J&MC Quarterly Index – Professional Issues
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Professional Issues
Are Journalists Really Irreligious? A Multidimensional Analysis (Doug Underwood and Keith Stamm) 78:4, 771-786.
Changing the Newsroom Culture: A Four-Year Case Study of Organizational Development at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Peter J. Gade and Earnest L. Perry) 80:2, 327-347.
Does the Cheerleading Ever Stop? Major League Baseball and Sports Journalism (William B. Anderson) 78:2, 355-382.
Does Making Journalism More Public Make a Difference? A Critical Review of Evaluative Research on Public Journalism (Brian L. Massey and Tanni Haas) 79:3, 559-586.
Explaining Variability in Newspaper Design: An Examination of the Role of Newsroom Subgroups (Wilson Lowrey) 80:2, 348-367.
Finding a New Way: Nicaraguan Newspapers in a Globalized World (Kris Kodrich) 79:1, 101-120.
Holding the News Media Accountable: A Study of Media Reporters and Media Critics in the United States (Susanne Fengler) 80:4, 818-832.
The Impact of Public Ownership, Profits, and Competition on Number of Newsroom Employees and Starting Salaries at Mid-Sized Daily Newspapers (Stephen Lacy and Alan Blanchard) 80:4, 949-968.
The Impact of Technological Skill on Job-Finding Success in the Mass Communication Labor Market (Wilson Lowrey and Lee B. Becker) 78:4, 754-770.
The Making and Unmaking of Civic Journalists: Influences of Professional Socialization (Michael McDevitt, Bob M. Gassaway, and Frank G. Pérez) 79:1, 87-100.
The Myth of “The Local” in American Journalism (John J. Pauly and Melissa Eckert) 79:2, 310-326.
National News Cultures: A Comparison of Dutch, German, British, Australian, and U.S. Journalists (Mark Deuze) 79:1, 134-149.
The Normative-Economic Justification for Public Discourse: Letters to the Editor as a “Wide Open” Forum (Karin Wahl-Jorgensen) 79:1, 121-133.
Numbers in the Newsroom: A Qualitative Examination of a Quantitative Challenge (Patricia A. Curtin and Scott R. Maier) 78:4, 720-738.
Numeracy in the Newsroom: A Case Study of Mathematical Competence and Confidence (Scott R. Maier) 80:4, 921-936.
Personal and Professional Dimensions of News Work: Exploring the Link between Journalists’ Values and Roles (Patrick Lee Plaisance and Elizabeth A. Skewes) 80:4, 833-848.
Professional Confidence and Situational Ethics: Assessing the Social-Professional Dialectic in Journalistic Ethics Decisions (Dan Berkowitz and Yehiel Limor) 80:4, 783-801.
The Promise and Peril of Anecdotes in News Coverage: An Ethical Analysis (David A. Craig) 80:4, 802-817.
Race and Ethical Reasoning: The Importance of Race to Journalistic Decision Making (Renita Coleman) 80:2, 295-310.
Sources and Civic Journalism: Changing Patterns of Reporting? (David D. Kurpius) 79:4, 853-866.
Times of Turmoil: Short-and Long-Term Effects of Organizational Change on Newsroom Employees (George L. Daniels and C. Ann Hollifield) 79:3, 661-680.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Press Performance
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Press Performance
Content Differences between Daily Newspapers with Strong and Weak Market Orientations (Randal A. Beam) 80:2, 368-390.
Does Making Journalism More Public Make a Difference? A Critical Review of Evaluative Research on Public Journalism (Brian L. Massey and Tanni Haas) 79:3, 559-586.
Embargoes and Science News (Vincent Kiernan) 80:4, 903-920.
An Experimental Examination of Readers’ Perceptions of Media Bias (Dave D’alessio) 80:2, 282-294.
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.
Framing Gender on the Campaign Trail: Female Gubernatorial Candidates and the Press (James Devitt) 79:2, 445-463.
Gender Politics: News Coverage of the Candidates’ Wives in Campaign 2000 (Betty Houchin Winfield and Barbara Friedman) 80:3, 548-566.
Holding the News Media Accountable: A Study of Media Reporters and Media Critics in the United States (Susanne Fengler) 80:4, 818-832.
The Making and Unmaking of Civic Journalists: Influences of Professional Socialization (Michael McDevitt, Bob M. Gassaway, and Frank G. Pérez) 79:1, 87-100.
The Myth of “The Local” in American Journalism (John J. Pauly and Melissa Eckert) 79:2, 310-326.
Objective Evidence of Media Bias: Newspaper Coverage of Congressional Party Switchers (David Niven) 80:2, 311-326.
Partisan and Structural Balance in Local Television Election Coverage (Sue Carter, Frederick Fico, and Jocelyn A. McCabe) 79:1, 41-53.
The Princess and the Paparazzi: Blame, Responsibility, and the Media’s Role in the Death of Diana (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 80:3, 666-688.
The Promise and Peril of Anecdotes in News Coverage: An Ethical Analysis (David A. Craig) 80:4, 802-817.
Source Use in a “News Disaster” Account: A Content Analysis of Voter News Service Stories (Randall S. Sumpter and Melissa A. Braddock) 79:3, 539-558.
Sources and Civic Journalism: Changing Patterns of Reporting? (David D. Kurpius) 79:4, 853-866.
This Just In … How National TV News Handled the Breaking “Live” Coverage of September 11 (Amy Reynolds and Brooke Barnett) 80:3, 689-703.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Political Communication
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Political Communication
Active and Passive Indicators of Public Opinion: Assessing the Call-in Poll (Patrick R. Cotter, David K. Perry, and James G. Stovall) 71:1, 169-175.
Anonymous Attribution during Two Periods of Military Conflict: Using Logistic Regression to Study Veiled Sources in American Newspapers (Bryan E. Denham) 74:3, 565-578.
