These presentations analyze journalism and media in different contexts: Colombian journalists support peace journalism but often use war frames in practice. In Cuba, labour precarity faced by journalists is the largest factor which can undermine democracy, and despite not being homogeneously dominated by elites’ interest, journalists can still use these relationships to advance personal agendas. Cuban media’s loyalty dynamics under an authoritarian regime also differ from other non-free countries, showing a lower elite-support dimension and a much higher nation-support dimension.
Role conception and role performance in reporting Colombian peace building: A paradox between ideals and practice in conflict coverage: Presenter(s): Jesús Arroyave, Universidad del Norte
The precarity trap: Modelling non-democratic journalistic practices beyond media capture: Presenter(s): Ricardo Ribeiro Ferreira, University of Edinburgh
Performing the loyal-facilitator role in Cuban journalism: Political regime, nationalism and national defense in a context of ongoing change: Presenter(s): Dasniel Olivera, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Additional Author(s): Claudia Mellado, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
Political polarization and journalistic role performance in East Asia: Public function of journalism in South Korea, Japan, and Taiwan:Presenter(s): Misook Lee, Otsuma Women’s University Christi I-Hsuan Lin, Rikkyo University. Additional Author(s): Yi-Ning Katherine Chen, National Chengchi University