The Suppression of Dissent: How the State and Mass Media Squelch USAmerican Social MovementsRoutledge, 2006 - 375 pages Despite longstanding traditions of tolerance, inclusion, and democracy in the United States, dissident citizens and social movements have experienced significant and sustained - although often subtle and difficult-to observe - suppression in this country. Using mechanism-based social-movement theory, this book explores a wide range of twentieth century episodes of contention, involving such groups as mid-century communists, the Black Panther Party, the American Indian Movement, and the modern-day globalization movement. |
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Page 197
... journalists are supposed to be politically neutral writers who critically examine important social issues and offer impartial cover- age ( Bennett 2002 , 194 ) . Even though objectivity became " the emblem of American journalism ...
... journalists are supposed to be politically neutral writers who critically examine important social issues and offer impartial cover- age ( Bennett 2002 , 194 ) . Even though objectivity became " the emblem of American journalism ...
Page 198
... journalists routinely injecting their partisan views into the news . To the contrary , the avoid- ance of political partisanship by journalists is reinforced , among other means , by the professional ethics codes of journalists , by the ...
... journalists routinely injecting their partisan views into the news . To the contrary , the avoid- ance of political partisanship by journalists is reinforced , among other means , by the professional ethics codes of journalists , by the ...
Page 250
... Journalism Review , Brent Cunningham ( 2003 , 26 ) excavates the term objectivity , asserting that objectivity makes journalists into " passive recipients of news , rather than aggressive analyz- ers and explainers of it . " A similar ...
... Journalism Review , Brent Cunningham ( 2003 , 26 ) excavates the term objectivity , asserting that objectivity makes journalists into " passive recipients of news , rather than aggressive analyz- ers and explainers of it . " A similar ...
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Common terms and phrases
Action Mode activity actors agent provocateur American approach asserts Badjacketing Bi-level Demonization black bag jobs Black Panther Party Black Propaganda Bureau bystander publics Ceplair and Englund Chapter Church Committee Churchill and Vander COINTELPRO collective action Communist Communist Party Court Direct Violence dissident citizens dissident social movements Divisive Disruption Donner Doug McAdam Durham dynamic effect engage example explore FBI's frame Fred Hampton Global Global Justice Movement Hampton Harassment Arrests Hollywood Hollywood Ten Hoover HUAC individual infiltration interaction internal Intimidation journalists King leaders mass media McAdam McCarthy Mechanisms of Suppression ment mobilization Modes of Suppression Office organizations police political opportunity potential Pratt process of demobilization protesters raid relations repression Resource Depletion SCLC Seattle Senate III 1976 social mechanisms social movements social-movement Soviet specific Stigmatization story surveillance tactics Tarrow Tilly tion United Vander Wall 1990 Vander Wall 2002 Washington Post York