Buses and Ballots: The Role of Media Images in a Local Election (Gerald M. Kosicki, Lee B. Becker, and Eric S. Fredin) 71:1, 76-89.
The Bush and Gore Presidential Campaign Web Sites: Identifying with Hispanic Voters during the 2000 Iowa Caucuses and New Hampshire Primary (María E. Len-Ríos) 79:4, 887-904.
Campaign Contributions: Online Newspaper Coverage of Election 2000 (Jane B. Singer) 80:1, 39-56.
A Case Study of Deliberative Democracy on Television: Civic Dialogue on C-SPAN Call-in Shows (David D. Kurpius and Andrew Mendelson) 79:3, 587-601.
Commercial Breaks: A Viewing Behavior Study (Sandra E. Moriarty and Shu-Ling Everett) 71:2, 346-355.
Communication and Age in Childhood Political Socialization: An Interactive Model of Political Development (William P. Eveland Jr., Jack M. McLeod, and Edward M. Horowitz) 75:4, 699-718.
Communication Styles and Female Candidates: A Study of the Political Advertising during the 1986 Senate Elections (Anne Johnston and Anne Barton White) 71:2, 321-329.
Differences among Newspapers, Television, and Radio in Their Contribution to Knowledge of the Contract with America (Keith Stamm, Michelle Johnson, and Brennon Martin) 74:4, 687-702.
Direct and Indirect Effects of Socioeconomic Status on Public Affairs Knowledge (Douglas M. McLeod and Elizabeth M. Perse) 71:2, 433-442.
Disengaged and Uninformed: 2000 Presidential Election Coverage in Consumer Magazines Popular with Young Adults (Tom Reichert, James E. Mueller, and Michael Nitz) 80:3, 513-527.
Does the Watchdog Bite? Newspaper Ad Watch Articles and Political Attack Ads (Patrick B. O’Sullivan and Seth Geiger) 72:4, 771-785.
Doing the Traditional Media Sidestep: Comparing the Effects of the Internet and Other Nontraditional Media with Traditional Media in the 1996 Presidential Campaign (Thomas J. Johnson, Mahmoud A. M. Braima, and Jayanthi Sothirajah) 76:1, 99-123.
The Effects of Credibility, Reliance, and Exposure on Media Agenda-Setting: A Path Analysis Model (Wayne Wanta and Yu-Wei Hu) 71:1, 90-98.
Effects of the News Media Environment on Citizen Knowledge of State Politics and Government (Michael X. Delli Carpini, Scott Keeter, and J. David Kennamer) 71:2, 443-456.
Effects of News Slant and Base Rate Information on Perceived Public Opinion (Albert C. Gunther and Cindy T. Christen) 76:2, 277-292.
Erosion of Television Coverage of City Hall? Perceptions of TV Reporters on the Beat (David C. Coulson, Daniel Riffe, Stephen Lacy, and Charles R. St. Cyr) 78:1, 81-92.
Experts and the Operational Bias of Television News: The Case of the Persian Gulf War (Janet E. Steele) 72:4, 799-812.
Fairness and Balance in the Structural Characteristics of Newspaper Stories on the 1996 Presidential Election (Frederick Fico and William Cote) 76:1, 124-137.
The Flawed Characters in the Campaign: Prestige Newspaper Assessments of the 1992 Presidential Candidates’ Integrity and Competence (Erika G. King) 72:1, 84-97.
Forecast 2000: Widening Knowledge Gaps (Cecilie Gaziano) 74:2, 237-264.
Framing the Candidates in Presidential Primaries: Issues and Images in Press Releases and News Coverage (M. Mark Miller, Julie L. Andsager, and Bonnie P. Riechert) 75:2, 312-324.
Framing Gender on the Campaign Trail: Female Gubernatorial Candidates and the Press (James Devitt) 79:2, 445-463.
Gender Politics: News Coverage of the Candidates’ Wives in Campaign 2000 (Betty Houchin Winfield and Barbara Friedman) 80:3, 548-566.
Going Negative: Candidate Usage of Internet Web Sites during the 2000 Presidential Campaign (Robert H. Wicks and Boubacar Souley) 80:1, 128-144.
How Feeling Free to Talk Affects Ordinary Political Conversation, Purposeful Argumentation, and Civic Participation (Robert O. Wyatt, Joohan Kim, and Elihu Katz) 77:1, 99-114.
How Interest Groups Attempt to Shape Public Opinion with Competing News Frames (Julie L. Andsager) 77:3, 577-592.
Illusions of Media Power: The Third-Person Effect (L. Erwin Atwood) 71:2, 269-281.
The Impact of Traditional and Nontraditional Media Forms in the 1992 Presidential Election (Jack M. McLeod, Zhongshi Guo, Katie Daily, Catherine A. Steele, Huiping Huang, Edward Horowitz, and Huailin Chen) 73:2, 401-416.
The Impact of Web Site Campaigning on Traditional News Media and Public Information Processing (Gyotae Ku, Lynda Lee Kaid, and Michael Pfau) 80:3, 528-547.
Individual and Routine Forces in Gatekeeping (Pamela J. Shoemaker, Martin Eichholz, Eunyi Kim, and Brenda Wrigley) 78:2 , 233-246.
The Influence of Political Talk Radio on Confidence in Democratic Institutions (Michael Pfau, Patricia Moy, R. Lance Holbert, Erin A. Szabo, Wei-Kuo Lin, and Weiwu Zhang) 75:4, 730-745.
The Interaction of News and Advocate Frames: Manipulating Audience Perceptions of a Local Public Policy Issue (David Tewksbury, Jennifer Jones, Matthew W. Peske, Ashlea Raymond, and William Vig) 77:4, 804-829.
Interest-Group Influence on the Media Agenda: A Case Study (Kyle Huckins) 76:1, 76-86.
