BJR publishes issue V.19, n.03

 

The Brazilian Journalism Research editorial board is pleased to announce the publication of issue Vol. 19 No. 3 (2023), dedicated to the dossier "Militant, Activist and Combat Journalism".

The guest editors were Rogério Christofoletti (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil), Salvador De León (Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes, Mexico) and Denis Ruellan (Sorbonne Université, France).

We invite our readers to navigate through the published titles and read the new edition: https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/issue/view/68

 

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SOCIAL ACTIVISM, POLITICAL ACTIVISM, AND COMBAT JOURNALISM: contemporary thoughts
Rogério Christofoletti, Salvador De León, Denis Ruellan

WHAT CAN FIGHTING TELL US ABOUT JOURNALISTIC IDENTITIES?
Fábio Henrique Pereira

IS ACTIVIST JOURNALISM POSSIBLE? Tensions within the professional ethos of objectivity
Adriana Barsotti, Agostinho Vieira

WHO ARE THE ACTIVIST AND ENGAGED WE ARE TALKING ABOUT? A look at the Brazilian commercial press and political positioning as a journalistic strategy
Fabiana Moraes

UNDER FIRE: news coverage of the Russian side of the war in Ukraine as combat. The case of Bruno Amaral de Carvalho
Luis M. Loureiro, Rui Pereira, Alexandra Figueira

ACTIVISM IN ENVIRONMENTAL JOURNALISM: how four key moments have helped shape an engagement practice in Brazil
Eloisa Beling Loose, Roberto Villar Belmonte

ENVIRONMENTAL MEDIA ACTIVIST JOURNALISM: contributions from an analysis of journalistic coverage from Amazonia Real
Amanda Franco de Souza, Katarini Miguel

ACTIVISM IN JOURNALISM FROM THE CENTER OF THE WORLD: Sumaúma and the denunciation of the Yanomami genocide
Luiza Gould

ACTIVIST JOURNALISM IN THE AMAZON: the narratives from Eliane Brum
Elaine Javorski, Quezia Alencar

THE SPECIALIZED AND ENGAGED JOURNALISM OF AZMINA MAGAZINE: feminist and intersectional agendas
Hyvana Rodrigues, Sonia Aguiar

GAY PRESS IN BRAZIL: a journalistic and militant look at homosexual reality in the 70s and 80s
Carlos Humberto Ferreira Silva Jr

FROM REPORTING SEXUAL VIOLENCE TO #METOO: The New York Times and its contributions to combative journalism
Paula de Souza Paes, Juliana Colussi