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New Book by Missouri Journalism Faculty Shows the Important Roles that Journalism Plays in Our Country's Democracy

Glen Cameron Glen Cameron
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Sandy Davidson Sandy Davidson
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David Herzog David Herzog
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George Kennedy George Kennedy
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Stuart Loory Stuart Loory
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Daryl Moen Daryl Moen
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Wes Pippert Wes Pippert
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Byron Scott Byron Scott
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Betty Winfield Betty Winfield
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Columbia, Mo. (July 13, 2007) -- Journalism is vital to the health of our democracy, the glue of information that holds this complex nation together, according to a new book by 12 members of the Missouri School of Journalism faculty.

What Good Is Journalism?
What Good Is Journalism?
How Reporters and Editors Are Saving America's Way of Life

What Good Is Journalism? How Reporters and Editors Are Saving America's Way of Life, edited by George Kennedy, professor emeritus, and Daryl Moen, professor, shows that there is much to be praised about the state of American journalism today.

"Journalism tells us most of what we know about the world beyond our own experience by going where its audience cannot or will not," said Kennedy. "It keeps watch on the government and other powerful institutions, exposes wrongdoing and injustice, and shares the endless fascinations of everyday life."

Through stories of real people, the chapters trace the development of free expression through American history and show how the principles of journalism that Americans take for granted are playing a revolutionary role in emerging democracies.

The subjects of those stories, some famous and some unknown, range from American heroes such as John Peter Zenger and Ida B. Wells to Fatmire Terdvice, an investigative reporter who risks her life with every story in today's Kosovo.

Other chapters detail the remarkable growth of NPR, examine the community-building role of a small daily newspaper, and show the importance of investigative reporting. There is even a chapter suggesting how citizens can demand the quality of journalism they want and need.

What Good Is Journalism? includes the results of a national survey, undertaken exclusively for this book, that reveal how Americans really view and use the press. The survey shows, as others have, that news consumers object to what they see as bias and intrusiveness. However, these consumers also place great value on journalism's roles as watchdog, explainer and informer. Overall, they believe what they read and hear. With all its faults, they say, journalism is important in their lives.

The chapters and authors are:

  • Americans and Journalism: We Value but Criticize It
    By George Kennedy and Glen Cameron, the Maxine Wilson Gregory Chair in Journalism Research

  • Journalism: The Lifeblood of a Democracy
    By Sandy Davidson, associate professor, and Betty Winfield, University of Missouri Curators' Professor

  • NPR Offers News and Companionship
    By Geneva Overholser, Curtis B. Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Reporting

  • The Hometown Newspaper Builds Community
    By Judy Bolch, Houston Harte Chair in Journalism

  • Watchdogs of Government Serve Citizens
    By Wes Pippert, associate professor and director of the Washington Program

  • Journalism Builds New Democracies
    By Byron Scott, professor emeritus

  • Investigative Reporting Saves Lives
    By Brant Houston, professor and executive director of Investigative Reporters and Editors

  • Computer-Assisted Journalism Creates New Knowledge
    By David Herzog, assistant professor, and Brant Houston

  • How to Get the Journalism You Deserve
    By Stuart Loory, the Lee Hills Chair in Free Press Studies

What Good Is Journalism? How Reporters and Editors Are Saving America's Way of Life (ISBN 978-0-8262-1730-1, $37.50 cloth) (ISBN 978-0-8262-1731-8, $19.95 paper) is available at local bookstores or directly from the University of Missouri Press. Individuals placing orders should include $5.00 shipping and handling for the first book and $1.00 for each additional book.

For more information on this title, for excerpt possibilities or to interview the authors, please contact Beth Chandler at or by phone at 573-882-9672.

Related


Upcoming Conversation to Share Good News about Journalism American journalism, taken as a whole, is better than its critics admit, and an upcoming conversation will share the many ways that journalism is a force for good in the lives of individuals and the nation. Roberta Baskin, executive director of The Center for Public Integrity, will be the keynote luncheon speaker. She has won more than 75 journalism awards, including two duPont-Columbia University Awards and two George Foster Peabody Awards for her investigative reporting. [More] Roberta Baskin
George Kennedy Glen Cameron New Research Shows Americans' Love-Hate Relationship with Journalism A new study shows that Americans have a more positive, more complicated set of attitudes toward journalism than the recent wave of media criticism implies. George Kennedy co-authored the study with design help from Glen Cameron. [More]
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