Intermedia Agenda Setting in the 1996 Presidential Election (Thomas P. Boyle) 78:1, 26-44.
Interpretation of Issues and Voter Decision-Making Strategies: A New Perspective on “Issue-Oriented” Election Coverage (David Domke and Dhavan V. Shah) 72:1, 45-71.
Intertwining of Campaign News and Advertising: The Content and Electoral Effects of Newspaper Ad Watches (Young Min) 79:4, 927-944.
Measurement Effects in Comparing Voter Learning from Television News and Campaign Advertisements (Xinshu Zhao and Glen L. Bleske) 72:1, 72-83.
Measuring New-Voter Learning Via Three Channels of Political Information (Kathleen A. Martinelli and Steven H. Chaffee) 72:1, 18-32.
Media Effects on Political and Social Trust (Patricia Moy and Dietram A. Scheufele) 77:4, 744-759.
Media Use, Involvement, and Knowledge of the Gulf War (Ven-Hwei Lo) 71:1, 43-54.
The Metro Wide Web: Changes in Newspapers’ Gatekeeping Role Online (Jane B. Singer) 78:1, 65-80.
Multiple Newspapers and Electoral Competition: A County-Level Analysis (Jan P. Vermeer) 72:1, 98-105.
The New News and the 1992 Presidential Campaign: Perceived vs. Actual Political Knowledge, 72:4 (Barry A. Hollander) 786-798.
News Information Processing as Mediator of the Relationship between Motivations and Political Knowledge (William P. Eveland Jr.) 79:1, 26-40.
News Media, Candidates and Issues, and Public Opinion in the 1996 Presidential Campaign (David Domke, David P. Fan, Michael Fibison, Dhavan V. Shah, Steven S. Smith, and Mark D. Watts) 74:4, 718-737.
News Media Exposure and Its Learning Effects during the Persian Gulf War (Zhongdang Pan, Ronald E. Ostman, Patricia Moy, and Paula Reynolds) 71:1, 7-19.
News on The 700 Club: The Cycle of Religious Activism (Robert Abelman) 71:4, 887-892.
Newspaper Photographs and the 1996 Presidential Election: The Question of Bias (Paul Waldman and James Devitt) 75:2, 302-311.
Nonrecursive Models of Internet Use and Community Engagement: Questioning Whether Time Spent Online Erodes Social Capital (Dhavan Shah, Michael Schmierbach, Joshua Hawkins, Rodolfo Espino, and Janet Donavan) 79:4, 964-987.
Of Horse Race and Policy Issues: A Study of Gender in Coverage of a Gubernatorial Election by Two Major Metropolitan Newspapers (Shirley A. Serini, Angela A. Powers, and Susan Johnson) 75:1, 194-204.
Partisan and Structural Balance in Local Television Election Coverage (Sue Carter, Frederick Fico, and Jocelyn A. McCabe) 79:1, 41-53.
Policing Political Ads: An Analysis of Five Leading Newspapers’ Responses to 1992 Political Advertisements (Lori Melton McKinnon, Lynda Lee Kaid, Janet Murphy, and Cynthia K. Acree) 73:1, 66-76.
Predicting Pluralistic Ignorance: The Hostile Media Perception and Its Consequences (Albert C. Gunther and Stella Chih-Yun Chia) 78:4, 688-701.
Predictors of State Legislators’ Attitudes toward Public Affairs Television in the State Capital (Glen Sussman) 73:1, 77-89.
Press Support for the U.S. Administration during the Panama Invasion: Analyses of Strategic and Tactical Critique in the Domestic Press (Sonia Gutierrez-Villalobos, James K. Hertog, and Ramona R. Rush) 71:3, 618-627.
Prestige Newspaper Coverage of Foreign Affairs in the 1990 Congressional Campaigns (Robert A. Wells and Erika G. King) 71:3, 652-664.
Public Opinion on Investigative Reporting in the 1990s: Has Anything Changed since the 1980s? (Lars Willnat and David H. Weaver) 75:3, 449-463.
Question-Order Effects in Surveys: The Case of Political Interest, News Attention, and Knowledge (Dominic L. Lasorsa) 80:3, 499-512.
The Relationship Between Censorship and the Emotional and Critical Tone of Television News Coverage of the Persian Gulf War (John E. Newhagen) 71:1, 32-42.
Revisiting the Civic Duty to Keep Informed in the New Media Environment (Paula M. Poindexter and Maxwell E. McCombs) 78:1, 113-126.
Revisiting the Clinton/Lewinsky Scandal: The Convergence of Agenda Setting and Framing (Julie Yioutas and Ivana Segvic) 80:3, 567-582.
The “Rhetorical Presidency” Meets the Press: The New York Times and the State of the Union Message (Todd M. Schaefer) 76:3, 516-530.
Setting the News Story Agenda: Candidates and Commentators in News Coverage of a Governor’s Race (Frederick Fico and Eric Freedman) 78:3, 437-449.
The Sound Bites, the Biters, and the Bitten: A Two-Campaign Test of the Anti-Incumbent Bias Hypothesis in Network TV News (Dennis T. Lowry and Jon A. Shidler) 75:4, 719-729.
Source Credibility during the Gulf War: A Q-Study of Rural and Urban Saudi Arabian Citizens (Safran S. Al-Makaty, Douglas A. Boyd, and G. Norman Van Tubergen) 71:1, 55-63.
Speaking Up and Silencing Out in Face of a Changing Climate of Opinion (Jacob Shamir) 74:3, 602-614.
The Specialized Business Press and Industry-Related Political Communication: A Comparative Study (C. Ann Hollifield) 74:4, 757-772.
The Spiral of Silence and Public Opinion on Affirmative Action (Patricia Moy, David Domke, and Keith Stamm) 78:1, 7-25.
Symbolic Politics: Congressional Interest in Television Violence from 1950 to 1996 (Keisha L. Hoerrner) 76:4, 684-698.
