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ESSAY: POLITICAL NEWS

OBJECTIVES

Construct a model government to solve a current political issue.

Remember that political science is the study of who gets what, when, and how. The world is filled with current news stories regarding how one political system or another handles conflict.

For this assignment, select some current news stories that have to do with politics, government decisions, or local problems that may require debate or a vote. You should also use outside reading material or online resources to find older events in history that are similar to the current news stories you found. Your task will be to write an essay and include a diagram of a government model.

Your essay will compare the current news story to a similar event in history and how the government dealt with that issue. You will then create a government model and write about how you would address the current issue in your own way. When creating your government model make sure to identify what the input and outputs are.

In your essay, you will also provide a diagram representing your form of government according to Aristotle's: rule of one, rule of a few, or rule of many.

To help you in your research and planning, think about a key issue that is in the news today. How is it being handled? Has anything similar to this happened in the past? Was that handled in the same way? Was it managed differently? Have other countries been faced with this problem? Do all governments approach this conflict in the same manner? These questions can help guide you during your research and writing process.

User Slyfox
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1 Answer

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21 votes

Step-by-step explanation:

There are two main reasons why the leaders of America’s elite newsrooms are so devoted to the journalistic practice commonly referred to as “objectivity,” which precludes reporters from “taking sides” in their political coverage — even when one side is an obvious lie, or an affront to core journalistic values like pluralism and democracy.

The official reason is that they sincerely believe that press neutrality leads to a more informed electorate. They argue that voters will trust their news sources more if those sources are “unbiased,” and that accurate information is more likely to be accepted as the truth if readers come to their own conclusions rather than being told what to think. A news organization perceived as objective, they say, has an increased power to persuade.

The unofficial reason, which New York University journalism professor Jay Rosen pithily calls “refuge seeking,” is that the “objective” approach protects editors and reporters from criticism – specifically, from accusations of bias. It also allows them to feel superior to partisans and activists, because they remain “above the fray.”

User Mamta D
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