Lessons in aiding journalism and democracy: a study of Australian educators working in the Asia Pacific region
conference contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00authored byA Wake
This paper examines assumptions about democracy and the role of media held by journalism educators working outside Australia, and the extent to which those assumptions influence teaching styles, regardless of the maturity of the political systems in the nations in question. This paper looks at the work emerging from academics Beate Josephi, Barbie Zelizer, John Nerone, Cherian George and Silvio Waisbord, who argue in Journalism (2012) that there needs to be a change to the understanding by journalism scholars of the central place of journalism in democracy because that view is not global in its perspective. This paper specifically considers Zelizer’s point that “much of the scholarly world in the West – and specifically in the United States – depends directly or indirectly on the presumption of democracy and its accoutrements”. The researcher asks, “what can we learn about our Australian perspective on teaching journalism in the developing world where there may not, yet, be an operating democracy or a form of democracy that replicates the Western liberal model?”
History
Event
World Journalism Educators Congress (3rd : 2013 : Mechelen, Belgium)
Pagination
1 - 25
Publisher
Journalism Education Association
Location
Mechelen, Belgium
Place of publication
Manhattan, Kan.
Start date
2013-07-03
End date
2013-07-05
Language
eng
Publication classification
E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed
Title of proceedings
WJEC 2013 : Renewing journalism through education : Proceedings of the World Journalism Educators 2013 congress