Robert A. Hackett’s research while affiliated with Simon Fraser University and other places

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Publications (3)


Television's Window on the World: International Affairs Coverage on the U. S. Networks
  • Article

January 1986

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4 Reads

Canadian Journal of Communication

Robert A Hackett

Two timely and politically relevant concerns underlie this book. They are the role of network television in the American foreign policy process, and the international debate on a New World Communication Order, a debate partly sparked by Third World criticisms of imbalance in international news flow, and the lack of "development news" in Western media.



Decline of a Paradigm? Bias and Objectivity in News Media Studies

September 1984

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653 Reads

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364 Citations

Critical Studies in Mass Communication

This essay outlines emerging empirical, methodological, and epistemolog‐ical challenges to several key assumptions associated with conventional research on news bias. These assumptions are: (1) the news can and ought to be objective, balanced and a reflection of social reality; (2) the political attitudes of journalists or editorial decision‐makers are a major determinant of news bias; (3) bias in news content can be detected with existing reading methods; (4) the most important form of bias is partisanship. It is concluded that the concepts of structured orientation and ideological effectiv‐ity are more fruitful than that of partisan bias, and that the concepts of bias and objectivity ought themselves to be objects of research rather than evaluative standards.

Citations (2)


... The reporters rely on powerful actors because they provide a convenient and regular flow of information. It makes their job efficient because it eliminates the need to double-check facts (Hackett 1985). Thus, I expect the journalists primarily to cover the messages of powerful actors. ...

Reference:

Conclusion
A Hierarchy of Access: Aspects of Source Bias in Canadian TV News
  • Citing Article
  • June 1985

Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly

... However, the concept of bias is not uncontested (Hackett, 1984), similar to definitions of "terrorism" (Saul, 2019). By adapting this conceptual lens, we neither argue that journalists can objectively mirror an objective reality of terrorism nor that citizens are irresponsible in taking up selective perceptions of terrorism. ...

Decline of a Paradigm? Bias and Objectivity in News Media Studies
  • Citing Article
  • September 1984

Critical Studies in Mass Communication