Monday, 27 February 2012

Comparative analysis of News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) and United Press International (UPI) on the coverage of the Nigeria Labour Congress strike action.


ABSTRACT.
Various scholars have defined news in their own term. But the aggregate consensus is that news is the accurate detail or information about an interesting or odd event. However, what makes the news is subject to a number of factors, and one of it includes the ownership structure of the news media. The two agencies in view which were selected purposively were selected due to the inability to view contents on some news agency websites until subscription fees were paid – News Agency of Nigeria and United Press International were pedestal to the execution of the topic: Comparative analysis of News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) and United Press International (UPI) on the coverage of the Nigeria Labour Congress strike action. The research sought to discover if the ownership structure of NAN played a role in playing down the news that attracted worldwide attention, in comparison to UPI which was owned by an individual. The agenda-setting theory and gate-keeping theory were extensively used to know if news report concerning the industrial action was filtered by the government. With the aid of content analysis, news reports and headlines were analyzed. In the final analysis, it was discovered that there was ample coverage of the industrial action by the individual owned UPI. It should be agreed that both news agencies report on the industrial action was unequal and reflected the owners influence. The research thus recommended that more individuals should own news agencies in Africa in order to enable national progress and a mature press.



TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                                                                                                    Page               
Abstract                                                                                                                        VI
Table of Contents                                                                                                        VII
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
Background of Study                                                                                              
Statement of the Problem                                                                           
Objectives of the study                                                                  
Research Questions                                                            
Significance of Study                                                                     
Scope and Limitations of Study                                                    
Definition of Terms                                                            
References
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW
References
CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH METHOD
Research Design                                                                              
Scope                                                                                                
Population                                                                                        
Sampling Frame                                                                               
Sample Size                                                                                      
Sampling Procedure/Criteria for Selection                                 
Research Instrument                                                                       
Method of Administration                                                 
Units of Analysis                                                                            
Method of Data Analysis                                                   
References    
CHAPTER FOUR: DATA ANALYSIS
Data Analysis, Interpretations and Discussions                                                                         
CHAPTER FIVE: SUMMARY, CONCLUSIONS AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
Summary                                                                                                                  
Conclusion                                                                                                               
Recommendations                                                                                                  
Bibliography









