2012
DOI: 10.1177/1748048512439812
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The geography of foreign news on television

Abstract: Since the advent of television in the middle of the 20th century, news has been an essential ingredient in TV programming. Often these newscasts are the most heavily viewed programmes, and by and large they are the main source of information for many people. This is particularly true for news from other countries and regions in the world. This immense significance of TV news has made it an important field in communication research. The article presents a new study that is formed from a multinational project. T… Show more

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Cited by 65 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Galtung (1986) also explained the global media pattern in terms of a ''centerÁ periphery'' model, according to which the world's nations can be classified as either central and dominant or peripheral and dependent, with a predominant flow of news from the former to the latter. Newer studies confirm this trend, finding that the central and dominant countries tend to originate news that is distributed to the periphery (Shoemaker, Danielian, and Brendlinger 1991;Wilke, Heimprecht, and Cohen 2012). (Basically, the United States and the larger countries of Western Europe are typically seen as more central, while countries in Africa are most peripheral.)…”
Section: Supply Of International Television Newsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Galtung (1986) also explained the global media pattern in terms of a ''centerÁ periphery'' model, according to which the world's nations can be classified as either central and dominant or peripheral and dependent, with a predominant flow of news from the former to the latter. Newer studies confirm this trend, finding that the central and dominant countries tend to originate news that is distributed to the periphery (Shoemaker, Danielian, and Brendlinger 1991;Wilke, Heimprecht, and Cohen 2012). (Basically, the United States and the larger countries of Western Europe are typically seen as more central, while countries in Africa are most peripheral.)…”
Section: Supply Of International Television Newsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Finally, the fourth phase has seen increased studies of the West and the world with the arrival of multi-nation studies across the globe, which nevertheless tended to be based on Western conceptual and methodological frameworks. Such recent large-scale endeavors have included studies of journalists’ professional views (Hanitzsch et al., 2011; Weaver and Willnat, 2012), journalism students (Mellado et al., 2013), and news content (Aalberg et al., 2013; Shoemaker and Cohen, 2012; Wilke et al., 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the notion of a global village carries a promise of audiences to become cosmopolitan audiences ---referring to cosmopolitanism as 'an orientation, a willingness to relate with the Other' (Hannerz, 1996: 103) ---it is, ironically, rather the second part of the concept ---village ---that is increasingly determining foreign news coverage. Studies continue to provide evidence for tendencies such as Eurocentrism and parochialism which point to an inward directed look on foreign news (Wilke, Heimprecht and Cohen, 2012). The underlying premise is generally that (international) 'news must essentially be about us' (Sonwalkar, 2004: 208).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%