36 分鐘

News Media Coverage of MVIs MVP - Mass Violence Podcast

    • 心理健康

MVP returns for a new season as host Dan Smith is joined by the NMVC's Associate Academicc Program Director, Anne Seymour, to talk about news media coverage of mass violence incidents. The news media is an essential partner for law enforcement during an MVI, especially to disseminate immediate messages and warnings to the public quickly. But it’s important for journalists to learn about appropriate, sensitive, and victim-informed coverage of traumatic events, and to educate themselves on vicarious trauma when covering complex and disturbing topics.



Resources:

The NMVC collection of resources for Journalists includes sections about the impact of media exposure, self care, advice for editors, covering gun violence, and covering mass violence.

From: Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma
Trauma & Journalism: A Practical Guide
This thirty-one-page booklet gives guidance to journalists, editors, managers and other media professionals on working with traumatic material. It offers tips on interviewing, highlights common mistakes made in trauma reporting and suggests what individuals and media teams can do to look after themselves while working in challenging situations.
https://dartcenter.org/content/trauma-journalism-handbookOther Dart Center resources for Homicide and Mass Shooting


From: Journal of Mass Media Ethics

Listeners, not Leeches: What Virginia Tech Survivors Needed from Journalists

From: Journalism Practice:

Covering Mass Shootings: Journalists’ perceptions of coverage and factors influencing attitudes

MVP returns for a new season as host Dan Smith is joined by the NMVC's Associate Academicc Program Director, Anne Seymour, to talk about news media coverage of mass violence incidents. The news media is an essential partner for law enforcement during an MVI, especially to disseminate immediate messages and warnings to the public quickly. But it’s important for journalists to learn about appropriate, sensitive, and victim-informed coverage of traumatic events, and to educate themselves on vicarious trauma when covering complex and disturbing topics.



Resources:

The NMVC collection of resources for Journalists includes sections about the impact of media exposure, self care, advice for editors, covering gun violence, and covering mass violence.

From: Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma
Trauma & Journalism: A Practical Guide
This thirty-one-page booklet gives guidance to journalists, editors, managers and other media professionals on working with traumatic material. It offers tips on interviewing, highlights common mistakes made in trauma reporting and suggests what individuals and media teams can do to look after themselves while working in challenging situations.
https://dartcenter.org/content/trauma-journalism-handbookOther Dart Center resources for Homicide and Mass Shooting


From: Journal of Mass Media Ethics

Listeners, not Leeches: What Virginia Tech Survivors Needed from Journalists

From: Journalism Practice:

Covering Mass Shootings: Journalists’ perceptions of coverage and factors influencing attitudes

36 分鐘