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The ethical conduct of newspaper reporters in reporting educational matters in the Department of Education in Limpopo Province.Machaka, Tsheko Frans 13 May 2010 (has links)
Thesis (MPA) --University of Limpopo, 2006 / Ethical issues arise from our interaction with other people, especially at the point
where there is potential or actual conflict of interests. In many cases, what is right
for one person might not be right for other people. And, in some cases, doing the
right thing might involve placing the greater good ahead of specific benefits that
might accrue to oneself. Ethical choices, therefore, involve a trade-off or
compromise between the interests and rights of different parties.
Newspapers inform the public about events in government and the broader
society. In doing so, they act within the bounds of legislation and ethical codes of
conduct that are inherent in the South African society. In Limpopo Province, the
newspapers are more often at loggerhead with the Department of Education
when reporting on educational matters. The department claims that reporters do
not report fairly and accurately about the activities of officials. Reporters flatly
deny these allegations. Who then, of the two institutions, act ethically when
executing its social mandate?
Flowing from the question posed in the above paragraph, the problem of the
ethical conduct of newspaper reporters in reporting on educational matters in the
Department of Education in the Limpopo Province arises. Newspaper reporters
have to adhere to and act in accordance with ethical codes of conduct, either
institutional or societal. In making ethical choices about what is right, newspapers
are faced with dilemmas. An ethical dilemma arises in a situation whereby it is
difficult to tell right from wrong because all the alternatives may have potentially
negative consequences. But, irrespective of the dilemmas that reporters face,
reporters must report ethically, fairly and accurately.
The Department of Education in the Limpopo Province sometimes questions the
validity of the criteria that newspapers use in the evaluation and publication of
information. The question frequently asked is, “How can newspapers fight for
honesty and integrity when they themselves are less than honest in getting a
story?” The department is, therefore, concerned about newspaper reporters who
slant news and discredit the department when reporting on educational matters.
To the department, this is unethical reporting.
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Turning up the heat : an analysis of the historic, scientific and socio-political complexities influencing climate change reporting in the modern newsroomJoubert, Leonie 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Journalism))--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / Global climate change is the result of the natural greenhouse effect being enhanced or augmented by human activities such as industrial burning of fossil fuels and large-scale agricultural practices which have increased the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The result – the first truly globalised consequence of pollution – is arguably one of the most pressing matters facing the future of the human species.
Journalists reporting on the subject have considerable responsibility to unravel the science and present it accurately and responsibly to the public, so that the latter can make informed decisions about individual energy consumption, informed decisions at the voting poll and go further to put the necessary pressure on policy makers.
However climate change is without doubt the most complex story environmental and science reporters have ever encountered, not only because it encompasses so many different fields of natural sciences (oceanography, climatology, biological sciences including flora and fauna, hydrology, horticulture etc.), but because it all too often spills over into the political, economic and social arenas.
“Climate change is a difficult story to recreate… (it) is one of the most complicated stories of our time. It involves abstract and probabilistic science, labyrinthine laws, grandstanding politicians, speculative economics and the complex interplay of individuals and societies” (Wilson, 2000: 206).
Specialist environmental and science news reporters only have three and a half decades of experience and history, since this is one of the more recent journalistic beats to be assigned to modern newsrooms. Such writers face a particularly challenging job of reporting the complex and growing science of global climate change. Furthermore they must do so in an environment where politicians and environmental activists feed journalists sometimes conflicting information, each with its own agenda. Increasing consumer demand for entertainment in place of information may also complicate the telling of these stories, given the financial imperative to sell newspapers.
Furthermore, the “global warming story is also affected by a number of journalistic constraints, such as deadlines, space, one-source stories, complexity and reporter education” (Wilson, 2000: 206). The complexities of news values also shape the stories which finally are released to the news consuming public.
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Numbers count: the importance of numeracy for journalistsGenis, Amelia January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil) -- Stellenbosch University, 2001. / Bibliography / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Few news subjects or events can be comprehensively covered in the media without numbers
being used. Indeed, most reports are essentially 'number stories', or could be improved
through the judicious use of numbers. Despite this there are frequent complaints about poor
levels of numeracy among journalists.
