Basic Data
Acronym
22DMNG
Status
elective
Semester
1
Number of classes
4L + E
ESPB
10.0
Study programme
Type of study
doctoral academic studies
Condition / Oblik uslovljenosti
No data
Goals and outcomes
Sadrzaj Predmeta

No data

Literature
  1. Wahl-Jorgensen, K. and Hanitzsch, T. (eds.) (2009). The Handbook of Journalism Studies. New York: Routledge.

    (Original)
  2. Hanitzsch, T. (2007). Deconstructing Journalism Culture: Towards a Universal Theory, Communication Theory, 17(4): 367–385.

    (Original)
  3. Hanitzsch, T. and Mellado, C. (2011). What Shapes the News around the World? How Journalists in Eighteen Countries Perceive Influences on Their Work, The International Journal of Press/Politics, 16(3): 404– 426.

    (Original)
  4. Cottle, S. (2006). Mediatized conflict. Developments in media and conflict studies. New York: Open University Press.

    (Original)
  5. van Dijk, J., Poell, T. and de Waal, M. (2018). Platform society - Public Values in a Connective World (poglavlja 2 i 3 - Platform Mechanism & News);

    (Original)
  6. Peters, C. and Witschge, T. (2015). From Grand Narratives of Democracy to Small Expectations of Participation, Journalism Practice, 9(1): 19-34.

    (Original)
  7. Humanes, M.L. and Roses, S. (2020). Audience Approach The Performance of the Civic, Infotainment, and Service Roles, In: Beyond Journalistic Norms (ed. Claudia Mellado).

    (Original)
  8. Anderson, C. W. (2011). Deliberative, agonistic, and algorithmic audiences: Journalism’s vision of its public in an age of audience transparency, International Journal of Communication.

    (Original)
  9. Hanitzsch, T, Van Dalen, A, and Steindl, N. (2018). Caught in the Nexus: A Comparative and Longitudinal Analysis of Public Trust in the Press, The International Journal of Press/Politics, 23(1) 3–23.

    (Original)
  10. Harsh T. and Webster, J. (2016). How Do Global Audiences Take Shape? The Role of Institutions and Culture in Patterns of Web Use, Journal of Communication 66: 161–182.

    (Original)
  11. Zelizer, B. (2018). Resetting Journalism in the Aftermath of Brexit and Trump, European Journal of Communication, 33 (2): 140–156.

    (Original)
  12. Monroe E. P. (2014). Free Expression, Globalism and the New Strategic Communication, Cambridge University Press.

    (Original)
  13. Surčulija Milojević J. (2018), Defamation as a "weapon" in Europe and in Serbia: legal and selfregulatory frameworks. Journal of international media & entertainment law, 2(8):100-128.

    (Original)
  14. (šira literatura) Mellado, C., Hellmueller, L., Marquez-Ramirez, et al. (2017). The Hybridization of Journalistic Cultures: A Comparative Study of Journalistic Role Performance, Journal of Communication, 67(6): 944–67.

    (Original)
  15. (šira literatura) Tumber, H. and Webster, F. (2006). Journalists under fire. Information war and journalistic practices. London: SAGE.

    (Original)
  16. (šira literatura) Wasserman, H. (2013). Journalism in a new democracy. The ethics of listening. Communicatio: South African Journal for Communication Theory and Research, 39(1): 64–84.

    (Original)
  17. (šira literatura) Weaver, D. (ed.) (1998). The global journalist: News people around the world, Cresskill, NJ: Hampton.

    (Original)
  18. (šira literatura) Terzis, G. (ed.) (2014). Mapping Foreign Correspondence in Europe. London: Routledge.

    (Original)
  19. (šira literatura) Stuart A. (ed.) (2009). The Routledge Companion to News and Journalism (poglavlja 6, 10 i 28).

    (Original)
  20. Chung, D. S., & Nah, S. (2013). Media credibility and journalistic role conceptions: views on citizen and professional journalists among citizen contributors, Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 28(4): 271–288.

    (Original)
  21. (šira literatura) Carroll, W. K., & Hackett, R. A. (2006). Democratic media activism through the lens of social movement theory, Media, culture & society, 28(1): 83–104.

    (Original)
  22. (šira literatura) Fenton, N. (2010). New media, old news: Journalism and democracy in the digital age, Sage.

    (Original)
  23. (šira literatura) Fortunati, L., Deuze, M., & De Luca, F. (2014). The new about news: How print, online, free, and mobile coconstruct new audiences in Italy, France, Spain, the UK, and Germany, Journal of Computer‐Mediated Communication, 19(2): 121–140.

    (Original)
  24. (šira literatura) Block, E. and Negrine, R. (2017). The Populist Communication Style: Toward a Critical Framework, International Journal of Communication 11 (20): 178–197.

    (Original)
  25. (šira literatura) McDevitt, M. and Ferrucci, P. (2018). Populism, Journalism, and the Limits of Reflexivity, Journalism Studies 19(4): 512–526.

    (Original)
  26. (šira literatura) Jagers, J., and Walgrave, S. (2007). Populism as Political Communication Style: An Empirical Study of Political Parties’ discourse in Belgium, European Journal of Political Research 46 (3): 319–345.

    (Original)
  27. (šira literatura) Kellner, D. (2016). American Nightmare: Donald Trump, Media Spectacle, and Authoritarian Populism, Rotterdam: Sense Publishers.

    (Original)
  28. (šira literatura) McCoy, J., Tahmina, R., and Somer, M. (2018). Polarization and the Global Crisis of Democracy: Common Patterns, Dynamics, and Pernicious Consequences for Democratic Polities, American Behavioral Scientist 62 (1): 16–42.

    (Original)
  29. (šira literatura) Surčulija, Jelena. News Choice and Offer in the Digital Transition, in: Marius, D. and Thompson, M. (eds.). Digital journalism: making news, breaking news. New York: Open Society Foundations, 2014, p. 129-142.

    (Original)