Library

Published Articles & Books

This bibliography was created by Chen Peishan. It is now maintained by Law Loo Shien, Subject Librarian for Communication Research and Journalism at the Communication & Information Library (NTU). Please email Loo Shien at looshien@ntu.edu.sg if you wish to recommend other publications for inclusion.

  • Ang, P.H. (2007). “Singapore Media“. Special to journalism.sg.
  • Ang, P.H. & Yeo, T.M. (1998). Mass Media Laws and Regulations in Singapore. Singapore: Asian Media Information and Communication Centre.
  • Article 19 (2005). Freedom of Expression and the Media in Singapore. London: Article 19.
  • Bokhorst-Heng, W. (2002). Newspapers in Singapore: a mass ceremony in the imagining of the nation. Media, Culture & Society, 24(4), 559.
  • Cenite, M., Shing Yee, C., Teck Juan, H., Li Qin, L., & Xian Lin, T. (2008). Perpetual development journalism? Balance and framing in the 2006 Singapore election coverage. Asian Journal of Communication, 18(3), 280-295.
  • Chang, T.-K. (1999). Reporting Public Opinion in Singapore. Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics, 4(1), 11.
  • Cheam, J. (2006). Press freedom in Singapore: the Oriental view and the impact of the digital age. Goldsmiths College, University of London, London.
  • Cheong, Y. S. (2013). OB markers : My Straits Times story. Singapore: Straits Times Press.
  • Chia, S. C., & Poo, Y. L. (2009). Media, celebrities and fans: an examination of adolescents’ media usage and involvement with entertainment celebrities. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 86(1), 23-44.
  • Chia, S. C., Shing Yew Joel, Y., Wong, Z. W. D., & Wei Ling, K. (2007). Personal bias or government bias? Testing the hostile media effect in a regulated press system. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 19(3), 313-330.
  • Detenber, B. H., Cenite, M., Ku, M. K. Y., Ong, C. P. L., Tong, H. Y., & Yeow, M. L. H. (2007). Singaporeans’ attitudes toward lesbians and gay men and their tolerance of media portrayals of homosexuality. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 19(3), 367-379.
  • DeVoss, D. (1978). Southeast Asia’s intimidated press. Columbia Journalism Review, 16(6), 37-39.
  • Edge, M. (2004). Pie Sharing or Food Fight? The Impact of Regulatory Changes on Media Market Competition in Singapore. JMM: The International Journal on Media Management, 6(3/4), 184-193.
  • Edge, M. (2004). The Failure of Project Eyeball: A Case of Product Overpricing or Market Overcrowding? International Journal on Media Management, 6(1-2), 114-122.
  • Fernandez, W., Han, F. K., & Tan, S. (1998). “Minding the Media”, in “Lee Kuan Yew: the man and his ideas”. Singapore: The Straits Times Press.
  • George, C. (2014). Why Singapore Journalists Don’t Press for Legal Reform. In Andrew T. Kenyon, T. Marjoribanks & A. Whiting (Eds.), Democracy, Media and Law in Malaysia and Singapore: A Space for Speech. London: Routledge.
  • George, C. (2013). The Internet as a Platform for Civil Disobedience. In J. Hartley, J. Burgess & A. Bruns (Eds.), A Companion to New Media Dynamics. Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • George, C. (2012). Freedom from the press : Journalism and state power in Singapore. Singapore: NUS Press.
  • George, C. (2011). Internet politics, shouting down the PAP. In Tan, K. & Lee, T. (Eds.), Voting in change : politics of Singapore’s 2011 general election. Singapore: Ethos Books.
  • George, C. (2010). Control-shift: The Internet and Political Change in Singapore. In Chong, T. (Ed.), Management of Success: Singapore Revisited. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
  • George, C. (2008). Framing The Fight Against Terror : Order versus Liberty in Singapore and Malaysia. In Sen, K. & Lee, T. (Eds.), Political regimes and the media in Asia. London, New York: Routledge.
  • George, C. (2007). Credibility deficits. Journalism Studies, 8(6), 898-908.
  • George, C. (2006) Contentious Journalism and the Internet: Towards Democratic Discourse in Malaysia and Singapore. Singapore: Singapore University Press and Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press.
  • George, C. (2006) “Asian Journalisms: Neglected Alternatives”, in Xiaoming Hao & Sundanda K. Datta-Ray (eds.) Issues and Challenges in Asian Journalism. Singapore: Times Academic Press.
  • George, C. (2006) “Newspapers”, in Singapore: The Encyclopaedia. Singapore: Editions Didier Millet.
  • George, C. (2005). “Calibrated coercion and the maintenance of hegemony in Singapore,” Asia Research Institute Working Paper, No. 48.
  • George, C. (2002) “Singapore: Media at the Mainstream and the Margins”, in Russell Heng (Ed.), Media Fortunes, Changing Times: ASEAN States in Transition. Singapore: Institute of South East Asian Studies.
  • George, C. (2000) “Freedom from the Press”, in Singapore: The Air-conditioned Nation. Essays on the Politics of Comfort and Control, 1990-2000. Singapore: Landmark Books.