Although numbers are fundamental to virtually everything they write, the most superficial
review of South African newspapers indicates that most encounters between journalists and
numbers of any sort are uncomfortable, to say the least. Reporters shy away from using
numbers, and frequently resort to vague comments such as "many", "more", "worse" or
"better". When reports do include numbers, they often don't make sense, largely because
journalists are unable to do simple calculations and have little understanding of concepts such
as the size of the world's population, a hectare, or a square kilometer. They frequently use
numbers to lend weight to their facts without having the numerical skills to question whether
the figures are correct.
Numeracy is not the ability to solve complicated mathematical problems or remember and use
a mass of complicated axioms and formulas; it's a practical life skill. For journalists it is the
ability to understand the numbers they encounter in everyday life - percentages, exchange
rates, very large and small amounts - and the ability to ask intelligent questions about these
numbers before presenting them meaningfully in their reports.
This thesis is not a compendium of all the mathematical formulas a journalist could ever need.
It is a catalogue of the errors that are frequently made, particularly in newspapers, and
suggestions to improve number usage. It will hopefully also serve to make journalists aware
of the potential of numbers to improve reporting and increase accuracy.
This thesis emphasises the importance of basic numeracy for all journalists, primarily by
discussing the basic numerical skills without which they cannot do their job properly, but also
by noting the concerns of experienced journalists, mathematicians, statisticians and educators
about innumeracy in the media. Although the contents of this thesis also apply to magazine, radio and television journalists, it is primarily aimed at their counterparts at South Africa's
daily and weekly newspapers.
I hope the information contained herein is of use to journalists and journalism students; that it
will open their eyes to the possibility of improving number usage and thereby reporting, serve
as encouragement to brush up their numerical skills, and help to shed light on the numbers
which surround them and which they use so readily. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Min nuusonderwerpe of -gebeure kan in beriggewing tot hul reg kom sonder dat enige getalle
gebruik word. Trouens, die meeste berigte is in wese 'syferstories', of kan verbeter word deur
meer sinvolle gebruik van syfers. Tog is daar vele klagtes oor joemaliste se gebrekkige
syfervaardigheid.
Ten spyte van die ingeworteldheid van getalle in haas alles wat hulle skryf, toon selfs die mees
oppervlakkige ondersoek na syfergebruik in Suid-Afrikaanse koerante joemaliste se ongemaklike
omgang met die meeste syfers. Hulle is skugter om syfers te gebruik, en verlaat hulle dikwels op
vae kommentaar soos "baie", "meer", "erger" of "beter". Indien hulle syfers gebruik, maak die
syfers dikwels nie sin nie: meermale omdat joemaliste nie basiese berekeninge rondom
persentasies en statistiek kan doen nie, en min begrip het vir algemene groothede soos die
wereldbevolking, 'n hektaar of 'n vierkante kilometer. Hulle sal dikwels enige syfer gebruik
omdat hulle meen dit verleen gewig aan hul feite en omdat hulle nie die syfervaardigheid het om
dit te bevraagteken nie.
Syfervaardigheid is nie die vermoe om suiwer wiskunde te doen of 'n magdom stellings en
formules te onthou en gebruik nie; dis 'n praktiese lewensvaardigheid, die vermoe om die
syferprobleme wat die daaglikse roetine oplewer - persentasies, wisselkoerse, baie groot en klein
getalle- te verstaan en te hanteer.
Hierdie tesis is nie 'n versameling van alle berekeninge wat joemaliste ooit sal nodig kry nie;
maar veel eerder 'n beskrywing van die potensiaal van syfers om verslaggewing te verbeter en
joemaliste te help om ag te slaan op die getalle rondom hulle en die wat hulle in hul berigte
gebruik.
Die doel van die tesis is om die belangrikheid van 'n basiese syfervaardigheid vir alle joemaliste
te beklemtoon, veral die basiese syfervaardighede waarsonder joemaliste nie die
verslaggewingtaak behoorlik kan aanpak nie, te bespreek, en ook om ervare joemaliste, wiskundiges, statistici en opvoeders se kommer oor joemaliste se gebrek aan syfervaardigheid op
te teken. Hoewel alles wat in die tesis vervat is, ewe veel van toepassing is op tydskrif-, radio- en
televisiejoemaliste, val die klem hoofsaaklik op hul ewekniee by Suid-Afrikaanse dag- en
weekblaaie.