INTRODUCTION
United we stand; divided we fall’ was an axiom that undoubtedly remained in the hearts of several Nigerians while they protested government’s decision to increase the Petrol Medium Spirit (PMS). The strike seemed like the only opportunity for Nigerians to vent their grievances against the government and decision and as an extension, moving for a paradigm shift from unscrupulous and impoverished era to an assuaging epoch that brings less stinging pangs of economic incarceration. The news media played a vital role in the proper dissemination of information about both the government’s stand on the removal of subsidy on fuel products and the people’s view of the burning issue. One of the tenets the news media thrives is objectivity. Once objectivity is truncated in the news media, the medium of dissemination is said to be contaminated and adulterated. In line with this research, two news agencies- a foreign (United Press International) and an indigenous (News agency of Nigeria) reports would be compared so as to know if any of the agencies operated under the invisible hands of its owners, and in the process, filtering the eventual news that got to the public.
Background of study
News agencies provide copy for newsrooms with diminishing journalistic staff which appears to have enhanced the importance of wire services in the daily news cycle. This stance has been corroborated by Frijters and Velamuri noting that due to economic cut backs, most major newspapers rely on “recycled news” from wire services of from a decreasing number of mobile journalists.
Going by Wikipedia’s  definition, a news agency is an organization of journalists established to supply news reports to news organizations: newspapers, magazines, and radio and television broadcasters. Such an agency may also be referred to as a wire service, newswire or news service.
News agencies are established to service the media organisation both print and broadcast media and this function have not gone unexecuted as international news agencies have, over the years, ensured the proper dissemination of newsworthy events to numerous media outfits. International news agencies have been responsible for the provision of ‘imported’ news to news media and this has been so as a result of the financial constraint this media outfits have found itself. As a result, the importance and prominence of these news agencies have grown considerably, hence, reverberating the foretold concept of a ‘global village’ by Marshall McLuhan.
News agencies, having emerged in most countries simultaneously with mass circulation newspapers, present for the historian an opportunity for international comparison, and the relationship between news agencies and newspapers is a microcosm of the competitive forces in news industries.
The oldest news agency is Agence France-Presse (AFP). It was founded in 1835 by a Parisian translator and advertising agent, Charles-Louis Havas as Agence Havas. Two of his employees, Paul Julius Reuter and Bernhard Wolff, later set up rival news agencies in London and Berlin respectively. In 1853, in Turin, Guglielmo Stefani founded the Agenzia Stefani, that became the most important agency in the Kingdom of Italy, and took international relevance with Manlio Morgagni.
In order to reduce overhead and develop the lucrative advertising side of the business, Havas's sons, who had succeeded him in 1852, signed agreements with Reuter and Wolff, giving each news agency an exclusive reporting zone in different parts of Europe
News agencies can be corporations that sell news (e.g. Press Association, Thomson Reuters, and AHN). Other agencies work cooperatively with large media companies, generating their news centrally and sharing local news stories the major news agencies may chose to pick up and redistribute (i.e. AP, Agence France-Presse (AFP) or American Press Agency (APA)). Commercial newswire services charge businesses to distribute their news (e.g. Business Wire, the Hugin Group, GlobeNewswire, Marketwire, PR Newswire, CisionWire, and ABN Newswire). Governments may also control news agencies: China (Xinhua), Canada, Russia (ITAR-TASS) and other countries also have government-funded news agencies which also use information from other agencies as well.
The major news agencies generally prepare hard news stories and feature articles that can be used by other news organizations with little or no modification, and then sell them to other news organizations. They provide these articles in bulk electronically through wire services (originally they used telegraphy; today they frequently use the Internet). Corporations, individuals, analysts and intelligence agencies may also subscribe.
For the purpose of this study which is a comparative analysis of United Press International (UPI) and News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) coverage on the Nigeria Labour Congress industrial action/ fuel subsidy removal, we would highlight a brief history of both news agencies and their ownership structure.
As glittering and unprecedented their achievement and significance has surfaced, these news agencies have been able to come under a storm of criticisms and odium. They have contributed conveniently to the much talked about information imbalance in the southern and northern hemisphere. Also mentioning the fact that the distortion of information by these agencies.
Murdock’s analysis suggests that the ways in which news organisations are financed and organised have an impact on contents or discourses and representations in the public domain and accessibility to audiences. Even more relevantly, McChesney argued in 1999 that the “core structural factors’ influencing the nature of media content include a variety of influences.
“The core structural factors that influence the nature of media content include the overall pursuit of profit, the size of the firm, the amount of direct and indirect competition facing the firm and the nature of that competition, the influence of advertising, specific interest of media owners, to a lesser extent, media employees. These factors can go a long way to providing a context (and a trajectory) for understanding the nature of media content (1999, p.31)’’. 
This validates the stance that the partial involvement by a body in a news media affects the news media transparency.
In 2000, UPI was purchased by News World Communications, an International news media company which was founded in 1976 by Unification Church leader Sun Myung Moon. It is noteworthy that UPI is owned by a private organization. This would however give account for their seemingly unbiased leaning to their dissemination of information.
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
It is difficult to think of a more important institution in our democratic society than the news media. James Madison put it best when he remarked that a popular government without popular information is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy, or perhaps both.’ Madison added that a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives. (Strentz,1989: 32)
The news agencies have in no small measure helped in equipping media outfits to judiciously accomplish their primary objective which is to inform, educate and entertain the teeming audience through the comprehensive reports disseminated within and beyond the confines of the media outfit existing geographical boundary.  As a result of the prohibitive expenses in stationing journalists around the world to source for news, local news media rely on news agencies for such news. This has led us to make extensive inquiry using two news agencies to test these agencies stance concerning burning issues in the world, using the industrial action that took place in Nigeria as a study.
However, this research has been instituted to determine the level of influence of ownership structure on news agencies in the adulteration of newsworthy events and the level of coverage given to those events such as the industrial action that took place in Nigeria.
OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
An absolute and unbiased press is gradually becoming a lost virtue amongst news media that have affiliations with certain existing individuals or body. NAN is owned by the Nigerian government, while UPI is owned by a private corporation. Therefore, the research tends to spotlight if the gate keeping process had a sound manifestation in the reportage of the industrial action by Nigeria Labour Congress as a result of the fuel subsidy in contrast to the transparent and balance reporting everyone craves for. And this is in line to see how much of the tune is called by the piper’s employer, bearing in mind the truism “he who pays the piper dictates the tune” is in existence, if any, amongst both news agency.

