Produced by the Dart Research Lab at the University of Tulsa and the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
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"Death of Journalist Investigated"IPI Global JournalistVol. 25200812p. 226-242.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineWarNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
"Egypt Reporting on the President Carries Risks"IPI Global JournalistVol. 27200611Blackwell Publishing Limitedp. 248-263.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineNon-specific/generalNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
"Georgia Political Climate Spurs Problems"IPI Global JournalistVol. 212003/05/23/2003 Annual Meeting, San Diego, CAInternational Communication Associationp. 1-29.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass violenceNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)TelevisionAdd
"Iraq A Dangerous to Work"IPI Global JournalistVol. 22006 2006 Annual MeetingInternational Communication Associationp. 1-27.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineWarNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
"Mexico March to Protest Murder of Journalist"IPI Global JournalistVol. 112003Routledgep. 209-219.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass violenceNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)TelevisionAdd
"Peru Government Struggles to Solve Murder"IPI Global JournalistVol. 42007Winter2007Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communicationp. 361-377.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineNonsexual crimeNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
"Correspondent Threatened"IPI Global JournalistVol. 1032005/05/26/2005 Annual Meeting, New York, NYInternational Communication Associationp. 1-39.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineOtherNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Radio broadcastAdd
Knightley, Phillip"Shooting the Messenger"The article reports that an increasing number of journalists reporting from enemy territory are caught in military crossfire. In 2002 the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) had sent one of its top reporters, Nik Gowing, to Washington to try to find out how it was that its correspondent, William Reeve, who had just re-opened BBC's studio in Kabul, Afghanistan, and was giving a live, down-the-line TV interview for BBC World, was suddenly blown out of his seat by an American smart missile. Coincidentally, four hours later, a few blocks away, the office and residential compound of the TV network al-Jazeera was hit by two more American missiles. The BBC, al-Jazeera and the Committee to Protect Journalists thought it prudent to find out from the Pentagon what had gone wrong, and if war came to Iraq, what steps they could take to protect their correspondents. Pentagon spokesperson Rear Admiral Craig Quigley, deputy assistant defense secretary for public affairs, was frank. Nothing had gone wrong. Quigley said the Pentagon was indifferent to media activity in territory controlled by the enemy. INSET: Why did soldiers shoot at released journalist's car?. (Copyright of Communication and Mass Media Complete)IPI Global JournalistVol. 651996Communication, Speech & Theatre Association of North Dakotap. 52-61.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineWarNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)TelevisionAdd
"By the Numbers Journalists Not Spared"The article informs about the damage caused to the media infrastructure by tsunami in the affected countries. In Indonesia, Serarnbi Indonesia, the only daily newspaper in Banda Aceh, lost 51 of its 193 staff in the tsunami. The newspaper's two-story building was severely damaged, its printing presses were wrecked, and the housing compound next door, where many employees lived, was leveled. In Banda Aceh, 11 radio stations were either damaged or destroyed and four radio stations in the Meulaboh area demolished. In Sri Lanka, about 58 percent of the more than 2,000 provincial Sri Lanka journalists are from the 14 Sri Lanka districts affected by the tsunami. From Malaysia, Thailand, Burma, Bangladesh, the Maldives, and East Africa and India there have been no reports of journalists harmed, though India's public TV broadcast station, Doordarshan, reports that some of its transmitters in the northern part of the Nicobar Islands were damaged by the waves. The article informs that the board of trustees of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation has approved $1 million in emergency funding to three international journalism organizations to work together to aid print and broadcast journalists in northwest Indonesia in the wake of the Indian Ocean tsunami. (Copyright of Communication and Mass Media Complete)IPI Global JournalistVol. 181995University of Marylandp. 10.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass disasterNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
Simpson, John"Beyond the Hazards of Duty"IPI Global JournalistVol. 20200802p. 5-30.NarrativeJournalism/Communication magazineWarNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)TelevisionAdd
Newman, Elana and Simpson, Roger
Handschuh, David"Trauma Exposure and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Among Photojournalist"News PhotographerVol. 372001Lawrence Erlbaum Associatesp. 1-24.Quasi-experimental researchJournalism/Communication magazineNon-specific/generalAdultOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)PTSDPhotojournalismAdd
"Death Watch"Global JournalistVol. 402007Summer2007p. 1-1.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineNonsexual crimeNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
"Don't Seal Our Lips"Global JournalistVol. 46200810p. 325-337.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass violenceNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
Depalma, Anthony"Suffering in Silence"Columbia Journalism ReviewVol. 16200311p. 32-40.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineTerrorismNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)PhotojournalismAdd
Long, Genevieve"The View from the Ground in Iraq and Afghanistan"QuillVol. 12720032003 Second Quarterp. 18.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineWarNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
Long, Genevieve"Women on a Mission in Pakistan and Afghanistan"Quill200501p. 131-141.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineWarNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Barriers to reporting on traumaAdd
Mbanga, Wilf"Zimbabwe Telling the Story, Reporting the News"Nieman Reports20072007 Annual MeetingInternational Communication Associationp. 1-1.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass violenceNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)PrintAdd
Meldrum, Andrew"In Zimbabwe, Courage Is the Journalist's Companion"Nieman ReportsVol. 542006Broadcast Education Associationp. 119-139.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass violenceNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
Menasche, Jacques"A Kind of Victory"Columbia Journalism ReviewVol. 552001Fall2001Reporter's Committee for Freedom of the Pressp. 8.OtherJournalism/Communication magazineMass violenceNAOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)Add
Almario-Gonzalez, M."The night watch: Filipino TV journalists and Oplan Tokhang: Experiencing coverage of the Duterte administration's bloody campaign against illegal drugs"Filipino journalists covering the graveyard shift were the first recorders of violence and brutality under Philippine President Duterte's anti-illegal drugs campaign. The first phase in 2016, called Oplan Tokhang, was executed ruthlessly and relentlessly. This study aims to explore how graveyard-shift TV journalists experienced covering Oplan Tokhang. The intention is to get a deeper understanding of how the experience impacted on the way they reported on the Oplan Tokhang stories. To get the essence of the Oplan Tokhang coverage experience, the study used a phenomenological research approach. Four graveyard-shift TV journalists agreed to face-to-face in-depth interviews. The participants came from major TV networks in the Philippines. Analysis of the results was framed within the lens of symbolic interactionism and discussions of past literature. The study presented constructed realities of four television journalists who described their nightly struggles to perform their duties, surrounded by a climate of death and suffering, in the violent world of Oplan Tokhang. Four themes emerged describing the experience: a) A 'horror fest' of violence, brutality and suffering; b) A constrained and controlled coverage; c) Objectivity and the truth; and d) Post-mortem: Falling short of fulfilling journalistic duties. These themes revealed ethical dilemmas encountered by the television journalists. They faced realities of intimidation and threat, resorting to self-censorship. Repeated exposure to violence desensitised the television journalists. The rush to meet nightly deadlines resulted in simplified treatment of stories, missing the context of the issue. In reflection, the TV journalists realised they fell short in fulfilling the journalist's obligation to search for the truth and to report it.Pacific Journalism ReviewVol. 242018Pacific Media Centrep. 42-63.Quasi-experimental researchJournalism specific journalMass violenceNonsexual crimeAdultOccupational health of journalists (negative consequences of reporting trauma)OtherNATelevisionNANANAAdd