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Author = Horgan, John;
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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 34 on page 1 of 2
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‘Government Sources Said Last Night . . . The Development of the Parliamentary Press Lobby in Modern Ireland”,
(2001)
Horgan, John
‘Government Sources Said Last Night . . . The Development of the Parliamentary Press Lobby in Modern Ireland”,
(2001)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21775/
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Aggiornamento
(2006)
Horgan, John
Aggiornamento
(2006)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
When I first attempted to join the staff of the Irish Times, I hadn’t even heard of Douglas Gageby. I had an introduction to Seamus Kelly and worked that line for a time until, after dozens of phone calls to the ‘Irishman’s Diary’ office which—to my innocent surprise and eventual disillusionment—were never answered and never returned, I knocked on the door of Conor O’Brien at the Evening Press and got a job.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21609/
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Anti-Communism and Media Surveillance in Ireland 1948-50
(2000)
Horgan, John
Anti-Communism and Media Surveillance in Ireland 1948-50
(2000)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
Ireland in the immediate post-war period offers, to the student of Cold War politics and intrigues, some unusual insights into the nature of political surveillance in general and to the surveillance of the press in particular, according to documents recently released by the US State department and made available in the US National Archives in Washington. Politically, the situation was becoming more volatile. Fianna Fail, which had been in power continuously since 1932 and had won its most recent election in 1944, was coming under increasingly vocal criticism from two key groups of erstwhile supporters: urban workers, who had been chafing under wages stand-still orders for much of the war and who were disappointed that the end of the conflict had not produced much in the way of material benefits; and republicans, many of whom had been interned during the war, and some of whom felt in any case that a sense of drive and purpose was missing from Fianna Fail's approach to the natio...
http://doras.dcu.ie/21598/
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Anti-Communism and Media Surveillance in Ireland 1948-50
(2016)
Horgan, John
Anti-Communism and Media Surveillance in Ireland 1948-50
(2016)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
Ireland in the immediate post-war period offers, to the student of Cold War politics and intrigues, some unusual insights into the nature of political surveillance in general and to the surveillance of the press in particular, according to documents recently released by the US State department and made available in the US National Archives in Washington.1 Politically, the situation was becoming more volatile. Fianna Fáil, which had been in power continuously since 1942 and had won its most recent election in 1944, was coming under increasingly vocal criticism from two key groups of erstwhile supporters: urban workers, who had been chafing under wages stand-still orders for much of the war, and who were disappointed that the end of the conflict had not produced much in the way of material benefits; and republicans, many of whom had been interned during the war, and some of whom felt in any case that a sense of drive and purpose was missing from Fianna Fáil's approach to the nati...
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol8/iss1/4
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Biographical note by John Horgan on his grandfather, J.J. Horgan, author of Parnell to Pearse
(2009)
Horgan, John
Biographical note by John Horgan on his grandfather, J.J. Horgan, author of Parnell to Pearse
(2009)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21602/
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Daniel O’Connell: Politics and the Press
(2016)
Horgan, John
Daniel O’Connell: Politics and the Press
(2016)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21603/
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Dropping the Captain: Louis McRedmond at the Irish Independent 1968-70
(2016)
Horgan, John
Dropping the Captain: Louis McRedmond at the Irish Independent 1968-70
(2016)
Horgan, John
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol14/iss1/6
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Dropping the Captain: the short but eventful editorship of Louis McRedmond at the Irish Independent, 1968-70.
(2014)
Horgan, John
Dropping the Captain: the short but eventful editorship of Louis McRedmond at the Irish Independent, 1968-70.
(2014)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
RECENT EVENTS BOTH BEFORE AND AFTER the publication of Lord Justice Leveson’s Report into regulatory aspects of the newspaper industry in Britain have tended to concentrate on ethical and professional issues as manifested in the practices of a substantial number of British national papers. Of less immediate concern – but, it could be argued, of some significance in the longer term – has been the relationship between proprietors and editors. It can reasonably be suggested that because the issues surrounding journalism practice are at least as cultural as they are legal or regulatory, and because culture within organisations flows down from the top rather than seeps up from the bottom, these relationships are deserving of further study than they have received to date. In the specific British context, the role of the effective proprietor of the News International group of newspapers has been evident in two sharply contrasting ways: in Mr Murdoch’s doughty, if behind-the-scenes, defence...
http://doras.dcu.ie/21790/
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Ethics in society at all levels: political, civil society, media and business. Contribution by Professor John Horgan, Press Ombudsman (Ireland)
(2010)
Horgan, John
Ethics in society at all levels: political, civil society, media and business. Contribution by Professor John Horgan, Press Ombudsman (Ireland)
(2010)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
Over the past decade, there has been increasing interest in the European Union in the question of media regulation. The oldest media regulation system, that of the Swedish Ombudsman and Press Council, dates from 1916. That model, and many others of more recent date, form part of the AIPCE – the Alliance of Independent Press Councils of Europe. To the best of my knowledge, no two press councils in Europe are the same. This is not a weakness. It reflects the fact that each institution has emerged organically from the culture and history of the state in which it is situated. The name of our organization – it is an “Alliance”, not an “Association” - underlines the fact that uniformity of structure, or of policy, is neither desirable nor necessary. At the same time, the existence and the regular meetings of the Alliance provide an invaluable forum for the exchange of views and experiences, so that each local organization can benefit from the accumulated wisdom of the others. What I have ...
