2008
DOI: 10.1177/1940161208326598
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Organizational Production of Self-Censorship in the Hong Kong Media

Abstract: Media self-censorship refers to nonexternally compelled acts committed by media organizations aiming to avoid offending power holders such as the government, advertisers, and major business corporations. While self-censorship constitutes a major threat to press freedom in Hong Kong under China, recent studies have shown that Hong Kong journalists have maintained a strong sense of professionalism. The coexistence of professionalism and self-censorship poses important challenges to news organizations: How is sel… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…ABSR constituted the mean of these three items. The notion of caution has been associated with self-censorship in prior work 32 and allows for a measure of the most major form of censorship that which occurs before information is communicated. 12,16…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ABSR constituted the mean of these three items. The notion of caution has been associated with self-censorship in prior work 32 and allows for a measure of the most major form of censorship that which occurs before information is communicated. 12,16…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, traditional news media in Hong Kong also suffer from the problem of self-censorship (Lee and Chan, 2009). While the news media cannot totally ignore the large-scale rally and the issue of Tiananmen, the media are often perceived to have toned down the coverage in fear of enraging China.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One plausible reason is that the negative relationship between online political communication and news consumption is generated by a critical attitude toward the performance of the mainstream media in Hong Kong. Older adults may be more perceptive about the problem of self-censorship in the mainstream media (Lee and Chan, 2009). Hence their online political communication may become articulated with a sense of dissatisfaction with and lower levels of consumption of traditional news media.…”
Section: Predicting Online Political Communication and Participationmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Even journalists with a sense of being autonomous will have to conform to the rules of the organization where they work, which are often tacit rules or ambiguous requests by superiors, like asking for a "balanced" view. Self-censorship in undemocratic societies can be very elusive with various informal mechanisms when news organizations need their workers to follow specifi c approaches when covering a story, but professional journalists also are often able to evade these mechanisms (Lee and Chan 2009 ).…”
Section: Press Freedom and Censorshipmentioning
confidence: 99%