ABSTRACT

Journalism and Democracy in Asia addresses key issues of freedom, democracy, citizenship, openness and journalism in contemporary Asia, looking especially at China, Japan, Korea, Indonesia, the Philippines and India. The authors take varying approaches to questions of democracy, whilst also considering journalism in print, radio and new media, in relation to such questions as the role of social, political and economic liberalization in bringing about a blooming of the media, the relationship between the media and the development of democracy and civil society, and how journalism copes under authoritarian rule.

With contributions from highly regarded experts in the region examining a broad range of issues from across Asia, this book will be of high interest to students and scholars in political communications, journalism and mass communication and Asian studies.

chapter |14 pages

Asian Journalism

News, Development and the Tides of Liberalization and Technology

chapter |13 pages

Going Online

Journalism and Civil Society in Singapore

chapter |13 pages

Changing Connections

The News Media, the Government and the People in China's SARS Epidemic

chapter |12 pages

Media Plurality or Democratic Deficit?

Private TV and the Public Sphere in India

chapter |15 pages

The Surrogate Democracy Function of the Media

Citizens' and Journalists' Evaluations of Media Performance in Hong Kong 1

chapter |12 pages

Media Change through Bounded Innovations

Journalism in China's Media Reforms

chapter |15 pages

Between Dictatorship and Democracy

State-Affiliated News Media in Indonesia

chapter |11 pages

Protesting the 1994 Okinawa Rape Incident

Women, Democracy and Television News in Japan

chapter |13 pages

The ‘Straight' Times

News Media and Sexual Citizenship in Singapore