Talk or Conversation? Dimensions of Interpersonal Discussion and Their Implications for Participatory Democracy (Dietram A. Scheufele) 77:4, 727-743.
Think about It This Way: Attribute Agenda-Setting Function of the Press and the Public’s Evaluation of a Local Issue (Sei-Hill Kim, Dietram A. Scheufele, and James Shanahan) 79:1, 7-25.
Time of Voting Decision and Use of Political Advertising: The Slade Gorton-Brock Adams Senatorial Campaign (Lawrence Bowen) 71:3, 665-675.
Turning the Spotlight Inward: How Five Leading News Organizations Covered the Media in the 1992 Presidential Election (Thomas J. Johnson and Timothy Boudreau, with Chris Glowaki) 73:3, 657-671.
Understanding Media Bias: The Press and the U.S. Invasion of Panama (Sandra H. Dickson) 71:4, 809-819.
Using Is Believing: The Influence of Reliance on the Credibility of Online Political Information among Politically Interested Internet Users (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye) 77:4, 865-879.
Using TV News for Political Information during an Off-Year Election: Effects on Political Knowledge and Cynicism (Glenn Leshner and Michael L. McKean) 74:1, 69-83.
Values and the Vote: Linking Issue Interpretations to the Process of Candidate Choice (Dhavan V. Shah, David Domke, and Daniel B. Wackman) 74:2, 357-387.
Voter Learning and Interest in the 2000 Presidential Election: Did the Media Matter? (David Weaver and Dan Drew) 78:4, 787-798.
Voter Learning in the 1996 Presidential Election: Did the Media Matter? (Dan Drew and David Weaver) 75:2, 292-301.
Voter Learning in the 1992 Presidential Election: Did the “Nontraditional” Media and Debates Matter? (David Weaver and Dan Drew) 72:1, 7-17.
When the Frame Is the Game: Revisiting the Impact of “Strategic” Campaign Coverage on Citizens’ Information Retention (Nicholas A. Valentino, Thomas A. Buhr, and Matthew N. Beckmann) 78:1, 93-112.
Who Cares about Local Politics? Media Influences on Local Political Involvement, Issue Awareness, and Attitude Strength (Dietram A. Scheufele, James Shanahan, and Sei-Hill Kim) 79:2, 427-444.
Willingness to Discuss “Official English”: A Test of Three Communities (Michael B. Salwen, Carolyn Lin, and Frances R. Matera) 71:2, 282-290.
J&MC Quarterly Index – News, Newsgathering, and Newswriting
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: News, Newsgathering, and Newswriting
Beauty and the Beasts: Significance of Press Coverage of the 1913 National Suffrage Parade (Linda J. Lumsden) 77:3, 593-611.
Campaign Contributions: Online Newspaper Coverage of Election 2000 (Jane B. Singer) 80:1, 39-56.
Civic Journalism and Nonelite Sourcing: Making Routine Newswork of Community Connectedness (Brian L. Massey) 75:2, 394-407.
Comparing Distinctions and Similarities across Websites of Newspapers, Radio Stations, and Television Stations (Carolyn A. Lin and Leo W. Jeffres) 78:3, 555-573.
Covering Conflict: A Structural-Pluralist Analysis of How a Small-Town and a Big-City Newspaper Reported an Environmental Controversy (Joseph C. Harry) 78:3, 419-436.
The Creation of the “Free” Press in Japanese-American Camps: The War Relocation Authority’s Planning and Making of the Camp Newspaper Policy (Takeya Mizuno) 78:3, 503-518.
Differences in Knowledge Acquisition among Readers of the Paper and Online Versions of a National Newspaper (David Tewksbury and Scott L. Althaus) 77:3, 457-479.
Digital Imaging Skills and the Hiring and Training of Photojournalists (John Russial and Wayne Wanta) 75:3, 593-605.
Does It Pay To Be A Market-Oriented Daily Newspaper? (Randal A. Beam) 78:3, 466-483.
Does Making Journalism More Public Make a Difference? A Critical Review of Evaluative Research on Public Journalism (Brian L. Massey and Tanni Haas) 79:3, 559-586.
Editors at Most U.S. Dailies See Vital Roles for Editorial Page (Ernest C. Hynds) 71:3, 573-582.
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.
Embargoes and Science News (Vincent Kiernan) 80:4, 903-920.
Experts and the Operational Bias of Television News: The Case of the Persian Gulf War (Janet E. Steele) 72:4, 799-812.
Fairness and Balance of Selected Newspaper Coverage of Controversial National, State, and Local Issues (Frederick Fico and Stan Soffin) 72:3, 621-633.
Finding a New Way: Nicaraguan Newspapers in a Globalized World (Kris Kodrich) 79:1, 101-120.
From Afghanistan to Chechnya: News Coverage by Izvestia and the New York Times (Olga V. Malinkina and Douglas M. McLeod) 77:1, 37-49.
From Barriers to Challenges: Career Perceptions of Women TV News Anchors (Erika Engstrom and Anthony J. Ferri) 75:4, 789-802.
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.
Homicide Reporting in Chicago Dailies (John W. C. Johnstone, Darnell F. Hawkins, and Arthur Michener) 71:4, 860-872.
I.F. Stone: The Practice of Reporting (Jack Lule) 72:3, 499-510.
International Conflict Coverage in Japanese Local Daily Newspapers (Hiromi Cho and Stephen Lacy) 77:4, 830-845.
The Invisible Woman: Female Sports Journalists in the Workplace (Phyllis Miller and Randy Miller) 72:4, 883-889.
Journalists’ and Public Relations Practitioners’ News Values: Perceptions and Cross-Perceptions (Lynne M. Sallot, Thomas M. Steinfatt, and Michael B. Salwen) 75:2, 366-377.
