dominant news values and conventions when reporting on Islam.

The book is based on an extensive review of international literature and interviews with news media editors, copy editors, senior reporters, social media editors, in-house journalism trainers and journalism educators, conducted for the Reporting Islam Project. In addition, the use of an original model – the Transformative Journalism Model – provides further insight into the nature of news reports about Muslims and Islam. The findings collated here help to identify the best and worst reporting practices adopted by different news outlets, as well as the factors which have influenced them. Building on this, the authors outline a new strategy for more accurate, fair and informed reporting of stories relating to Muslims and Islam.

By combining an overview of different journalistic approaches, with real-world accounts from professionals and advice on best practice, journalists, journalism educators and students will find this book a useful guide to contemporary news coverage of Islam.

Arvustused

This book presents a compelling structure for studying and advancing the coverage of Islam. It combines scholarly interests with a real sensitivity to the pressures facing both individual journalists and the journalism industry.

Fred Vultee, Associate Professor of Journalism, Wayne State University, USA

Urgent and timely, this book advances existing research on the reporting of Islam by offering solutions to its findings.

Elizabeth Poole, Programme Director in Media, Communications and Culture, Keele University, UK

A fine book. A pro-active book. A book that creates a new model of journalism to intervene, to challenge and to question. Working through the complex layering of otherness in journalism, alongside the pressure to summon workable narratives under time pressures, Ewart and O'Donnell create a new way of summoning evidence, developing interpretations and presenting complex ideas. This book is rare. It is practical but also high theory. It is interventionist, but never summons the subjectivity that would weaken the argument. In a time of fake news, Ewart and O'Donnell are the scholars to teach all of us to look widely and deeply for evidence, and evaluate the consequences of our choices.

Tara Brabazon, Dean of Graduate Research and Professor of Cultural Studies, Flinders University, Australia

List of illustrations
ix
Acknowledgements x
1 Introduction
1(8)
2 Setting the scene
9(12)
3 Conceptual frameworks for analysing news media coverage of Islam: Orientalism, Islamophobia and racism
21(10)
4 Problems and effects: news media coverage of Islam and its potential implications
31(10)
5 Approaches for more ethical coverage: peace journalism, constructive journalism and solutions journalism
41(12)
6 Journalists', educators' and Muslims' views of the reportage of Islam and Muslims
53(12)
7 A model for transformative journalism
65(12)
8 Reporting radicalisarion, terror incidents and arrests
77(10)
9 Reporting Muslim women --- veiling
87(8)
10 Muslim, migrant, refugee? conflating identities
95(10)
11 Reporting sharia and halal
105(10)
12 News media coverage of mosques
115(12)
13 Best practice approaches to training and resources
127(12)
14 Conclusion: implementing inclusive approaches to reporting on Muslims, production and audience considerations
139(10)
Index 149
Jacqui Ewart is a former journalist and Professor at Griffith University, Australia. She researches news media representations of Muslims and disasters communication. She is the co-author and author of several books about news media coverage of Muslims and has published widely in related international journals.

Kate ODonnell is the Reporting Islam Projects Principal Research Fellow based at Griffith University, Australia. She is a career public servant turned academic whose research interests also include terrorism, policing and critical infrastructure resilience.