Ek hoop die inligting hierin vervat sal van nut wees vir praktiserende joemaliste en
joemalistiekstudente om hulle bewus te maak van die moontlikhede wat bestaan om
syfergebruik, en uiteindelik verslaggewing, te verbeter en as aanmoediging dien om hul
syfervaardigheid op te skerp.
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"Making the News": a case study of East Cape News (ECN)Davidow, Audrey Beth January 1999 (has links)
To fully comprehend the complex process of news making, we must first understand that the events we read about everyday in the newspaper are not merely a reflection of the world in which we live. News does not just happen. Rather, it is a socially constructed product in which events are “made to mean” (Hall, 1978). Thus, the news plays a fundamental role in shaping our interpretations of reality - our perceptions of the world as we know it. Informed by a structuralist approach to news making, this research provides a detailed ethnographic study of the determinants that shape and produce news in the South African print media. I provide examples of the influence various factors, operating at all levels, exert within the news making process. The research focuses on the news production process at East Cape News Pty. Ltd. (ECN) a small news agency operating in the peripheral news region of South Africa’s Eastern Cape. It considers the journalistic routines and interests of the ECN reporters; how these reporters select events and turn them into news, how they interpret their significance and how they formulate them as news stories. The research also considers the second stage of selection ECN news must pass before it is read by the public - the “gates” of external newspapers. In this section, the study is primarily concerned with which ECN news stories succeed past the gates of national newspapers as these are the newpapers that play an influential role in shaping national perceptions of the marginalised Eastern Cape region. A province burdened with devastating rural poverty, unstable government, and little economic growth, the Eastern Cape warrants little coverage from the national, Johannesburg-based news market. As a result, little news of the Eastern Cape is published nationally, further perpetuating the region’s perceived insignificance on a national level. This point also demonstrates the fact that news both shapes, and is shaped by, our ideologies. News, therefore is ideological (Fishman, 1977). My findings reinforce many of the observations of other media researchers informed by a structuralist approach in the field of news making. However, some elements of news making emerge which appear to be unique in terms of other studies of news making. These elements are primarily a result of ECN’s informal organisational structures which allow the journalists a greater level of autonomy than a larger more bureaucratic organisation might. Thus, in addition to considering the structures that shape the news, I also discuss the role of human agency in making the news.
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Ukucwaningwa kwama-atikili esiZulu ngemibiko yezindaba ezibuhlungu ezisemaphephandabeniNsele, Zandile Victoria 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (African Languages))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / This study invesitgates a selection of hard news articles in isiZulu that were published in the newspaper Ilanga within the framework of genre theory. The study invokes in particular the orbital structure approach to the organisation of the structure of hard news articles advanced by White (1997) in analysing the isiZulu articles. Hard news reports are typically associated with eruptive violence, reversals of fortune and socially significant breaches of the moral order. Hard news reports are distinguished in terms of two types, namely those reports which are primarily grounded in a material event such as an accident, natural disaster, riot, or terrorist attack, and those reports grounded in a communicative event such as a speech, interview, or press release. The research in this study presents an analysis of four articles in isiZulu of each of these two types. The analysis of the isiZulu articles presents support for White’s view that both types of hard news reports exhibit the same generic structure, a mode of textual organisation unique to mass media which gives hard news its textual distinctiveness. Both types hard news reports achieve their informational and rhetorical objectives through a non-linear, orbital structure in which dependent ‘satelites’ elaborate, explain, contextualize and appraise a textually dominant nucleus.
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Burgerlike joernalistiek in die Suid-Afrikaanse konteks : 'n ondersoek na die insluiting van gemarginaliseerde gemeenskappe deur herberaming met verwysing na projekte van die Cape Argus en Kaapse-RapportTruter, Charlene 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2005. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Since South Africa’s transition from a nationalistic state to a democracy in 1994, debates
about the media’s role have intensified as the challenges and complexities of the South
African society unfolded. In this debate, which mainly played out between the
government and the media, the liberal theory and the developmental theory were used
as the two main normative positions from which to contest the media’s role. As
normative theories they describe the ideal role of the press within societal systems and
thus fall within the functionalist paradigm.
Historically, the liberal approach was seen as the accepted normative framework for the
media within a democracy to protect that very democracy. The liberal consensus
adopted by the post-apartheid media therefore came as no surprise. However, the
optimism initially experienced regarding the independence of the new, liberal media, its
professionalisation and economic restructuring, is gradually being challenged by the
critical perspective. This perspective questions the extent of transformation in a public
sphere where entrance is still restricted by class structures.
