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MEDIA MANAGEMENT (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   144302


Assessing China's media reform / Shao, Guosong; Lu, Jiayin ; Hao, Ye   Article
Shao, Guosong Article
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Summary/Abstract Since China adopted the policy of reform and opening up in 1978, the Chinese media system has undergone a transformation. We survey and evaluate the media reforms. After summarizing the changes in media management, structure, and function, we discuss the challenges that China's media industries are confronting today. These include the inherent contradictions of media attributes, the administrative segmentation of the media market, and the lack of adequate protection of free speech. We conclude with recommendations for the further reform of China's media system.
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2
ID:   055538


Iraq, alliance and crisis management / Bell , Coral   Journal Article
Bell , Coral Journal Article
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Key Words Information Warfare  Alliance  Iraq-War  Media Management 
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3
ID:   170079


Messiah Modi?: a tale of great expectations / Singh, Tavleen 2020  Book
Singh, Tavleen Book
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Publication Noida, HarperCollins Publishers, 2020.
Description xiii, 293p.hbk
Standard Number 9789353575946
Key Words India  Media Management  Article 370  Modi, Narendra  Demonetization  Modi 2.0 
Lynchings 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
059812320.54/SIN 059812MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   142575


Unifying the ancestral land: the CCP's “Taiwan” frames / Brady, Anne-Marie   Article
Brady, Anne-Marie Article
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Summary/Abstract The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) government engages in a vast range of measures aimed at moulding global and domestic public opinion on the Taiwan issue. The Taiwan frames set by the CCP are not just aimed at shaping domestic Chinese public opinion and global discourse on Taiwan-related matters; they also succeed in curtailing the Republic of China (ROC) on Taiwan's global political and commercial space. The CCP's Taiwan frames are in direct conflict with the evolving “Taiwanese identity” frames coming out of the ROC. Moreover, they form part of the CCP government's wider ideological project to frame global concepts of “Chineseness,” which is aimed at combating other ideological challenges to that trope such as the Falun Gong movement, Tibetan independence activism and Chinese democracy groups. Yet, political, economic and technological changes in the PRC and globally suggest that, despite the CCP government's increased efforts, it may be harder than ever to ensure that the CCP frames have the desired effect.
Key Words Taiwan  China  Media Management  Framing 
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