Workplace Monitoring and the Right to Private Life at Work
In: The Modern Law Review, Volume 81, Issue 4, p. 688-700
22 results
Sort by:
In: The Modern Law Review, Volume 81, Issue 4, p. 688-700
SSRN
In: Political studies review, Volume 15, Issue 2, p. 255-256
ISSN: 1478-9302
In: J. Atkinson, 'Human Rights as Foundations for Labour Law', in H. Collins, G. Lester, V. Mantouvalou (eds), Philosophical Foundations of Labour Law, OUP, 2018
SSRN
There is a very good and useful book waiting to escape from this collection on journalism and public affairs in New Zealand. Its editorial troika of scholars (from three different universities) have set themselves laudable but editorially exacting goals, made more demanding by the accelerated climate of academic publishing. The stated editorial intent is to address the 'tensions between [journalistic] practitioners and academics … exemplified in the enduring tendency to see "theory" and "practice" as irrevocably opposed' (p. 21), and to 'redirect [New Zealand journalism] towards a more critical and reflexive position of intellectual confidence and independence' (p. 24).
BASE
In: Political science, Volume 63, Issue 1, p. 146-147
ISSN: 2041-0611
In: The international journal of press, politics, Volume 16, Issue 1, p. 102-129
ISSN: 1940-1620
Journalists and their editorial managers are increasingly beholden to standards of performance built into industrial performance templates imported from outside what used to be regarded as the journalistic 'field'. This paper distinguishes three sets of criteria for journalistic 'performance': ethical (P1), commercial (P2) and theatrical (P3). These are elaborated in turn with respect to their industrial origins, their underlying conceptions of the public interest, their political implications and their productive consequences. The three-template model extends Franklin's (2003) critique of McJournalism by: a) providing a fuller account of the (P2) McDonaldization of television news, b) more precisely demarcating backstage (P2) and frontstage (P3) elements of journalistic performance, and c) elaborating a new P3 news template with reference to Bryman's (2004) work on Disneyization. The paper concludes with a New Zealand case study highlighting tensions between P2 and P3 modes of performance and audience outcomes. [Reprinted by permission; copyright Sage Publications Inc.]
In: Political science, Volume 63, Issue 1, p. 146-148
ISSN: 0112-8760, 0032-3187
In: Political science, Volume 63, Issue 1, p. 146-147
ISSN: 0112-8760, 0032-3187
In: The international journal of press, politics, Volume 16, Issue 1, p. 102-129
ISSN: 1940-1620
Journalists and their editorial managers are increasingly beholden to standards of performance built into industrial performance templates imported from outside what used to be regarded as the journalistic 'field'. This paper distinguishes three sets of criteria for journalistic 'performance': ethical (P1), commercial (P2) and theatrical (P3). These are elaborated in turn with respect to their industrial origins, their underlying conceptions of the public interest, their political implications and their productive consequences. The three-template model extends Franklin's (2003) critique of McJournalism by: a) providing a fuller account of the (P2) McDonaldization of television news, b) more precisely demarcating backstage (P2) and frontstage (P3) elements of journalistic performance, and c) elaborating a new P3 news template with reference to Bryman's (2004) work on Disneyization. The paper concludes with a New Zealand case study highlighting tensions between P2 and P3 modes of performance and audience outcomes.
In: Political science, Volume 57, Issue 2, p. 17-27
ISSN: 2041-0611
In: Political science, Volume 57, Issue 2, p. 17-28
ISSN: 0112-8760, 0032-3187
In: Political science, Volume 47, Issue 1, p. 151-153
ISSN: 2041-0611
In: Political science, Volume 46, Issue 2, p. 193-214
ISSN: 2041-0611
In: Political science, Volume 45, Issue 2, p. 230-230
ISSN: 2041-0611
In: Political science, Volume 43, Issue 2, p. 93-94
ISSN: 2041-0611