http://doras.dcu.ie/21778/
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Government, Propaganda and the Irish News Agency
(2016)
Horgan, John
Government, Propaganda and the Irish News Agency
(2016)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
The theme of identity forged in adversity has bulked large on the agenda of the founders of many small nation states, and the case of Ireland is no exception. The extent and nature of the Irish diaspora, in addition, has given this theme an added dimension: its propagation to the world at large. Bending the world's ear to the cause of righting . Ireland's wrongs has been a constant, if rarely successful, strand in Irish nationalist policy for over two centuries. It is only in more recent times, however, that it has become more formally associated with the official structures of the State, most notably in the seven-year experimental existence of the Irish News Agency (I.N.A.). The history of this institution, unique in the Irish administrative system, provides us with important perspectives on government ideology in relation to Northern Ireland and in relation to the news media themselves, as well as on the nature of professional journalism in Ireland in the 1950s.
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol3/iss1/6
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Ireland’s Press Ombudsman, John Horgan, on accountability, regulation and redress: Where do press councils stand?
(2012)
Horgan, John
Ireland’s Press Ombudsman, John Horgan, on accountability, regulation and redress: Where do press councils stand?
(2012)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
In recent years, the creation of a number of press councils in Europe and elsewhere, as well as the concurrent appointment of internal ombudsmen or readers’ representatives in many significant newspapers, particularly in the United States, is a clear response to a growing public perception that there is a need for an appropriate level of accountability for the print media. It is fair to assume that this is related, in part, to a public perception that there is a need for remedies for abuses of media power – as there is a need for remedies for abuses of institutional power in any society.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21774/
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Irish print and broadcast media: The political, economic, journalistic and technological context
(2007)
Horgan, John; McNamara, Paul; O'Sullivan, John
Irish print and broadcast media: The political, economic, journalistic and technological context
(2007)
Horgan, John; McNamara, Paul; O'Sullivan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21610/
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Journalism education: the future
(2009)
Horgan, John
Journalism education: the future
(2009)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
How can we decide what journalism education should look like in the future if we do not know what journalism itself will look like in the future? The prophets of doom are everywhere. Some of them may yet be proven right. But history has a way of making some of the prophets of doom eat their words, if they stick around for long enough, and it is certainly true that some of those prophets who have been most excited by technological change have ended up with egg on their faces. As my colleague James Curran pointed out recently, the CD-ROM, the camcorder, and cable television were all going to revolutionise the world of communications, but somehow it didn’t happen quite like that.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21623/
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Laying the foundation – politics
(2012)
Horgan, John
Laying the foundation – politics
(2012)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
Addressing the issue of the political context at the time of Ireland’s first application to join the Common Market (as it then was) has more than a few ironic aspects in the light of more recent events, and I would like to address a few of them. One of them is the relationship between Ireland and Britain, then and now. Needless to say, any resemblance to current political events is entirely unintentional. Another is a sub-set of that – the foreign policy of Fianna Fáil in relation to both to Britain and to Europe, then and now. A third is the political culture of this Republic as a whole, then and now. You do not have to delve too deeply into political history to unearth evidence that things were not always as they seemed in these departments, or at least not as they are generally remembered.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21605/
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Maintaining freedom with responsibility: the evolving role of non-statutory press councils in a changing media landscape
(2010)
Gore, Will; Horgan, John
Maintaining freedom with responsibility: the evolving role of non-statutory press councils in a changing media landscape
(2010)
Gore, Will; Horgan, John
Abstract:
There are several fundamental reasons why the state should not involve itself in the regulation of the press. However, there are also more practical reasons why selfregulation can be a preferable alternative, benefitting journalists and the public alike. It is flexible, non-bureaucratic and highly effective at delivering practical solutions to problems. Ultimately, self-regulation can raise standards and provide effective redress to those who are wronged by the press. But it does so by working with journalists, not against them. What follows is an examination and analysis of the origins and practices of the press regulatory bodies of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, together with an exploration of current issues and solutions adopted, and the identification of future issues deriving from convergence, accountability and effectiveness.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21788/
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Notes from Ireland: Irish Unionism's media outreach to Britain - and beyond
(2016)
Horgan, John
Notes from Ireland: Irish Unionism's media outreach to Britain - and beyond
(2016)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
The printed press in Ireland has always been, from its inception at least until the demise of the Irish Press two decades ago, and still today in Northern Ireland, closely involved in the political battles that have shaped, and continue to shape, modern Ireland, not only as an observer, but as an active participant. In this context, the failure of the Irish uprisings of 1848 and 1867 had two significant effects. One was to push militaristic Irish nationalism underground, via the Irish Republican Brotherhood; the other was the growth of a aggressive constitutionalism under Parnell and the increasingly powerful Irish Parliamentary Party at Westminster. Also relevant was the sea-change in the ownership and editorial direction of Irish regional newspapers: by 1880, about a third of the provincial newspapers had declared themselves nationalist, even though this exposed them to intermittent official disfavour and even overt censorship.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21601/
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Paper by Professor John Horgan, Press Ombudsman
(2007)
Horgan, John
Paper by Professor John Horgan, Press Ombudsman
(2007)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21783/
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Presentation and management of acute myocardial infarction in Irish hospitals: a national census
(1996)
McGee, Hannah M.; Browne, Ciaran; Horgan, John; Irish Heart Foundation. Council on Acut...
