How Well Do India's Multiple Language Dailies Provide Political Knowledge to Citizens of this Electoral Democracy?

Type Journal Article - Journalism Studies
Title How Well Do India's Multiple Language Dailies Provide Political Knowledge to Citizens of this Electoral Democracy?
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 1-16
URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1461670X.2015.1054185#.Vdn0mvntmko
Abstract
This article investigates journalism's supply of political knowledge to citizens in India's democracy. The contribution of newspapers to informed citizenship is measured by content analysis measuring the quantity, quality, and regional equality of political knowledge distribution. The content area selected for analysis of newspaper representations is the indigenous armed struggle modeled on China's Maoist revolution, the alternative to electoral democracy that both the Manmohan Singh and Narendra Modi administrations consider India's greatest internal security threat. All coverage from 2011 to 2012 in the highest circulation daily in each of five languages (Hindi, Telegu, Bengali, Urdu, and English) was selected for analysis. Findings in this article focus on the differences in the amount of coverage, topics that set the public agenda, how they were framed, and how the stories performed on a specially prepared news comprehensiveness index. Concerns are raised about significant regional inequalities in political knowledge supply to distinct linguistic electoral constituencies that are pulling at the seams of this young multiple-nation democracy. The article closes with a question relevant to all democracies: can for-profit news organizations be relied on as the only pillar of public citizenship education essential to democratic functioning?

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