RESEARCH QUESTIONS
1.                  What was the level of coverage by each of the two wire services?
2.                  Does coverage indicate/ reflect ownership bias?


SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY

First of all, every academic research is attempted to add to existing knowledge about a subject thus promoting research and learning. This work will do that.
The research intends to reveal the dynamics behind filtered dissemination of news as a result of ownership pattern. The research would also expose the degree of reportage of both news agencies and also degree of prominence and attention given to the industrial action.
Such understanding is important for people to know that there is nothing like absolute free press.
Media scholars, professionals and students can also get an insight to the nature of the News agencies, whether unique or commonplace.
SCOPE OF STUDY
The 2012 industrial action that erupted as a result of the fuel subsidy is one of the few the country has witnessed. This study did not exhaustively analyze previous news agency report. Hence, the scope of this study was restricted to the 7- day industrial action by NLC.
LIMITATION OF STUDY
First, there was a huge time constraint in order to analyze the reports of the news agencies. Secondly, the subscription fee required by NAN on its website restricted the study to just analyzing the headline of the reports and the lead paragraph and the change of agency from AP to UPI. Thirdly, as a result of analysing the contents from a website, the proper content analysis method was modified to suit the research and time constraint. The major limitation was in determining the slant editorials. To solve this problem, key words were considered as markers for articles in support of, against or neutral about the subject matter. These words, phrases and sentences when and where used are unpretentious
OPERATIONAL DEFINITION
Industrial action refers to a phenomenon experienced in countries which occurs as a result of a general disagreement of a government unpopular policy, whereby labour abstain from work and in so doing ground the activities in the country.
News agencies are also wire services. They sell news to other news media.
Ownership is an individual’s right of possession or fact or state of owning something. To own something is to have that thing and have control over it. If a company is owned by someone then it is registered in the person’s name and that person bears responsibility for the company under the law especially if it is a limited liability company.
Comparative: - A comparison between NAN and UPI reportage of the NLC strikes and protests.
Analysis: - The detailed study of information on the coverage.


















REFERENCES
Jonathan Silberstein (2007), International news agencies and their cartel in the context of business history, Boston, Havard Business School Press.
 Collingwood (1999), The increasing importance of news agencies provided a basis for the research, Birmingham, Princeton ville.
Frijters,P, &Velamuri, M (2009), is the internet bad news? The online news era and the market for high-quality news.MPRA paper, no. 15723. University Library of Munich
Mcchesney, R. (2008), The political economy of media : enduring issues, emerging dilemmas, Newyork, Monthly review press.
Murdock .G. (1989), Cultural studies at the cross roads, Australian journal of communication, 16, 37-                                49
Strentz, H (1989). News reporters and news sources: accomplices in shaping
        and misshaping  the news (2nd ed.) (pp. 79-80). Iowa, US: Iowa State
       UniversityPress                        
           
