2016
DOI: 10.24135/pjr.v22i2.61
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Covering cops: Critical reporting of Indonesian police corruption

Abstract: Abstract:The following article analyses contemporary newspaper representations of police corruption in Indonesia's premier English-language newspaper, The Jakarta Post. The article draws on primary data obtained from 114 articles published online between January and December 2013. The subsequent quantitative analysis found that The Jakarta Post reported on various forms of police corruption in both specific and general contexts with a majority of reports focusing on the investigation of corruption allegations … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Sen describes a much more problematic picture related to press freedom than the standard narrative, where press freedom is still not present and where some of the former government control of the media is now in the hands of private owners (Haryanto, in Sen and Hill, 2011), which exercise control over the content. Despite the reforms, many journalists find it difficult to play the role of "watchdog" and some Indonesian journalists "struggle with conflicting challenges of being critical of institutional powers while maintaining their job" (Davies et al, 2016). Sensitive issues can then rather be covered in trivialized and sensationalized tones (Hartono, 2015).…”
Section: Discourse Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sen describes a much more problematic picture related to press freedom than the standard narrative, where press freedom is still not present and where some of the former government control of the media is now in the hands of private owners (Haryanto, in Sen and Hill, 2011), which exercise control over the content. Despite the reforms, many journalists find it difficult to play the role of "watchdog" and some Indonesian journalists "struggle with conflicting challenges of being critical of institutional powers while maintaining their job" (Davies et al, 2016). Sensitive issues can then rather be covered in trivialized and sensationalized tones (Hartono, 2015).…”
Section: Discourse Practicementioning
confidence: 99%