Presentation and management of acute myocardial infarction in Irish hospitals: a national census
(1996)
McGee, Hannah M.; Browne, Ciaran; Horgan, John; Irish Heart Foundation. Council on Acute Coronary Care
Abstract:
This study demonstrates significant achievements by Irish cardiology services over the past decade. On the best available' evidence from the 1980s, time to treatment for AMI appears to have reduced substantially over the past 10 years in Ireland. The proportion, of patients receiving thrombolysis has also increased considerably (by 66%) over the two 'year period 1992-1994. Tune to treatment within hospitals is similar to that documented at international centres where thrombolysis is also delivered in the specialist (intensive care or coronary care) setting. It is however longer than the target aspired to in recent international recommendations. Changes in the location for thrombolysis administration may be needed if further improvements are to be made in this area. TIlis study documents significant achievements in the management of AMI in Ireland in the last decade and provides an evidence base from which to plan for further improvements in AMI management in Ireland into t...
http://hdl.handle.net/10147/333652
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Preventing incitement to terrorism and radicalisation: what role for the media? Opening address
(2007)
Horgan, John
Preventing incitement to terrorism and radicalisation: what role for the media? Opening address
(2007)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21781/
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Public issues in media: regulation, accountability and the freedom of the press
(2012)
Horgan, John
Public issues in media: regulation, accountability and the freedom of the press
(2012)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21792/
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Report on Editorial Processes and Risk Management Procedures in RTE Television Current Affairs
(2011)
Horgan, John
Report on Editorial Processes and Risk Management Procedures in RTE Television Current Affairs
(2011)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21606/
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Reporting 1916 in the North of Ireland: a study in the political equivalent of the Doppler effect.
(2015)
Horgan, John
Reporting 1916 in the North of Ireland: a study in the political equivalent of the Doppler effect.
(2015)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
In physics, the Doppler effect describes how the properties of waves - as in sound waves - change in frequency as an observer, or listener, moves in relation to their source. This study of the modalities of reporting and commenting on the events of 1916 in Dublin across both the Unionist and Nationalist newspapers in what was to become Northern Ireland after 1922 offers new perspectives on the way in which both physical distance and embedded political positions will influence the selection and the presentation of news. While it demonstrates – as might have been expected - that intra-communitarian and sectarian tensions are echoed in the reports concerned, it also reveals sometimes unexpected distortions and adds several layers of complexity to the study of both Unionist and Nationalist media in this period. It also indicates the weakness of the traditional Orange/Green dichotomy as an explanatory paradigm of the complexity of Northern Ireland at this time. The ways in which 19...
http://doras.dcu.ie/21611/
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Saving us from Ourselves: Contraception, Censorship and the 'Evil Literature' Controversy of 1926
(2016)
Horgan, John
Saving us from Ourselves: Contraception, Censorship and the 'Evil Literature' Controversy of 1926
(2016)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
In the history of Irish public policy on communications, the ban on the publication of information about contraception merits a special place. It existed for half a century. and the circumstances of its elaboration and implementation offer a special insight into the sensitivity of Irish governments on matters of sexual morality, as well as into public and media attitudes to the controversies involved.
https://arrow.dit.ie/icr/vol5/iss1/7
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Saving us from ourselves: contraception, censorship and the 'evil literature'controversy of 1926
(1995)
Horgan, John
Saving us from ourselves: contraception, censorship and the 'evil literature'controversy of 1926
(1995)
Horgan, John
Abstract:
In the history of Irish public policy on communications. the ban on the publication of information about contraception merits a special place. It existed for half a century. and the circumstances of Its elaboration and Implementation offer a special insight Into the sensitivity of Irish governments on matters of sexual morality, as well as into public and media attitudes to the controversies Involved.
http://doras.dcu.ie/21773/
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Sean Lemass’s foreign policy
(2007)
Horgan, John
Sean Lemass’s foreign policy
(2007)
Horgan, John
http://doras.dcu.ie/21785/
Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 34 on page 1 of 2
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