Celeste González De Bustamante, Jeannine E Relly
Surviving Mexico
Resistance and Resilience Among Journalists in the Twenty-First Century
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Celeste González De Bustamante, Jeannine E Relly
Surviving Mexico
Resistance and Resilience Among Journalists in the Twenty-First Century
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A rigorously researched study shows how Mexican organized crime enjoys the protection of government officials, and some media companies, while individual journalists and their allies try to safeguard themselves and those willing to expose corruption and c
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A rigorously researched study shows how Mexican organized crime enjoys the protection of government officials, and some media companies, while individual journalists and their allies try to safeguard themselves and those willing to expose corruption and c
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Univ of Chicago Behalf of University of Texas
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 476g
- ISBN-13: 9781477323694
- ISBN-10: 1477323694
- Artikelnr.: 60600896
- Verlag: Univ of Chicago Behalf of University of Texas
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 476g
- ISBN-13: 9781477323694
- ISBN-10: 1477323694
- Artikelnr.: 60600896
Celeste González de Bustamante is an associate professor at the University of Arizona School of Journalism, where she directs the Center for Border and Global Journalism. She is the author of “Muy buenas noches”: Mexico, Television, and the Cold War and coeditor of Arizona Firestorm: Global Immigration Realities, National Media, and Provincial Politics. Jeannine E. Relly is a professor with the School of Journalism and School of Government & Public Policy (with courtesy) at the University of Arizona. She is affiliated with the Center for Latin American Studies. Before joining academia, she worked as a journalist for news outlets in the Caribbean, the Mexico-US borderlands, and several US states. She is the director of Global Initiatives at the UA School of Journalism.
1. List of Illustrations and Tables
2. Acknowledgments
3. Introduction: Mexico’s Peripheries as a Case Study for Violence against
Journalists around the World
4. Part I. The Past, Place, and Politics of Violence against Journalists
* 1. How Journalists Became Their Own Activists: A Historical
Perspective
* 2. Place Matters: The Promise and Limits of the Periphery
* 3. Moving Targets and Perpetrators: Mercurial Violence, Ownership,
and Changing Journalism Practices
5. Part II. Murdering the Messengers and Controlling the Message
* 4. Red Light, Green Light: Strategies of Resistance among Journalists
in the Peripheries
* 5. The Personal and Familial Toll: Violence, Trauma, and Resilience
* 6. Social Media, Digital Insecurity, and Journalists’ Safety
6. Part III. Structured and Unstructured Attempts to Save Journalism and
Journalists
* 7. Attempts to Intervene
* 8. State Actors, Violence, and Resilience among Organized Crime
Groups
* 9. Women on the Frontline: Resistance and Resilience in Ciudad Juárez
7. Conclusion: Toward a More Secure Journalism Future
8. Appendix: Journalists Killed in Mexico 2000–2020, by Presidential
Administration
9. Notes
10. References
11. Index
2. Acknowledgments
3. Introduction: Mexico’s Peripheries as a Case Study for Violence against
Journalists around the World
4. Part I. The Past, Place, and Politics of Violence against Journalists
* 1. How Journalists Became Their Own Activists: A Historical
Perspective
* 2. Place Matters: The Promise and Limits of the Periphery
* 3. Moving Targets and Perpetrators: Mercurial Violence, Ownership,
and Changing Journalism Practices
5. Part II. Murdering the Messengers and Controlling the Message
* 4. Red Light, Green Light: Strategies of Resistance among Journalists
in the Peripheries
* 5. The Personal and Familial Toll: Violence, Trauma, and Resilience
* 6. Social Media, Digital Insecurity, and Journalists’ Safety
6. Part III. Structured and Unstructured Attempts to Save Journalism and
Journalists
* 7. Attempts to Intervene
* 8. State Actors, Violence, and Resilience among Organized Crime
Groups
* 9. Women on the Frontline: Resistance and Resilience in Ciudad Juárez
7. Conclusion: Toward a More Secure Journalism Future
8. Appendix: Journalists Killed in Mexico 2000–2020, by Presidential
Administration
9. Notes
10. References
11. Index
1. List of Illustrations and Tables
2. Acknowledgments
3. Introduction: Mexico’s Peripheries as a Case Study for Violence against
Journalists around the World
4. Part I. The Past, Place, and Politics of Violence against Journalists
* 1. How Journalists Became Their Own Activists: A Historical
Perspective
* 2. Place Matters: The Promise and Limits of the Periphery
* 3. Moving Targets and Perpetrators: Mercurial Violence, Ownership,
and Changing Journalism Practices
5. Part II. Murdering the Messengers and Controlling the Message
* 4. Red Light, Green Light: Strategies of Resistance among Journalists
in the Peripheries
* 5. The Personal and Familial Toll: Violence, Trauma, and Resilience
* 6. Social Media, Digital Insecurity, and Journalists’ Safety
6. Part III. Structured and Unstructured Attempts to Save Journalism and
Journalists
* 7. Attempts to Intervene
* 8. State Actors, Violence, and Resilience among Organized Crime
Groups
* 9. Women on the Frontline: Resistance and Resilience in Ciudad Juárez
7. Conclusion: Toward a More Secure Journalism Future
8. Appendix: Journalists Killed in Mexico 2000–2020, by Presidential
Administration
9. Notes
10. References
11. Index
2. Acknowledgments
3. Introduction: Mexico’s Peripheries as a Case Study for Violence against
Journalists around the World
4. Part I. The Past, Place, and Politics of Violence against Journalists
* 1. How Journalists Became Their Own Activists: A Historical
Perspective
* 2. Place Matters: The Promise and Limits of the Periphery
* 3. Moving Targets and Perpetrators: Mercurial Violence, Ownership,
and Changing Journalism Practices
5. Part II. Murdering the Messengers and Controlling the Message
* 4. Red Light, Green Light: Strategies of Resistance among Journalists
in the Peripheries
* 5. The Personal and Familial Toll: Violence, Trauma, and Resilience
* 6. Social Media, Digital Insecurity, and Journalists’ Safety
6. Part III. Structured and Unstructured Attempts to Save Journalism and
Journalists
* 7. Attempts to Intervene
* 8. State Actors, Violence, and Resilience among Organized Crime
Groups
* 9. Women on the Frontline: Resistance and Resilience in Ciudad Juárez
7. Conclusion: Toward a More Secure Journalism Future
8. Appendix: Journalists Killed in Mexico 2000–2020, by Presidential
Administration
9. Notes
10. References
11. Index