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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. There were three primary concerns for instituting executive press censorship during Operation Desert Storm: the questionable tactics the media use to purportedly report the truth; the very real chance of classified information reaching enemy hands; and the ever present possibility of reporters getting harmed or even killed while covering the front lines. These issues are significant to the field of communications law, because they represent the sanctity of privacy that is so instrumental in the overall safety of wartime activities. The writer addresses these three issues as they pertain the censorship implementation. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Warpress.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
postulating the journalists own personal opinions rather than by assimilating the reality of the crisis. Operation Desert Storm foresaw these possibilities and more when the Gulf war began escalating.
In an effort to avert the potential catastrophe due to unfavorable media coverage, executive press censorship was implemented immediately. There were three
primary concerns for instituting this ban: the questionable tactics the media use to purportedly report the truth; the very real chance of classified information reaching enemy hands; and the ever
present possibility of reporters getting harmed or even killed while covering the front lines. These issues are significant to the field of communications law, because they represent the sanctity
of privacy that is so instrumental in the overall safety of wartime activities. Thus far, the writers research has uncovered pertinent motivation for
such media restrictions in articles from The World & I and Journal of Arts Management, Law & Society, which will attempt to demonstrate the connection between media censorship during Operation
Desert Storm and its significance to the field of communications law. II. INTRODUCTION America was eager to know what was truly going
on behind the scenes during Operation Desert Storm, and the media graciously obliged by offering a clear perspective of the wartime activities as they unfolded right before Americas eyes.
Or did they? With the often varying and distorted accounts of reality that are routinely portrayed by the media -- such as with the Vietnam War -- there came
a call for executive press censorship so that Americans were not fed a slanted or misinterpreted version of the events. As well, the media were subdued for the overall
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