Local Breaking News: Sources, Technology, and News Routines (Kathleen A. Hansen, Jean Ward, Joan L. Conners, and Mark Neuzil) 71:3, 561-572.
Looking beyond Hate: How National and Regional Newspapers Framed Hate Crimes in Jasper, Texas, and Laramie Wyoming (L. Paul Husselbee and Larry Elliott) 79:4, 833-852.
The Louisville Courier-Journal’s News Content after Purchase by Gannett (David C. Coulson and Anne Hansen) 72:1, 205-215.
Measurement Effects in Comparing Voter Learning from Television News and Campaign Advertisements (Xinshu Zhao and Glen L. Bleske) 72:1, 72-83.
The Metro Wide Web: Changes in Newspapers’ Gatekeeping Role Online (Jane B. Singer) 78:1, 65-80.
The Mundane and the Arcane: Prestige Media Coverage of Social and Natural Science (William Evans) 72:1, 168-177.
The New News and the 1992 Presidential Campaign: Perceived vs. Actual Political Knowledge (Barry A. Hollander) 72:4, 786-798.
The New York Times’ Conformity to AAPOR Standards of Disclosure for the Reporting of Public Opinion Polls (Krisztina Marton and Lowndes F. Stephens) 78:3, 484-502.
News of Hurricane Andrew: The Agenda of Sources and the Sources’ Agendas (Michael B. Salwen) 72:4, 826-840.
Newspaper Coverage of Fundamentalist Christians, 1980-2000 (Peter A. Kerr and Patricia Moy) 79:1, 54-72.
Newsroom Topic Teams: Journalists’ Assessments of Effects on News Routines and Newspaper Quality (Kathleen A. Hansen, Mark Neuzil, and Jean Ward) 75:4, 803-821.
The “Not-So-Genial” Conspiracy: The New York Times and Six Presidential “Honeymoons,” 1953-1993 (William J. Hughes) 72:4, 841-850.
Numeracy in the Newsroom: A Case Study of Mathematical Competence and Confidence (Scott R. Maier) 80:4, 921-936.
Occupational, Gender, and Geographic Representation of Information Sources in U.S. and Canadian Business Magazines (Steven L. McShane) 72:1, 190-204.
Partisan and Structural Balance in Local Television Election Coverage (Sue Carter, Frederick Fico, and Jocelyn A. McCabe) 79:1, 41-53.
Perception of Interviewees with Less-Than-Perfect English: Implications for Newspaper Citations (Paul Isom, Edward Johnson, James McCollum, and Dolf Zillmann) 72:4, 874-882.
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.
Sample Size for Newspaper Content Analysis in Multi-Year Studies (Stephen Lacy, Daniel Riffe, Staci Stoddard, Hugh Martin, and Kuang-Kuo Chang) 78:4, 836-845.
Sex, Violence, and Consonance/Differentiation: An Analysis of Local TV News Values (William R. Davie and Jung-Sook Lee) 72:1, 128-138.
The Sound Bites, the Biters, and the Bitten:An Analysis of Network TV News Bias in Campaign ’92 (Dennis T. Lowry and Jon A. Shidler) 72:1, 33-44.
Source Use in a “News Disaster” Account: A Content Analysis of Voter News Service Stories (Randall S. Sumpter and Melissa A. Braddock) 79:3, 539-558.
Sources and Civic Journalism: Changing Patterns of Reporting? (David D. Kurpius) 79:4, 853-866.
A Study of Tennessee Newspapers’ Use of Traditional Headline “Rules” (Randall W. Hines and Jerry Hilliard) 72:3, 698-705.
What Were You Thinking? A Survey of Journalists Who Were Sued for Invasion of Privacy (Paul S. Voakes) 75:2, 378-393.
Young Readers and the Newspaper: Factors Affecting Information Recall and Perceived Enjoyment, Readability, and Attractiveness (Wayne Wanta and Dandan Gao) 71:4, 926-936.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Methodology-Research
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Methodology-Research
Does Making Journalism More Public Make a Difference? A Critical Review of Evaluative Research on Public Journalism (Brian L. Massey and Tanni Haas) 79:3, 559-586.
The Effectiveness of Simple and Stratified Random Sampling in Broadcast News Content Analysis (Daniel Riffe, Stephen Lacy, Jason Nagovan, and Larry Burkum) 73:1, 159-168.
Interactions and Nonlinearity in Mass Communication: Connecting Theory and Methodology (William P. Eveland Jr.) 74:2, 400-416.
Mass Communication Research Trends from 1980 to 1999 (Rasha Kamhawi and David Weaver) 80:1, 7-27.
Measuring Contingencies: Using Scales to Measure Public Relations Practitioner Limits to Accommodation (Bryan H. Reber and Glen T. Cameron) 80:2, 431-446.
Question-Order Effects in Surveys: The Case of Political Interest, News Attention, and Knowledge (Dominic L. Lasorsa) 80:3, 499-512.
Reliability in Cross-National Content Analysis (Jochen Peter and Edmund Lauf) 79:4, 815-832.
Sample Size in Content Analysis of Weekly News Magazines (Daniel Riffe, Stephen Lacy, and Michael W. Drager) 73:3, 635-644.
Sample Size in Content Analysis of Weekly Newspapers (Stephen Lacy, Kay Robinson, and Daniel Riffe) 72:2, 336-345.
Sample Size in Multi-Year Content Analyses of Monthly Consumer Magazines (Stephen Lacy, Daniel Riffe, and Quint Randle) 75:2, 408-417.
Sample Size for Newspaper Content Analysis in Multi-Year Studies (Stephen Lacy, Daniel Riffe, Staci Stoddard, Hugh Martin, and Kuang-Kuo Chang) 78:4, 836-845.
Sampling Error and Selecting Intercoder Reliability Samples for Nominal Content Categories (Stephen Lacy and Daniel Riffe) 73:4, 963-973.