The argument of this paper is that although the above changes to the media landscape
are recognised as important, they do not account for issues of class and how the poor,
the spaces they live in and the factors impacting on their lives, are framed by the media.
This paper is presented as a normative undertaking and presents civic journalism as
alternative normative framework. It moves from the premise that the representations
afforded to the poor in die media are being hampered by the individualistic aims of the
Western, liberal, journalistic tradition.
The argument is further that the use of a community-driven approach should lead to
broader representation of the poor in the media and the inclusion of this currently
marginalised group in the public sphere. Reframing, one of the most important methods
of civic journalism, is singled out to explore the possibility of applying civic journalism to
the South African context. The motivation for this paper is the belief that the need exists
for a greater plurality of voices and discourses. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Sedert Suid-Afrika in 1994 beweeg het van ’n nasionalistiese staat na ’n demokrasie, het
die debat oor die rol van die media algaande verdiep namate die uitdagings en
kompleksiteite van die Suid-Afrikaanse situasie ontvou het. In die debat tussen die postapartheid
media en die regering was die twee normatiewe posisies van waar die media
se rol by uitstek betwis is, die libertynse en ontwikkelingsteorie. As normatiewe teorieë
wat die ideale rol van die pers binne samelewingsisteme verwoord, val dit binne die
funksionalistiese paradigma.
Histories word die liberale benadering gesien as die vanselfsprekende roete wat ’n media
binne ’n demokrasie moet volg om daardie demokrasie te beskerm. Die liberale
konsensus van die post-apartheid media was in die lig hiervan geen verrassing nie. Maar
die optimisme wat aanvanklik ervaar is oor die onafhanklike, liberale media, sy
professionalisering en ekonomiese herstrukturering, word algaande uitgedaag deur ’n
kritiese perspektief. Hierdie perspektief bevraagteken die waarde van ’n
getransformeerde media waar toelating tot die openbare sfeer steeds deur klasstrukture
gereguleer word.
Alhoewel die bogenoemde erken word as belangrike veranderinge, is die argument dat
die liberale normatiewe paradigma nie genoeg was om kwessies van klas te verreken en
hoe armes, die kwessies wat hulle lewens beïnvloed en die ruimtes waarin hulle ’n
bestaan maak, deur die media beraam word nie. Hierdie werkstuk is ’n normatiewe
onderneming wat burgerlike joernalistiek as normatiewe raamwerk wil voorstel. Die
uitgangspunt is dat representasie van armes in die media deur die individualistiese
doelstellings van die Westerse, liberale joernalistieke tradisie beperk word.
Die argument is verder dat die toepassing van ’n gemeenskapsgerigte benadering
behoort te lei tot ’n breër representasie van armes en die insluiting van dié tans
gemarginaliseerde gemeenskappe by die openbare sfeer. Herberaming, een van die
belangrikste metodes van burgerlike joernalistiek, word uitgesonder om die
toepassingsmoontlikheid van burgerlike joernalistiek as alternatief te ondersoek. Die
motivering vir die werkstuk is die oortuiging dat daar in die Suid-Afrikaanse
mediakonteks ’n behoefte bestaan aan ’n groter diversiteit van stemme en diskoerse.
