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Beng, Lee Yuen
- Press and Corporate Reputation: Factors Affecting Biasness of Business News Reporting in Malaysia
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Authors
Affiliations
1 School of Communication, Universiti Sains Malaysia 11800 Penang, MY
2 Graduate School of Business, Universiti Sains Malaysia, MY
1 School of Communication, Universiti Sains Malaysia 11800 Penang, MY
2 Graduate School of Business, Universiti Sains Malaysia, MY
Source
Media Watch, Vol 5, No 3 (2014), Pagination: 321-332Abstract
In Malaysia, media bias has always been a hot debated issue. The ruling Barisan Nasional coalition often portrays itself as an advocate of press freedom while the masses often feel otherwise as media organisations are either directly or indirectly owned by component parties of the Barisan Nasional. Readers therefore commonly accuse these organisations of practising media control although the latter often maintains that they are free from external factors or from governmental control. Till date, researches about media biasness have only studied the effects of media biasness on corporate reputations but not about the factors associated to such biasness and are often done within Western contexts. This paper fills these gaps by examining the links between the personal interest of a journalist and their level of compliance with the National Union of Journalists' Code of Conduct, audience pressure, political interests, and the biasness of business news reporting in Malaysia.Keywords
Media Biasness, Business News Reporting, NUJ, Journalism, Code of Conduct- Liberalisation of the Malaysian Media and Politics: New Media, Strategies and Contestations
Abstract Views :497 |
PDF Views:1
Authors
Affiliations
1 School of Communication, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800, Penang, MY
2 Universiti Sains Malaysia, MY
1 School of Communication, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800, Penang, MY
2 Universiti Sains Malaysia, MY
Source
Media Watch, Vol 6, No 3 (2015), Pagination: 296-308Abstract
On 28 April 2012, 'Bersih 3.0', a rally calling for freer and fairer elections estimated that 250, 000 people gathered to support its cause. Government controlled newspapers the New Straits Times and Utusan Malaysia accused this rally attended by 20, 000 demonstrators as a plot to destabilise and overthrow the ruling coalition through chaos and disorder. Online news portals Malaysiakini and Malaysian Insider however reported that the rally attended by 150,000 demonstrators began peacefully but ended chaotically as demonstrators, journalists and police personnel were attacked and manhandled. While the conflicting reports of Bersih 3.0 and other news reports unpublished by the state controlled media through the new media suggests political dissent and possible media liberalisation, it does not necessarily mean that press freedom is well and alive. It however marks the beginning of a larger movement in cyberspace that threatens the hegemony of the ruling coalition. This paper examines the proliferation of the new media within the political economic structure of the Malaysian society and media; selected representations and messages in the old and new media; and whether the strategies and if representations in the new media are counter hegemonic tools capable of creating space for diverse voices, dissent and transformation.Keywords
New Media, Internet, Political Economy, Civil Society, Counter-Hegemony.References
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