The Status of Internet-Based Research in Five Leading Communication Journals, 1994-1999 (Tami K. Tomasello) 78:4, 659-674.
Validating a Scale for the Measurement of Credibility: A Covariance Structure Modeling Approach (Mark Douglas West) 71:1, 159-168.
“Who Was ‘Shadow’?” The Computer Knows: Applying Grammar-Program Statistics in Content Analyses to Solve Mysteries about Authorship (Barbara G. Ellis and Steven J. Dick) 73:4, 947-962.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Media Organization, Management
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Media Organization, Management and Ownership
Chain Growth and Merger Waves: A Macroeconomic Historical Perspective on Press Consolidation (Edward E. Adams) 72:2, 376-389.
Chain Ownership, Organizational Size, and Editorial Role Perceptions (Roya Akhavan-Majid and Timothy Boudreau) 72:4, 863-873.
Changing the Newsroom Culture: A Four-Year Case Study of Organizational Development at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Peter J. Gade and Earnest L. Perry) 80:2, 327-347.
Content Differences between Daily Newspapers with Strong and Weak Market Orientations (Randal A. Beam) 80:2, 368-390.
Departmental Influences on Interdepartmental Cooperation in Daily Newspapers (George Sylvie) 73:1, 230-241.
Effect of Organizational Size on Job Satisfaction of Top Editors at U.S. Dailies (David Pearce Demers) 71:4, 914-925.
Explaining Variability in Newspaper Design: An Examination of the Role of Newsroom Subgroups (Wilson Lowrey) 80:2, 348-367.
Hard Times and the News Hole (William B. Blankenburg) 72:3, 634-641.
The Impact of Competition and Group Ownership on Radio News (Stephen Lacy and Daniel Riffe) 71:3, 583-593.
Impact of Ownership on Newspaper Quality (David C. Coulson) 71:2, 403-410.
The Impact of Public Ownership, Profits, and Competition on Number of Newsroom Employees and Starting Salaries at Mid-Sized Daily Newspapers (Stephen Lacy and Alan Blanchard) 80:4, 949-968.
Job Satisfaction among Newsworkers: The Influence of Professionalism, Perceptions of Organizational Structure, and Social Attributes (George Pollard) 72:3, 682-697.
London’s “Quality” Newspapers: Newspaper Ownership and Reporting Patterns (Kimberley E. Fradgley and Walter E. Niebauer Jr.) 72:4, 902-912.
The Louisville Courier-Journal’s News Content after Purchase by Gannett (David C. Coulson and Anne Hansen) 72:1, 205-215.
Measuring the Tie between Funding and News Control at Student Newspapers (John V. Bodle) 71:4, 905-913.
Targets, Effects, and Perpetrators of Sexual Harassment in Newsrooms (Cindy M. Brown and Gail M. Flatow) 74:1, 160-183.
Times of Turmoil: Short-and Long-Term Effects of Organizational Change on Newsroom Employees (George L. Daniels and C. Ann Hollifield) 79:3, 661-680.
TV Station Group and Cross-Media Ownership: A 1995 Update (Herbert H. Howard) 72:2, 390-401.
Women Editors at the “Seven Sisters” Magazines, 1965-1985: Did They Make a Difference? (Lee Joliffe and Terri Catlett) 71:4, 800-808.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Magazines
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Magazines
Black in a Blonde World: Race and Girls’ Interpretations of the Feminine Ideal in Teen Magazines (Lisa Duke) 77:2, 367-392.
Cultural Standards of Attractiveness: A Thirty-Year Look at Changes in Male Images in Magazines (Cheryl Law and Magdala Peixoto Labre) 79:3, 697-711.
“A Death in the American Family”: Myth, Memory, and National Values in the Media Mourning of John F. Kennedy Jr. (Carolyn Kitch) 79:2, 294-309.
Disengaged and Uninformed: 2000 Presidential Election Coverage in Consumer Magazines Popular with Young Adults (Tom Reichert, James E. Mueller, and Michael Nitz) 80:3, 513-527.
Flabless Is Fabulous: How Latina and Anglo Women Read and Incorporate the Excessively Thin Body Ideal into Everyday Experience (J. Robyn Goodman) 79:3, 712-727.
Health and Beauty Magazine Reading and Body Shape Concerns among a Group of College Women (Steven R. Thomsen) 79:4, 988-1007.
How Magazines Covered Media Companies’ Mergers: The Case of the Evolution of Time Inc. (Jaemin Jung) 79:3, 681-696.
Social or Economic Concerns: How News and Women‘s Magazines Framed Breast Cancer in the 1990s (Julie L. Andsager and Angela Powers) 76:3, 531-550.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Law, Policy, Criticism, and Ethics
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Law, Policy, Criticism, and Ethics
Access to Governors’ Records: State Statutes and the Use of Executive Privilege (Ellen M. Bush) 71:1, 135-144.
Alistair Cooke: America’s Unconventional Press Critic (Michael D. Murray) 72:1, 158-167.
Australian Journalists’ Professional and Ethical Values (John Henningham) 73:1, 206-218.
Bridging Latin America’s Digital Divide: Government Policies and Internet Access (Eliza Tanner Hawkins with Kirk A. Hawkins) 80:3, 646-665.
The Corporate Plaintiff as Public Figure (Matthew D. Bunker) 72:3, 597-609.
A Decade of Indecency Enforcement: A Study of How the Federal Communications Commission Assesses Indecency Fines (1987-1997) (Milagros Rivera-Sanchez and Michelle Ballard) 75:1, 143-153.
The Fight for Access to Government Records Round Two: Enter the Computer (Sigman L. Splichal and Bill F. Chamberlin) 71:3, 550-560.
From Class D to LPFM: The High-Powered Politics of Low-Power Radio (Alan G. Stavitsky, Robert K. Avery, and Helena Vanhala) 78:2, 340-354.
