News media analyses: Newswatch is looking for partners

ABOUT NEWSWATCH: Newswatch (http://www.newswatch.in/) was launched in August 2005 to serve as an online monitor of press freedom and media ethics issues. It also looks at developments in the news media industry that are of relevance to journalists. Newswatch believes in maintaining its editorial independence.

MEDIA COVERAGE: The news media, willy-nilly, makes errors. In other words, these are either errors of omission, or that of commission. Bias, inaccuracies, and fairness are subjects that Newswatch is concerned with. And concerned about, as well. But making accusations in the air, or badmouthing the news media makes no sense in itself. Unless those are rooted in research. Studies are not ends in themselves, but starting points. It is in this backdrop that Newswatch wants to carry out analytical studies of news media coverage of various incidents, and issues that develop over time. Newswatch did a pilot study in February-March 2008 on the coverage of the launch of a Project Tiger report. The report was well appreciated. Since then we have done a few more. We now want to do still more. But there’s little that one can do alone. That’s why Newswatch needs partners. All our studies are archived here: http://www.newswatch.in/research/.

See our latest study here: http://issuu.com/newswatch/docs/vedanta

WHAT NEWSWATCH HAS: Credibility. Newswatch does not accept donations/grants from anyone -- governments and the official machinery, political parties, corporate houses, nongovernmental organisations, security forces. It does not accept individual donations either. The only ones it allies itself with are free speech defenders and journalists' organisations. With everyone else, it can only be project-to-project tie-ups. For news coverage analyses, Newswatch has developed a codebook that has as many as 4000+ parameters on basis of which news items can be marked/judged. This algorithm, of course, is not for sale.

WHAT NEWSWATCH IS LOOKING FOR: Newswatch has the technology and the tools. We are looking for one-off alliances with organisations who can provide us with the expertise to study subjects/issues that we are not experts in. We also look forward to organisations who can give us the human resources required for the period of a particular study. Newswatch can also consider sponsorships of projects provided the organisations concerned have a clean track record as far as respecting press freedom is concerned. That aside, Newswatch is open to ideas and opinions.

Newswatch also takes up turnkey content analysis projects for organisations.

If you want to take this forward, please revert to:

Subir Ghosh

Newswatch

editor@newswatch.in

+91-9811316305

 
 
 
 
Post date
2 September 2010
Last modified
2 September 2010