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This research is a deliberate attempt to examine the editorial treatment of the 2008 Mumbai Attacks in the news papers - DAWN and Times of India - of both India and Pakistan in between November 26, 2008 and November 26, 2009. The main interest lies in the media s role in shaping foreign as well as public policy discourse through its framing. For that matter, editorial treatment of both the papers is thoroughly examined to understand that How they interpret the unfolding of the Mumbai massacre for their readers by pointing fingers on who or what forces? And How they interpret salience of the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This research is a deliberate attempt to examine the editorial treatment of the 2008 Mumbai Attacks in the news papers - DAWN and Times of India - of both India and Pakistan in between November 26, 2008 and November 26, 2009. The main interest lies in the media s role in shaping foreign as well as public policy discourse through its framing. For that matter, editorial treatment of both the papers is thoroughly examined to understand that How they interpret the unfolding of the Mumbai massacre for their readers by pointing fingers on who or what forces? And How they interpret salience of the story and eventually frame and narrate the discourse in their editorials of defense and foreign policy decision making debate in the changing nature of Indo-Pak relations proceeding the one year of [26/11] Mumbai attacks.
Autorenporträt
Muhammad Ajmal Jami is working as an Anchor and Special Correspondent at Dunya News since 2010. He started his career in 2005 from FM Radio and subsequently joined Express News in 2007. Jami earned his B.S (Hons) from Institute of the Communication Studies, University of the Punjab Lahore in 2008. He did his M.Phil in 2011 from the Center for Sou