Essays about: "journalism, racism"

Found 3 essays containing the words journalism, racism.

  1. 1. “Living in a Post-Racial Matrix” : A case study of how female journalists negotiate a working identity at Sveriges Radio

    University essay from Stockholms universitet/JMK

    Author : Debora Hermele; [2022]
    Keywords : Journalists; journalism; Sweden; Post-Racialism; Working Identity; Racism; Intersectionality;

    Abstract : While research on the different expressions of racism in media has been closely linked to the understanding of stereotypes in a plethora of research, little is known about the journalists' perspectives and experiences of racism. However, in 2020, an anti-racist manifesto called “Whose SR?” (Vems SR?” 2021) was published online where the Swedish public radio Sveriges Radio (SR) was criticized by current and former employees for its lack of diverse representation and for having a work-environment where non-white journalists are marginalized. READ MORE

  2. 2. The R Word: Race and Racism at the Swedish Radio

    University essay from Uppsala universitet/Medier och kommunikation

    Author : Johanna Lill-Inger Fredrika Karlsson; [2021]
    Keywords : phenomenology; race; racism; journalism; media; objectivity;

    Abstract : Race is a taboo subject — and word — in Swedish culture, and the Swedish news media is no exception. During recent years, however, the topic of race and racism has started to be discussed moreand more in the mainstream. READ MORE

  3. 3. Trickle-Down Inequality: The Reconstruction of Crime and Immigration in the Swedish Context

    University essay from Örebro universitet/Institutionen för humaniora, utbildnings- och samhällsvetenskap

    Author : Gabriela Susana Armengol Rodriguez; [2020]
    Keywords : Journalism; News Frames; Discourse Analysis; Trickle-effect; Cultural Racism; Immigration; Structural Oppositions; Identity; Risk Identities; Indirect Social Influence; Assimilation Theory; Resistance; Social Cohesion;

    Abstract : News reports in relation to criminality are often considered a trustworthy and factual source of information. However, media consumers often disregard the discourses within the content they consume as well as the power structures it reproduces. READ MORE