  • Giok-Ling, O. (2000). Civil Society, Democracy and the Role of the Media in Singapore. Media Asia, 27(4), 200-222.
  • Goh, D. (2008). It’s the Gays’ Fault: News and HIV as Weapons Against Homosexuality in Singapore. Journal Of Communication Inquiry, 32(4), 383-399.
  • Gomez, J. (1999). Self-censorship: Singapore’s Shame. Singapore: Think Centre.
  • Gomez, J. (Ed.). (2001). Publish and Perish: The Censorship of Opposition Party Publications in Singapore. Singapore: National Solidarity Party
  • Gomez, J. (2001). Singapore: New Technologies, Old Values. In S. Coronel (Ed.), Access to Information in Southeast Asia. Manila: Philippine Center of Investigative Journalism.
  • Gomez, J. (2002). Information Technology as a Tool for Control in Singapore. Development Dialogue, 1, 62-76.
  • Gomez, J. (2002). Internet Politics: Surveillance and Intimidation in Singapore. Singapore: Think Centre
  • Gomez, J. (2002). Think Centre: The Internet and Politics in the New Economy Asian Journal of Social Science, 30(2), 304-318.
  • Gomez, J. (2006). Citizen Journalism’: Bridging the Discrepancy in Singapore’s General Elections News. Südostasien Aktuell – Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 6, 3-34.
  • Gomez, J. (2006). Restricting Free Speech: The Impact on Opposition Parties in Singapore. Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies, 23.
  • Gomez, J. (2008). Online Opposition in Singapore: Communications Outreach Without Electoral Gain. Journal of Contemporary Asia, 38(4), 591-612.
  • Hachten, W. A. (1989). Media Development without Press Freedom. Lee Kuan Yew’s Singapore. Journalism Quarterly, 66(4), 822-827.
  • Hao, X., & George, C. (2012). Singapore journalism: Buying into a winning formula. In Weaver, D. H. & Willnat, L. (Eds.), The global journalist in the 21st century. New York: Routledge.
  • Heng, W. B. (2002). Newspaper in Singapore: A mass ceremony in the imaging of the nation. Media, Culture & Society, 24(4), 559-569.
  • Hor, M., & Seah, C. (1991). Selected issues in the freedom of speech and expression in Singapore, in Singapore Law Review.
  • International Bar Association Human Rights Institute (2008) Prosperity versus Individual Rights: Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law in Singapore. London: International Bar Association
  • Kaur, K., & Ramanathan, S. (2008). ‘Wither’ media regulation?: Experiences of Malaysia and Singapore. Journal of International Communication, 14(1), 7-27.
  • Kliesch, R. E. (1980). News Media Presence and Southeast Asia. Journalism Quarterly, 57(2), 255-261.
  • Knight, A. (2007). Jihad and cross-cultural media: Osama bin Laden as reported in the Asian press. Pacific Journalism Review, 13(2), 155-174.
  • Kwong, A. (1999) A Duty to Communicate: the Public Interest Defence to Offences under Section 5 of the Official Secrets Act, in Singapore Law Review.
  • Lee, K. Y. (2000) “Managing the Media”, in From Third World To First. The Singapore Story: 1965-2000. Singapore: Times Media.
  • Lee, T. (2014). Media governmentality in Singapore. In Andrew T. Kenyon, T. Marjoribanks & A. Whiting (Eds.), Democracy, Media and Law in Malaysia and Singapore: A Space for Speech. London: Routledge.
  • Lee, T. (2011). Mainstream media reporting in the lead-up to GE2011.  In Tan, K. & Lee, T. (Eds.), Voting in change : politics of Singapore’s 2011 general election. Singapore: Ethos Books.
  • Lee, T. (2010). Media Governmentality and Political Communication. In The media, cultural control and government in Singapore. London, New York: Routledge.
  • Lee, T. & Willnat, L. (2009). Media management and political communication in Singapore. In Willnat, L. & Aw, A. (Eds)., Political communication in Asia (pp. 93-111). New York: Routledge, 2009.
  • Lee, T., & Kan, C. (2009). Blogospheric pressures in Singapore: Internet discourses and the 2006 general election. Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, 23(6), 871-886.
  • Leo, P., & Lee, T. (2004). The ‘New’ Singapore: mediating culture and creativity. Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, 18(2), 205-218.
  • Leung, C. C. M., & Huang, V. (2007). The paradox of journalistic representation of the other: The case of SARS coverage on China and Vietnam by western-led English-language media in five countries. Journalism, 8(6), 675-697.
  • Loh, C. K. (2011). The role of the media, investigative journalism in Singapore. In Chong, T. (Ed.), The AWARE saga : civil society and public morality in Singapore (pp. 96-105). Singapore: NUS Press.
  • Luo, Y., & Hao, X. (2007). Media Portrayal of Women and Social Change. Feminist Media Studies, 7(3), 281-298.
  • Maslog, C., Seow Ting, L., & Hun Shik, K. (2006). Framing Analysis of a Conflict: How Newspapers in Five Asian Countries Covered the Iraq War. Asian Journal of Communication, 16(1), 19-39.
