Characteristics And Attitudes Of Australia’s Finance Journalists
Tài liệu tham khảo
Bulletin, 1996, Nurses rate highest for ethics and honesty”, The Bulletin, 30, 38
Chadwick, 1990, The Ownership Disaster: How Journalism Failed
Deamer, 1972, On Self-Censorship, 5
Henningham, 1982, Television Journalists: Participant and Neutral Values, Australian Journal of Communication, 1, 1
Henningham, 1988
Henningham, 1989, Why and How Journalists Should Be Professionalised, Australian Journalism Review, 11, 27
Henningham, 1990, Is Journalism a Profession?”
Henningham, 1993, Multicultural Journalism: a Profile of Hawaii’s Newspeople, Journalism Quarterly, 70, 550, 10.1177/107769909307000307
Henningham, 1994, Ethnic Differences in Journalists’ Ethical Attitudes, Asian Journal of Communication, 4, 1, 10.1080/01292989409359591
Henningham, 1995, Australian Journalists’Reactions to New Technology, Prometheus, 13, 225, 10.1080/08109029508631981
Henningham, 1995, Political Journalists’ Political and Professional Values, Australian Journal of Political Science, 30, 10.1080/00323269508402339
Henningham, 1996, Australian Journalists’ Professional andEthical Values, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 73, 206, 10.1177/107769909607300118
Hohenberg, 1983
Janowitz, 1975, Professional Models in Journalism: the Gatekeeper and the Advocate”, 52, 618
Johnstone, 1976
Layton, 1993
Matolcsy, 1994, Errors in Financial Journalism, Australian Studies in Journalism, 3, 335
McMane, 1993, Ethical Standards of French and U.S. Newspaper Journalists, Journal of Mass Media Ethics, 8, 207, 10.1207/s15327728jmme0804_2
McQueen, 1981
Mencher, 1987
1989
Rothman, 1985, Who Are Those Journalists? (And Why are They Saying Such Critical Things?), Media Information Australia, 37, 5, 10.1177/1329878X8503700104
Schultz, 1993, Reporting Business – A Changing Feast
Schultz, 1993, Business Boosters or Impartial Critics
Weaver, 1992
Weaver, 1986