The transformation of journalism in India—the worlds largest democracy and one of its fa
问题详情
The transformation of journalism in India—the worlds largest democracy and one of its fastest growing economies—has implications for journalism around the world. With approaching 100 round-the-clock news channels—unrivalled in any other country—India boasts the worlds most linguistic diverse news【M1】______ landscape. This offers exciting opportunities, as well challenges to【M2】______ professional journalists and scholars of international journalism. The India Media Centre, the worlds first academic centre which dedicated to studying globalizing tendencies of media【M3】______ in India, is organizing the pioneering conference to address【M4】______ the implications of this major media development. This international gathering will bring together journalists and journalism scholars around the world to examine the changing face【M5】______ of journalism in India and their impact on the rest of the world.【M6】______ According to the World Association of Newspapers, the sale of newspapers in India is booming: circulation grew by 46 per cent between 2000 and 2008 and more than 99 million copies of newspapers were sold in India every day. The Times of India is【M7】______ now the worlds largest circulating, English-language "quality"【M8】______ newspaper. From FM and community radio to online media, journalists are finding new ways to communicate with a requiring【M9】______ and fragmenting audience, including a young and vocal, middle-class diaspora. International media groups—from financial, to sport journalism to entertainment news—are extending and embedding their operations into that is one of the worlds biggest【M10】______ news bazaars.
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