  • Massey, B. L., & Chang, L.-j. A. (2002). Locating Asian Values in Asian Journalism: A Content Analysis of Web Newspapers. Journal of Communication, 52(4), 987.
  • Nash, C., & Bacon, W. (2006). 6. Reporting sustainability in the English-language press of Southeast Asia. Pacific Journalism Review, 12(2), 106-135.
  • Natarajan, K., & Xiaoming, H. (2003). An Asian Voice? A Comparative Study of Channel News Asia and CNN. Journal of Communication, 53(2), 300-314.
  • Polsky, A. (October 1971 – 1972). Lee Kuan Yew versus the Press, Pacific Community, An Asian Quarterly Review, 3(1-4).
  • Portmann, K. (2011). A buzz in cyberspace, but no net-revolution: The role of the internet in Singapore’s 2011 election. Berlin: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung.
  • Ramchand, A.M. (1990). Freedom of the Press: Regulation Under the Newspaper and Printing Presses Act, 1974, in Singapore Law Review.
  • Rodan, G. (1998). Asia and the International Press: the Political Significance of Expanding Markets, Democratization, 5(2), pp. 125-54.
  • Rodan, G. (1998). The Internet and Political Control in Singapore. Political Science Quarterly, 113(1), pp. 63-90.
  • Rodan, G. (2000). Asian Crisis, Transparency and the International Media in Singapore. The Pacific Review, 13(2), pp. 217-242.
  • Rodan, G. (2000). Singapore: Information Lockdown, Business as Usual. In L. Williams & R. Rich (Eds.), Losing Control: Freedom of the Press in Asia (pp. 169-189). Canberra: Asia Pacific Press, Australian National University.
  • Rodan, G. (2002). The Implications of the Asian Crisis for Media Control in Asia. In M. Beeson (Ed.), Reconfiguring East Asia: Regional Institutions and Organisations After the Crisis (pp. 61-82). London: Routledge Curzon Press.
  • Rodan, G. (2003). Embracing Electronic Media but Suppressing Civil Society: Authoritarian Consolidation in Singapore. The Pacific Review, 16(4), pp. 503-24.
  • Rodan, G. (2004). Transparency and Authoritarian Rule in Southeast Asia: Singapore and Malaysia. London: Routledge.
  • Seow, F. T. (1998). The Media Enthralled: Singapore Revisited.. Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienner.
  • Sim, J. L. (2014). “I am not a journalist”: Identity negotiation among subcultural media ‘journalists’ in Singapore. Paper presented at the 6th Annual Postgraduate Student Forum, 17-18 January 2014, organised by the Department of Anthropology, the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
  • Sim, S.-F. (2003). The media’s construction of consensus and the softening of authoritarianism in Singapore. Paper presented at the Conference Papers — International Communication Association.
  • Sim, S.-F. (2006). Obliterating The Political: One-party ideological dominance and the personalization of news in Singapore 211. Journalism Studies, 7(4), 575-592.
  • Sun Sun, T., & Yen Ling, T. (2004). Parental control of new media usage in Singapore. Australian Journal of Communication, 31(1), 57-74.
  • Tan, K. (1999) Fifty Years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: A Singapore Reflection, in Singapore Law Review.
  • Tan, K. (2005) An Introduction to Singapore’s Constitution. Singapore: Talisman.
  • Tan, T. H., Chung, S. & Zhang, W. (2011). Survey on Political Traits and Media Use. Singapore: Institute of Policy Studies
  • Tan, T. H. (2010). Singapore’s Print Media Policy: A National Success? In Chong, T. (Ed.), Management of Success: Singapore Revisited. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
  • Tan, T. H. & Mahizhnan, A. (2008). Subverting Seriousness and Other Misdemeanours: Modes of resistance against OB markers in the 2006 Singapore General Election. Media Asia, 35(4), 207-212.
  • Tan, T. L. (1990) The Singapore Press: Freedom, Responsibility and Credibility. Singapore: Times Academic Press for the Institute of Policy Studies.
  • Tandoc, E. C. (2014). The Roles of the Game: The Influence of News Consumption Patterns on the Role Conceptions of Journalism Students. Journalism & Mass Communication Educator, first published on February 5, 2014 as doi:10.1177/1077695813520314
  • Turnbull, M. (1995) Dateline Singapore: 150 Years of The Straits Times. Singapore: Singapore Press Holdings.
  • Wagstaff, J. (2010) Southeast Asian Media: Patterns of Production and Consumption. A Survey of National Media in 10 Countries of Southeast Asia. New York: Open Society Institute.
  • Weiss, M. L. (2014). New media, new activism: trends and trajectories in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia. International Development Planning Review, 36(1), 91-109.
  • Wong, K. (2004). Asian-based development journalism and political elections. Gazette: International Journal for Communication Studies, 66(1), 25-40.
  • Xu, X. (2000). Asian Perspectives in Communication: Assessing the Search. American Communication Journal, 3(3), 1.

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