Bookbot

Más información sobre el libro

Diversity is not about political correctness. It’s about quality journalism. In journalism, white, male, Western voices still dominate and are often privileged over others, which means that we are not getting the whole story, or the most accurate one. At Hostwriter, we asked journalists to tell us about the barriers they face in their field and potential ways to fix them. We received stories from colleagues around the globe - from Germany to Brazil, Tajikistan to the Philippines, and China to the U. S. - that directly address the challenges to making journalism more diverse in ways that are surprising, funny and sometimes infuriating. The result is a field guide to unbiasing the newsroom and a launchpad for a new kind of journalism that looks more like the society it serves.

Compra de libros

Unbias the News, Tina Lee, Amber D. Dodd, Christina Elmerfeldt-Böhner, Michaela Cavanagh, Chinula Mandla, Atokhon Ganiev, Bex vanKoot, Charles Nisz, Silvia Nortes, Marielba Núñez, Priscila Pacheco, Tanya Pampalone, Jelena Prtoric, Randrianarisoa Riana Raymonde, Purple Romero, Ahmad Sabri, Lakshmi Sarah, Anuradha Sharma, Ali Shehab, Qian Sun, Kolawole Talabi, Laura Vargas-Parada, Shona Yang, Asma Abidi, Wafaa Albadry, Brigitte Alfter, Mónica Baró Sánchez, Daniel Bates, Irene Caselli, Tabea Grzeszyk, Emran Feroz, Michelle Soto Méndez

Idioma
Publicado en
2019
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Tapa dura)
Te avisaremos por correo electrónico en cuanto lo localicemos.

Métodos de pago

Nadie lo ha calificado todavía.Añadir reseña

Título
Unbias the News
Subtítulo
Why Diversity Matters for Journalism
Idioma
Inglés
Publicado en
2019
Formato
Tapa dura
Páginas
224
ISBN10
3948013039
ISBN13
9783948013035
Serie
Descripción
Diversity is not about political correctness. It’s about quality journalism. In journalism, white, male, Western voices still dominate and are often privileged over others, which means that we are not getting the whole story, or the most accurate one. At Hostwriter, we asked journalists to tell us about the barriers they face in their field and potential ways to fix them. We received stories from colleagues around the globe - from Germany to Brazil, Tajikistan to the Philippines, and China to the U. S. - that directly address the challenges to making journalism more diverse in ways that are surprising, funny and sometimes infuriating. The result is a field guide to unbiasing the newsroom and a launchpad for a new kind of journalism that looks more like the society it serves.