Document details

Watchdog or Missionary? A Portrait of African News People and Their Work: A Case Study in Tanzania

Frankfurt am Main et al.: Peter Lang (1992), xix, 180 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 159-169

Table of contents: https://d-nb.info/920198074/04

Series: European University Studies. Series 40: Communications, 31

ISBN 978-3-631-44844-1

"Tanzanian journalists are more and more outspokenly claiming the right to be watchdogs on the public's behalf. How they process information to present to the predominantly rural public depends decisively on how they perceive their professional role. That self-perception is influenced by social and organisational factors. Just what these factors are and to what degree the allow 'development journalism' to unfold in Tanzania was the central research approach of this study." (Publisher description)
1 Introduction, 1
PART 1: JOURNALISM IN COMMUNICATION THEORIES
2 The sociology of mass media communicators, 9
PART 2: JOURNALISTS' WORKING ENVIRONMENT IN THE TANZANIAN MASS MEDIA
3 Communication policy, 21
4 Functions and tasks of the media organisations, 37
PART 3: THE PROFESSIONAL PORTRAIT OF THE JOURNALISTS - AN EMPIRICAL SURVEY
5 The design of the study, 93
6 Sociogram of the Tanzanian journalists, 99
7 Summary of the research findings, 137
PART 4: OUTLOOK
8 Journalism in Tanzania - theory and reality, 143