Record ID | marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-004.mrc:581921791:4075 |
Source | marc_columbia |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-004.mrc:581921791:4075?format=raw |
LEADER: 04075fam a2200409 a 4500
001 1958187
005 20220609035149.0
008 961114s1997 flu b 001 0 eng
010 $a 96037650
020 $a1574540122
035 $a(OCoLC)36001160
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm36001160
035 $9AMF9156CU
035 $a(NNC)1958187
035 $a1958187
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dNNC$dOrLoB-B
043 $an-mx---
050 00 $aPN4748.M4$bC85 1996
082 00 $a323.44/5/0972$221
245 02 $aA culture of collusion :$ban inside look at the Mexican press /$cedited by William A. Orme, Jr.
260 $a[Coral Gables? Fla.] :$bNorth-South Center Press, University of Miami,$c1997.
263 $a9611
300 $ai, 159 pages ;$c23 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 00 $tOverview: From Collusion to Confrontation /$rWilliam A. Orme, Jr. --$gCh. 1.$tA Culture of Collusion: The Ties That Bind the Press and the PRI /$rRaymundo Riva Palacio --$gCh. 2.$tTrial by Fire: The Chiapas Revolt, the Colosio Assassination and the Mexican Press in 1994 /$rSergio Sarmiento --$gCh. 3.$tLa Gacetilla: How Advertising Masquerades as News /$rJoe Keenan --$gCh. 4.$tSound Bites and Soap Operas: How Mexican Television Reported the 1994 Presidential Elections /$rBarbara Belejack --$gCh. 5.$tThe Eye of the Tiger: Emilio Azcarraga and the Televisa Empire /$rMarjorie Miller and Juanita Darling --$gCh. 6.$tTelevisa North: Spanish-Language News in the United States /$rAmerica Rodriguez --$gCh. 7.$tBalancing Act: Surviving as a Television Reporter in Mexico /$rBruno Lopez --$gCh. 8.$tFrom Intimidation to Assassination: Silencing the Press /$rLucy Conger --$gCh. 9.$tMexican News and American Diplomacy: U.S. State Department Monitoring of Press Freedom Violations in Mexico /$rMary C. Moynihan --
505 80 $gCh. 10.$tThe Measure of Violence: Problems in Documentation /$rJoel Solomon --$gCh. 11.$tLimits to Apertura: Prospects for Press Freedom in the New Free-Market Mexico /$rJorge G. Castaneda --$gAppendix.$tMexican Journalists Murdered in the Line of Duty Between 1984 and 1995 /$rThe Committee to Protect Journalists.
520 $aFew outsiders are fully aware of the complex relationship between the ostensibly independent news media in Mexico and the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party - a relationship that has been sustained by subsidies, bribery, fear of violence, and mutual political convenience. Leading Mexican and U.S. journalists examine this "culture of collusion" and portray how it is only now beginning to change.
520 8 $aThis groundbreaking collection of analytical essays features frank, first-hand accounts of overt subsidies, payoffs, and news-as-advertising budgets that keep most Mexican dailies dependent on government support; pressures on Mexican journalists covering the Chiapas uprising, political assassinations, and the presidential campaign of 1994: and changing methods of government coercion and co-opting of the news media before and after the Salinas administration.
520 8 $aThe authors also explore the financial and political interests of the strong-willed government loyalist who controls Mexican television news and the growing Mexican influence on Spanish-language news broadcasting in the United States.
520 8 $aThe outgrowth of a two-year investigative project by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), this study reveals a disturbing pattern of violence against journalists outside the capital city and includes brief CPJ case histories of eleven Mexican reporters who were murdered in mysterious circumstances over the past ten years.
650 0 $aFreedom of the press$zMexico.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008121175
650 0 $aGovernment and the press$zMexico.
650 0 $aJournalists$xCrimes against$zMexico.
700 1 $aOrme, William A.,$cJr.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n86027121
852 00 $boff,leh$hPN478.M4$iC85 1997