Have It Your Way? Public Records Law and Computerized Government Information (Matthew D. Bunker) 73:1, 90-101.
High School Newspapers Still Censored Thirty Years after Tinker (Lillian Lodge Kopenhaver and J. William Click) 78:2, 321-339.
Holding the News Media Accountable: A Study of Media Reporters and Media Critics in the United States (Susanne Fengler) 80:4, 818-832.
How Effective Are Codes of Ethics? A Look at Three Newsrooms (David E. Boeyink) 71:4, 893-904.
Impartial Spectator in the Marketplace of Ideas: The Principles of Adam Smith as an Ethical Basis for Regulation of Corporate Speech (Robert L. Kerr) 79:2, 394-415.
Intellectuals‘ Property: Universities, Professors, and the Problem of Copyright in the Internet Age (Matthew D. Bunker) 78:4, 675-687.
Journalists and the Overtime Provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (Robert Jensen) 73:2, 417-426.
The News Media’s Right of Access to Pretrial Discovery Materials in Civil Lawsuits (Hosoon Chang) 71:1, 145-158.
Newspaper as Repeater: An Experiment on Defamation and Third-Person Effect (Laurie Mason) 72:3, 610-620.
Online News: User Agreements and Implications for Readers (Victoria Smith Ekstrand) 79:3, 602-618.
Open Government in the Digital Age: The Legislative History of How Congress Established a Right of Public Access to Electronic Information Held by Federal Agencies (Martin E. Halstuk and Bill F. Chamberlin) 78:1, 45-64.
Personal and Professional Dimensions of News Work: Exploring the Link between Journalists’ Values and Roles (Patrick Lee Plaisance and Elizabeth A. Skewes) 80:4, 833-848.
Pervasive Public Figure Status and Local or Topical Fame in Light of Evolving Media Audiences (Matthew D. Bunker and Charles D. Tobin) 75:1, 112-126.
The Princess and the Paparazzi: Blame, Responsibility, and the Media’s Role in the Death of Diana (Elizabeth Blanks Hindman) 80:3, 666-688.
Privatized Government Functions and Freedom of Information: Public Accountability in an Age of Private Governance (Matthew D. Bunker and Charles N. Davis) 75:3, 464-477.
Professional Confidence and Situational Ethics: Assessing the Social-Professional Dialectic in Journalistic Ethics Decisions (Dan Berkowitz and Yehiel Limor) 80:4, 783-801.
The Promise and Peril of Anecdotes in News Coverage: An Ethical Analysis (David A. Craig) 80:4, 802-817.
Pronouncements and Denunciations: An Analysis of State Press Association Ethics Codes from the 1920s (Mary M. Cronin and James B. McPherson) 72:4, 890-901.
Protecting a Delicate Balance: Facts, Ideas, and Expression in Compilation Copyright Cases (Matthew D. Bunker and Bethany Bolger) 80:1, 183-197.
Race and Ethical Reasoning: The Importance of Race to Journalistic Decision Making (Renita Coleman) 80:2, 295-310.
Regulation of Sexually Explicit Videotex Services in France (Michel Dupagne) 71:1, 121-134.
Reputational Assault: A Critical and Historical Analysis of Gender and the Law of Defamation (Diane L. Borden) 75:1, 98-111.
The Salience and Pertinence of Ethics: When Journalists Do and Don’t Think for Themselves (H. Allen White) 73:1, 17-28.
Sexual Harassment of Women Journalists (Kim Walsh-Childers, Jean Chance, and Kristin Herzog) 73:3, 559-581.
Silenced Students: The Uncertain but Extensive Power of School Officials to Control Student Expression (Susan Dente Ross) 79:1, 172-187.
The Supreme Court Defines the Marketplace of Ideas (W. Wat Hopkins) 73:1, 40-52.
Targets, Effects, and Perpetrators of Sexual Harassment in Newsrooms (Cindy M. Brown and Gail M. Flatow) 74:1, 160-183.
Trespassing Speakers and Commodified Speech: First Amendment Freedoms Meet Private Property Claims (Matthew D. Bunker) 77:4, 713-726.
The Variable Nature of Defamation: Social Mores and Accusations of Homosexuality (Elizabeth M. Koehler) 76:2, 217-228.
What Were You Thinking? A Survey of Journalists Who Were Sued for Invasion of Privacy (Paul S. Voakes) 75:2, 378-393.
J&MC Quarterly Index – Internet and New Technologies
Volumes 71 to 80
1994 to 2003
Subject Index: Internet and New Technologies
Accidentally Informed: Incidental News Exposure on the World Wide Web (David Tewksbury, Andrew J. Weaver, and Brett D. Maddex) 78:3, 533-554.
Bridging Latin America’s Digital Divide: Government Policies and Internet Access (Eliza Tanner Hawkins with Kirk A. Hawkins) 80:3, 646-665.
The Bush and Gore Presidential Campaign Web Sites: Identifying with Hispanic Voters during the 2000 Iowa Caucuses and New Hampshire Primary (María E. Len-Ríos) 79:4, 887-904.
Campaign Contributions: Online Newspaper Coverage of Election 2000 (Jane B. Singer) 80:1, 39-56.
Cognitive Impact of Banner Ad Characteristics: An Experimental Study (Hairong Li and Janice L. Bukovac) 76:2, 341-353.
Corporate World Wide Web Pages: Serving the News Media and Other Publics (Stuart L. Esrock and Greg B. Leichty) 76:3, 456-467.
Cruising Is Believing?: Comparing Internet and Traditional Sources on Media Credibility Measures (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye) 75:2, 325-340.
Differences in Knowledge Acquisition among Readers of the Paper and Online Versions of a National Newspaper (David Tewksbury and Scott L. Althaus) 77:3, 457-479.
Digital Imaging Skills and the Hiring and Training of Photojournalists (John Russial and Wayne Wanta) 75:3, 593-605.
