Critique of the SABC's parliament coverage
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2008
TITLE AUTHOR(S): A.Hadland
KEYWORDS: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION, MEDIA SECTOR, SOUTH AFRICAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION
DEPARTMENT: Developmental, Capable and Ethical State (DCES)
Intranet: HSRC Library: shelf number 5544
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/5150
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/5150
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
-
Related Research Outputs:
- Cosmopolitanism, not blackness, key to charter
- Does SA need a media tribunal?
- Broadcasting democracy: radio and identity in South Africa
- Freedom of expression: a comparative analysis
- Chronic poverty in South Africa: incidence, causes and policies
- Constructions of whiteness, gender, class and sexuality in South African English-medius men's and women's magazines
- Research on TV violence and sex in SABC programmes
- The development and current state of the South African local media sector: the people's voice
- Garden of Eden in genome shock: the challenge of popularising genomics in Africa through the media
- A history of media policy in South Africa
- The people's voice: the development and current state of the South African media sector
- The people's voice: the development and current state of the South African small media sector
- 'Nothing without us': disability inclusion and the South African mass media
- Re-visioning television: research on the policy, strategy and models for the sustainable development of community television in South Africa
- The people's voice: the development and current state of the SA small media sector
- The last word: looking for a new South African journalism: is the next generation ready for the challenge?
- The South African newspaper and printing industry and its impact on the industrial conciliation act of 1924
- If baboons could talk ... J.S. Mill on freedom of speech and the limits of racial discourse
- Rainbow voices: diversifying media in a new democracy: the South African experience
- Feminist intellectual activism: within and beyond the academy: constructions of 'whiteness', gender and sexuality in South African magazines