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Lokaal bestuur, verkiezingen en dagbladverslaggeving in Gauteng, Zuid-Afrika, (1982-1995).Deuze, Martinus Johannes Petrus 17 August 2012 (has links)
M.A. / Het doel van deze studie is te komen tot een inventarisatie van de problemen -zowel op praktisch als theoretisch vlak- aan welke de nieuw gekozen plaatselijke overheden het hoofd moeten bieden, zoals deze zijn overgeleverd vanuit het verleden. Daarnaast wordt middels het empirische gedeelte bekeken, hoe de dagbladen in de provincie Gauteng - vaak het 'hart' van Zuid-Afrika genoemd - met deze problematiek en geschiedenis omgingen om de lezer annex kiezer adequaat te informeren. 3 Gekozen is voor een media-onderzoek over enkele maanden rond de twee laatste verkiezingen voor plaatselijke overheden: oktober 1988 en november 1995. Daarnaast wordt gekeken naar enkele van de vele begripsverwarringen binnen de Zuid-Afrikaanse politieke en media-context, zoals deze bijvoorbeeld onder meer bestaan rond zaken als 'democratie', 'macht', 'detribalisatie' en 'non-racialisme; allen termen die er in het discours omtrent regeren en geregeerd worden, nieuws produceren en nieuws ontvangen voortdurend met de haren bijgesleept worden maar voor de verschillende deelnemers aan het debat soms geheel uiteenlopende betekenissen hebben. De scriptie hoopt met deze onderwerpskeuze een bijdrage te leveren aan het voortdurende debat in Zuid-Afrika over het heden, verleden en wellicht ook toekomst van de gedrukte media, de politieke en sociaal-economische geschiedschrijving en de functionering en definiring van plaatselijk bestuur. Hoewel deze studie weliswaar nauwelijks alternatieve voorstellen voor de toekomstige behandeling van deze kwesties aandraagt, kan een kritisch en samenvattend overzicht hiervan zoals gepresenteerd in de hierna volgende hoofdstukken hemieuwde stof tot nadenken bieden, zowel gedragen als beperkt door de buitenlandse kijk van de auteur.
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Dispatches from the front : war reporting as news genre, with special reference to news flowBotha, Nicolene 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Journalism))--Stellenbosch University, 2007. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: During Gulf War II, the American government implemented new media policies which,
due to their potentially manipulative impact, became a subject of concern to academics,
social commentators and the media alike. Key to these policies was the Department of
Defense's Embedded Media Program which allowed hundreds of selected reporters to
accompany US forces to the war front. The US openly tried to win international support
for the war, and critics felt that this policy was designed to saturate the media with
reports supporting the American point of view. This study examines these policies, the
history of war reporting as a separate news genre, as well as the fluctuating relations
between the US military and the media. Because of the US media policies, the fact that
only one South African newspaper reporter was in Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom
phase of the war and South African newspapers' consequent reliance on foreign news
sources, there was a real possibility that the American position would be propagated in
the local press. To test whether this was the case, the way the war was reported on in
four leading South African newspapers is examined in terms of gatekeeping,
agendasetting and framing. Using an adapted version op Propp's fairytale analysis as a
standard, it compares the slant and content of the South African coverage to the way
four senior US government officials presented the war. Also, the coverage of the
newspapers is compared to one another. The analyses indicate that while most of the
information published by the newspapers came from American sources, the news
reports generally did not mirror the US standpoint, but instead criticised President Bush
and the war on Iraq. Neither the frequency of the newspapers, nor its cultural
background showed any correlation with the way the war was depicted by the different
newspapers. It is therefore concluded that while the US might have been successful in
their attempt to "occupy the media territory" in terms of sources cited, they were not
able to sway the opinion of the South African press in their favour. However, the US is
aware of these failures and plans to rectify the mistakes made in Gulf War II by means
of proactive global operations started in times of peace. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Tydens die Tweede Golfoorlog het die Amerikaanse regering 'n nuwe mediabeleid
ingestel wat weens die potensieel manipulerende impak daarvan ’n bron van kommer
vir akademici, sosiale kommentators en die media self geword het. Sentraal tot hierdie
nuwe beleid was die Departement van Verdediging se sogenaamde "Embedded Media
Program" wat honderde uitgesoekte joernaliste toegelaat het om Amerikaanse magte na
die oorlogsfront te vergesel. Die VSA het openlik probeer om internasionale steun vir
die oorlog te werf en kritici het gevoel dat dié beleid ontwerp is om die media met