ON-LINE SOURCE







                                                            CHAPTER TWO
REVIEW OF CONCEPTS [communication, ownership, ethics] AND EXISTING LITERATURE
It would be trite to say that news is about people: what people are doing; what is being done to people; what the effect of a situation, action or inaction will do to people, the whole shebang. Infractions, offences, celebrations and whatever human activity that is necessary for puiblic consumption should willy-nilly be reported.
Communication is an indispensable feature of existence. Really, communication is not unique to living things as Raufu (1999:83) states that there is man to man communication as there is human-machine communication. It is inevitable to communicate and communication is life.
The Mass Media is an empire where information passes through various channels. It plays a crucial role in almost all aspects of our daily life. In this 21st century, power has not changed hands. Information flow is almost the same process; it is still a top-down process. Many factors determine what news becomes; ownership, influence, power relations, prominence, oddity, proximity and so on.
However, the relevance of mass media messages are underscored by the functions of mass communication in any society.
FUNCTIONS
Uyo (1987: 2-4), Citing the classical works of Harold Lasswell, Charles Wright, identifies four major functions of mass communication in society. These are; Surveillance; the collection and distribution of information about the environment (the news function), Correlation; the interpretation of information about the environment and prescription for conduct  in relation to these events (editorial or opinion function), Transmission of social heritage; which focuses on the communication of knowledge, values , and social norms from generation to another from members of a group to newcomers (education function), and entertainment; which includes communicative acts primarily intended for amusement.
Another research carried out by Ekaterina Shmykova (University of Georgia). Information is now called “power” like money and authority. Mass media companies that exercise control over information transmitted to the masses are now seen as strong force in building public opinion. As the “fourth power” in society, mass media organizations attract attention of many scientists. Both models refer to the public interest to address an issue of content in mass media messages. Mass media content is a product of the interaction between different interests within mass media, different roles of mass media, different sources of information, and different interests of groups outside mass media organization (McCullagh, 2002; Shoemaker, 1991; Press Freedom, 1997; Koltsova, 2001). Shoemaker (1991) builds the hierarchical model of sources that influence content of mass media. Within organization content is being affected on three levels: individual level, media routines level, and organizational level. On individual level content of media messages is affected by communicators’ personal backgrounds, experiences, attitudes, values, and beliefs and by communicators professional backgrounds, roles, ethics, and power within the organization. “Organizations must routinize work in order to control it” (Shoemaker, 1991, p. 97). These routines affect individual communicators and their way of working. On the organizational level content is affected by the economic goals of a media Organization, its structure, internal policies, internal control, and organizational roles. “Individual workers and their routines must be subordinated to the larger organization and its goals”
(Shoemaker, 1991, p.116).the Goals of an organization are determined by the owners of the organization. One of the areas of research that examined media ownership effects on content deals with consolidation of media, which occurred in order to pursue economic and organizational advantages.
RELEVANCE
It is clear from the above stated functions of communication that the society depends on the media for information. It views mass media and society as interdependent entities. The people need the mass media to provide them with news, information, education and entertainment. Similarly, the media uses the people for running their daily operations, public figures, celebrities and dignitaries. The media influences public opinion through the messages it sends. As major channels of information, mass media provide people with messages from the outside world. People use such messages to form mental pictures of the world of public affairs.
FUNCTIONS
The Media is a watcher (Wilbur Schramm; 1960). The functions of watchers is to monitor the environment and report the good news and opportunities as well as the bad and ugly news, in addition to the dangers, disasters, tragedies and threats. The importance of the mass media in any society derives from the general assumption that information is a necessary ingredient of good governance and effective public administration. To buttress this function, the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria states in Section 22 that,
The press, radio and television and other agencies of the mass media shall at all times be free to uphold the responsibility and accountability of the government to the people.”
From this provision of the constitution, it is obvious that the mass media is intended to serve as a means of producing a very effective and accountable system of governance.
Furthermore, the media is a powerful means of maintaining and sustaining established order in any society because it comprises of major channels through which the younger generation is socialized.
CRISIS
Definition and Background
In every society, crises abound. Every organization does experience crisis at one time or the other and most times such societal crises find their way into newspapers, magazines, and the internet. Such news is negative and therefore injurious to the image and reputation of the organization concerned. Nwokocha (1999:186) defines crisis as a period of heightened uncertainty that increases the need to plan, and a point in time in which external and internal pressures change objective and operational practices of an organization and its resources and also present a restricted amount of time within which they can be tackled. Crises are usually unanticipated by organizations and therefore constitute great threats to the stability and survival of many organizations. News reporting patterns were found to be connected to the type of ownership. Independently owned daily newspaper had more stories that require more reportorial efforts and used more enterprises news sources than chain-owned (Fradgley&Niebauer, 1995). A study by Olien, Tichenor, and Donohue (1988) found a strong correlation between the type of ownership and coverage (frequency and proportion) of non-local business. Another study found that the more characteristics of the corporate form of organization newspaper had, the more emphasis was placed on quality of news coverage (Demers, 1996).

