American Journalist in the 1990s


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About The Book

<p>Who are U.S. journalists? What are their backgrounds and educational experiences? Why did they choose journalism as an occupation? What do they think about their work? What are their professional and ethical values? What kinds of work do they consider their best? Do men differ from women on these questions? Do ethnic and racial minorities differ from the majority? Do journalists working for different print and broadcast news media differ? <br><br> This book uses findings from the most comprehensive and representative study ever done of the demographic and educational backgrounds working conditions and professional and ethical values of 1410 U.S. print and broadcast journalists working in the 1990s to answer these questions including separate analyses for women and minority news people. It also compares many of these findings with those from the major studies of the early 1970s and 1980s. As such it should be the standard reference on U.S. journalists for years to come.<br><br> In addition this study goes beyond the previous two in adding more open-ended questions to explain and enrich quantitative findings in the belief that the numbers by themselves are not enough to provide explanations for the patterns that emerge. This book includes more of the journalists' own words to fill this gap as well as an analysis of samples of their self-selected best work.</p>
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