nuusberigte wat die Amerikaanse standpunt steun, te versadig. Hierdie studie ondersoek
dié beleid, die geskiedenis van oorlogsverslaggewing as afsonderlike nuus-genre, asook
die wisselvallige verhouding tussen die Amerikaanse weermag en die media. Weens die
Amerikaanse mediabeleid, die feit dat slegs een Suid-Afrikaanse koerantverslaggewer
tydens die Operation Iraqi Freedom fase van die oorlog in Irak was en Suid-Afrikaanse
koerante gevolglik van buitelandse nuusbronne afhanklik was, was daar 'n werklike
moontlikheid dat die Amerikaanse posisie deur die plaaslike pers gepropageer kon
word. Om te toets of dit die geval was, is die manier waarop in vier vooraanstaande
Suid-Afrikaanse koerante oor die oorlog berig is, ondersoek in terme van
hekwagterskap, agendastelling en raamskepping. Deur 'n aangepaste weergawe van
Propp se feëverhaalanalise as maatstaf te gebruik, is die neiging en inhoud van die Suid-
Afrikaanse dekking vergelyk met die manier waarop vier senior Amerikaanse
amptenare die oorlog voorgehou het. Die koerante se dekking is ook met mekaar
vergelyk. Die analises wys dat hoewel die meeste van die inligting wat deur die
koerante gepubliseer is van Amerikaanse bronne kom, die nuusberigte oor die algemeen
nie die Amerikaanse standpunt weerspieël nie, maar eerder krities teenoor President
Bush en die oorlog teen Irak is. Nie die frekwensie van die koerante of die kulturele
agtergrond daarvan het enige korrelasie getoon met die manier waarop die oorlog deur
die verskillende koerante uitgebeeld is nie. Die gevolgtrekking word gemaak dat hoewel
die VSA moontlik daarin geslaag het om die "mediaterrein te okkupeer" in terme van
aangehaalde bronne, het hulle nie daarin geslaag om die Suid-Afrikaanse pers se opinie
in hul guns te swaai nie. Die VSA is egter bewus van die foute wat tydens die Tweede
Golfoorlog gemaak is en beplan om dit deur middel van proaktiewe globale operasies
in vredestyd reg te stel.
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Media as agenda setters : a study of the infected and affected living with HIV/AidsNgam, Theophilus Mamnkeli 03 1900 (has links)
Assignment (MPhil)--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The media, in its ongoing task to inform and educate South Africans, seemingly set the agenda in such a way that depicts poor black African people as the only racial group that is affected and infected by HIV/Aids. Photographs of poor black Africans are also used to inform and educate the public about the pandemic. In short, the media has set an agenda that has given HIV/Aids a black African face: vulnerable, helpless and living in squalid conditions. The hypothesis of this research is that it is racial stereotyping of poor black Africans, and that it is perpetuated by the Daily Dispatch and other media.
It is also important to note that the voices of the affected and infected are not prominent in news reports about the pandemic. Their stories are either told by the journalists themselves or someone else as a spokesperson. The media must begin to give space to the heroes and heroines who are affected and infected by the HIV/Aids pandemic to tell their stories in their own words.
Qualitative content analysis of the Daily Dispatch from 1 to 31 December 2004 was conducted. News stories, photographs, headlines and captions were analysed.
This analysis shows that the voices of the affected and infected are still lacking in news reports and that poor black African people are used as the only visuals in HIV/Aids news stories.
This study recommends that more attention should be given to upholding and respecting the rights of the affected and infected by the disease. The media should also allow their voices to be heard, not through spokespeople, but from their own mouths. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Dit lyk of die media in sy voortgaande taak om Suid-Afrikaners in te lig en op te voed, die agenda op so ’n manier stel dat dit arm swart Afrikane as die enigste rassegroep voorstel wat deur MIV/Vigs geaffekteer en geïnfekteer word. Foto’s van arm swart Afrikane word ook gebruik om die publiek oor die pandemie in te lig en op te voed.
In ’t kort, die media het ’n agenda gestel wat MIV/Vigs ’n swart, Afrika-gesig gee: een wat arm, ontvanklik en hulpeloos is, en wat in haglike toestande leef.
Die hipotese van hierdie navorsing berus daarop dat dit rasse-stereotipiering is van arm swart Afrikane, en dat die Daily Dispatch en ander media dit perpetueer.
Dit is ook belangrik om daarop te let dat die stemme van die geaffekteerde en geïnfekteerde nie so prominent in nuusberige oor die pandemie is nie. Hul stories word vertel deur die joernaliste self, of iemand anders wat ’n segspersoon is. Die media moet begin om hierdie helde en heldinne wat deur die siekte geaffekteer en geïnfekteer is, self hul storie te laat vertel, in hul eie woorde.
Kwalitatiewe inhoudsanalise van die Daily Dispatch van 1 tot 31 Desember 2004 is uitgevoer. Nuusstories, foto’s, opskrifte en onderskrifte is geanaliseer.
Hierdie analise toon dat die stemme van die geaffekteerde en geïnfekteerde steeds in ons nuusberigte ontbreek en dat arm swart Afrikane die enigste visuele onderwerpe in MIV-Vigs nuusstories is.