Doing the Traditional Media Sidestep: Comparing the Effects of the Internet and Other Nontraditional Media with Traditional Media in the 1996 Presidential Campaign (Thomas J. Johnson, Mahmoud A. M. Braima, and Jayanthi Sothirajah) 76:1, 99-123.
The Effectiveness of Banner Advertisements: Involvement and Click-through (Chang-Hoan Cho) 80:3, 623-645.
Effects of Salience Dimensions of Informational Utility on Selective Exposure to Online News (Silvia Knobloch, Francesca Dillman Carpentier, and Dolf Zillmann) 80:1, 91-108.
Exploring Receivers’ Criteria for Perception of Print and Online News (S. Shyam Sundar) 76:2, 373-386.
Factors Influencing the Adoption of Multimedia Cable Technology (Carolyn A. Lin and Leo W. Jeffres) 75:2, 341-352.
From Luxury to Utility: A Longitudinal Analysis of Cell Phone Laggards (Ran Wei) 78:4, 702-719.
From On-Air to Online World: Examining the Content and Structures of Broadcast TV Stations’ Web Sites (Sylvia M. Chan-Olmsted and Jung Suk Park) 77:2, 321-339.
The Future of the Internet: A Historical Perspective (David T. Z. Mindich) 75:1, 7-8.
Going Negative: Candidate Usage of Internet Web Sites during the 2000 Presidential Campaign (Robert H. Wicks and Boubacar Souley) 80:1, 128-144.
How Pagination Affects Job Satisfaction of Editors (Keith Stamm, Doug Underwood, and Anthony Giffard) 72:4, 851-862.
The Impact of Web Site Campaigning on Traditional News Media and Public Information Processing (Gyotae Ku, Lynda Lee Kaid, and Michael Pfau) 80:3, 528-547.
Interactive Disaster Communication on the Internet: A Content Analysis of Sixty-Four Disaster Relief Home Pages (Mary Jae Paul) 78:4, 739-753.
Interactivity, Online Journalism, and English-Language Web Newspapers in Asia (Brian L. Massey and Mark R. Levy) 76:1, 138-151.
The Internet and Continuing Historical Discourse (Hazel Dicken-Garcia) 75:1, 19-27.
The Internet and the End of the National Communication System: Uncertain Predictions of an Uncertain Future (James W. Carey) 75:1, 28-34.
The Internet Provides Both Opportunities and Challenges for Mass Communication Researchers (Guido H. Stempel III and Robert K. Stewart) 77:3, 541-548.
The Internet and Public Relations: Investigating Practitioners’ Roles and World Wide Web Use (Lance V. Porter and Lynne M. Sallot) 80:3, 603-622.
Journalists’ Perceptions of Online Information-Gathering Problems (Bruce Garrison) 77:3, 500-514.
Media Credibility Reconsidered: Synergy Effects between On-Air and Online News (Erik P. Bucy) 80:2, 247-264.
Media Reporting and Perceived Credibility of Online Polls (Sung Tae Kim, David Weaver, and Lars Willnat) 77:4, 846-864.
The Media Trade Press as Technology Forecaster: A Case Study of the VCR’s Impact on Broadcasting (Philip Napoli) 74:2, 417-430.
The Microscope and the Moving Target: The Challenge of Applying Content Analysis to the World Wide Web (Sally J. McMilllan) 77:1, 80-98.
More Than Just Talk on the Move: Uses and Gratifications of the Cellular Phone (Louis Leung and Ran Wei) 77:2 308-320.
Multimedia Effects on Processing and Perception of Online News: A Study of Picture, Audio, and Video Downloads (S. Shyam Sundar) 77:3, 480-499.
New Technology and the Writer/Editor Relationship: Shifting Electronic Realities (Kathleen L. Endres and Ann B. Schierhorn) 72:2, 448-457.
Nonrecursive Models of Internet Use and Community Engagement: Questioning Whether Time Spent Online Erodes Social Capital (Dhavan Shah, Michael Schmierbach, Joshua Hawkins, Rodolfo Espino, and Janet Donavan) 79:4, 964-987.
Online News: User Agreements and Implications for Readers (Victoria Smith Ekstrand) 79:3, 602-618.
Perceived Effects of Sexually Explicit Internet Content: The Third-Person Effect in Singapore (Wei Wu and Soh Hoon Koo) 78:2, 260-274.
Perceptions of Internet Information Credibility (Andrew J. Flanagin and Miriam J. Metzger) 77:3, 515-540.
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.
The Presentation of Self in Virtual Life: Characteristics of Personal Home Pages (Zizi Papacharissi) 79:3, 643-660.
Relation of Growth of Use of the Internet to Changes in Media Use from 1995 to 1999 (Guido H. Stempel III, Thomas Hargrove, and Joseph P. Bernt) 77:1, 71-79.
The Rural-Urban Digital Divide (Douglas Blanks Hindman) 77:3, 549-560.
The Status of Internet-Based Research in Five Leading Communication Journals, 1994-1999 (Tami K. Tomasello) 78:4, 659-674.
The Visible Hand: Money, Markets, and Media Evolution (David Abrahamson) 75:1, 14-18.
The Vulnerable Image: Categories of Photos as Predictor of Digital Manipulation (Shiela Reaves) 72:3, 706-715.
Web Site Use and News Topic and Type (H. Denis Wu and Arati Bechtel) 79:1, 73-86.
Webelievability: A Path Model Examining How Convenience and Reliance Predict Online Credibility (Thomas J. Johnson and Barbara K. Kaye) 79:3, 619-642.
“Which Communications Revolution Is It Anyway?” (Mitchell Stephens) 75:1, 9-13.
Who Do You Think You Are? Personal Home Pages and Self-Presentation on the World Wide Web (Joseph R. Dominick) 76:4, 646-58.
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.