Hierdie studie beveel aan dat meer aandag gegee moet word om die regte van die geaffekteerde en geïnfekteerde te bewaar en te respekteer. Die media moet ook toelaat dat diegene se stemme gehoor word, nie deur segspersone nie, maar uit hul eie monde. / ISISHWANKATHELOL: Kubonakala ngathi amajelo eendaba kwinzame zawo zokufundisa nokwazisa uluntu loMzantsi Afrika ngesifo sikaGawulayo neNtsholongwane yaso, abonakalisa abantu abaMnyama beli njengohlanga ekukuphela kwalo oluthi luchatshazelwe sesi sifo. Nkqu nemifanekiso ethi isetyenziswe kumabalili athetha ngesi sifo, yileyo yabantu abaMnyama abazimpula zikalujacu ezingathathi ntweni. Ngokufutshane amajelo eendaba anika isizwe umzobo osengqondweni othi, uGawulayo neNtsholongwane yakhe uchaphazela ze ubulale abantu abaMnyama abahluphekileyo nabaphila phantsi kweemeko zobugxwayiba.
Kusenjalo olu hlalutyo lubonakalise ukuba amazwi abantu abanesifo sikaGawulayo nabo bachaphazelekayo awakho kupapasho lweendaba. Kwakhona iingxelo ngesi sifo zinika ingqwasela kubantu abaMnyama abahluphekileyo neminifanekiso yabo kuphela. Akukho nto ithethekayo ngezinye intlanga.
Okokuqala, olu phando ngoko ke lucebisa ukuba makuhlonitshwe umGaqo Siseko weli ngokubhekiselele kumalungelo abantu ingakubi abo banesifo sikaGawulayo neNtsholongwane yaso.
Okwesibini, amajelo eendaba mawaqinisekise ukuba abantu abagula sesi sifo nabo sibachaphazelayo bayazithethela ngemilomo yabo kuba ngabo abajamelene neentlungu umhla nezolo.
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The coalface of journalism: A qualitative research investigation into development communication objectives amongst rural newspapers in the Overberg DistrictGalant, Raashied 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Journalism))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / 131 p. / This thesis explores how six commercial local newspapers based in the towns of
Swellendam, Bredasdorp, Caledon and Gansbaai are reporting on gender and HIV/AIDS
in ways that may help to shift specific attitudes as well as to generate appropriate
community responses. The overall aim of the study is to advance theories around the
location of commercial news media in the development context. It also aims to inform
and empower development workers and activists on the opportunities or pitfalls in
engaging with rural local media to advance their development goals.
In most prior studies into the nature of gender or HIV/AIDS reporting in the media in
South Africa, the focus has been exclusively on mainstream corporate and/or urbanbased
media titles and very little investigation has been done into the performance of small
ruralbased
media. The study employs two methods of data collection namely, a
quantitative content analysis of newspapers and structured interviews with the editors of
the papers, and a sample group of government employees and community activists in the
respective towns.
The structured interviews provide a qualitative dimension to the content analysis, bearing
in mind the dangers of quantifying media content and making isolated judgements on the
actual context of journalistic practice. Through the interviews, the researcher has been
able to explore the extent to which the perceptions of the media editors visavis
a public
interest role with respect to gender and HIV/AIDS actually differs from the quantitative
evidence of their performance and the perceptions of key informants in their
communities.
The findings of the study suggest that local rural media hold out great hope with respect
to the advancement of development communication goals through commercial media
platforms. The editors in the four towns have established organic connections with their
community, albeit tenuous, but which extend into the ranks of development workers in
their towns. The data from the content analysis suggests that women enjoy high visibility
in the pages of their local papers, and they are most likely to be portrayed as positive
achievers than as women encountering violence.
The tenuous nature of the connections between editor and community are most starkly
evident around the issue of HIV/AIDS, with coverage of this being very low despite much
work being undertaken in the community to deal with the pandemic. With respect to the
issue of gender, there was demonstrable evidence from actual examples of content, that
showed on the one hand the capacity to motivate for change in women's lives, but also on
the other hand a danger of reinforcing attitudes that compound women's oppression. The
study offers recommendations to a range of roleplayers to ensure, firstly, the continued
survival of local rural newspapers, and also support in building capacity to see these
papers mature into journalism products that are integrative and transformative. / Ford Foundation and the Media Development and Diversity Agency
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