Social Impact
According to Ajala (2001:174), crises incite emotional behavior from all concerned. Rumours get started and spread with considerable speed. People tend to interpret the seriousness of a crisis in terms of personal risk to people important to them. According to Salu (1994:384), a crisis can be any threat or event that creates chaos and usually suffering. Some people see crises as an isolated incident- a brief or lengthy interruption to the flow of moral business practices.
Causative Agents
Strikes/Industrial actions pave the way for crises/conflict in an organization. Strikes are unintended consequences of conflict between two parties; employers and workers. Workers strike when political opportunities arise from changes within the state. This suggests that strikes are inherently political; they are aimed at the state and not at employers. Hence, strikes (conflicts, crises) must be analysed as an interaction between two sides, rather than a unilateral action by workers.
Elements
Salu (1994:385) identifies four elements of crisis:
1)                  A Trigger: This is an unexpected event, which has the potential to drastically alter how people perceive an organization.
2)                  A Threat: threats to look for include:
a)                  Danger to human life
b)                  Risk to the environment or property
c)                  Financial loss
d)                 Damage to corporate image.
3)                  An uncontrolled situation: Experts believe that a crisis will always involve turbulent circumstances that make the situation beyond management’s control for some time.
4)                  Urgent Attention Needed:  In order to avert or minimize damage, an organization must respond very fast to protect itself as well as its target publics or those who will certainly be affected by the crisis.
Most crises constitute hot news in the mass media and such news could sometimes be negative and injurious to the image of an organization, its management and its products or services.
The way the media handles a particular crisis in an organization determines to a large extent the damage such crisis can cause.
Summary
This review started out by examining the background of mass media and went on to give an exposition on its functions and relevance.
In a separate discourse, crisis was discussed in the context of its definition and background. Its causative agents, culminating social impact and its constraints were meticulously examined.

THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
There are many communication theories but for the purpose of this study, two theories are being used to explain and predict this phenomenon. They are the Gate Keeping theory and the Agenda Setting theory—these theories form the theoretical framework of this study.
Mass Communication plays an important role in our society its purpose is to inform the public about current and past events. Mass communication is defined in “Mass Media, Mass Culture” as the process whereby professional communicators use technological devices to share messages over great distances to influence large audiences. Within this process the media, which can be a newspaper, a book and television, takes control of the information we see or hear. The media then uses gatekeeping and agenda setting to “control our access to news, information, and entertainment” (Wilson 14). Gatekeeping is a series of checkpoints that the news has to go through before it gets to the public. Through this process, many people have to decide whether or not the news is to be seen or heard. The gatekeepers include reporters, writers, and editors. On the other hand, Agenda Setting as defined in “Mass Media, Mass Culture” is the process whereby the mass media determine what we think and worry about.
Gate Keeping and Agenda Setting were chosen because they explicitly explain how news information is filters at different levels/stages by keepers who are the actual controllers of the flow of information and how this news becomes our thoughts and our “talk”
Kurt Lewin propounded the gate keeping theory. Lewin was born in Germany in 1890; He was a great Psychologist and pioneer in Social Psychology. Gate keeping in the simplest definition is to block and prevent certain unwanted and useless things from gaining entrance using a gate.  Lewin first coined the term "gatekeeping," which he used to describe a wife or mother s the person who decides which foods end up on the family's dinner table while observing the food habits of families (Lewin, 1947).
Gatekeeping is “the process of culling and crafting countless bits of information into the limited number of messages that reach people each day. . .” the centre of the mass media’s role in society (Shoemaker & Vos, 2009)
“WHO” is Gatekeeper? “A person is one who controls access to something, decide whether a given message will be distributed by a mass medium”. We use the term mass media to describe that transmit information to many people, such as those that create web pages, news portal or blogs on the internet,newpaper,television and radio companies, as well as magazines. Individuals can also act as gatekeepers, deciding what information to include in an email or in a blog.
A gatekeeper has to decide what kind of news items will publish and what should not.  Every day the news channel receives various news items from all over the world. The channel have its own ethics and policies through this the editor decide the news items for publish or aired. In some cases the editor due the organizations policy rejects few news items
Lewin opined that a gatekeeper is the person who decides what shall pass through each gate section, of which, in any process, there are several. Although he applied it originally to the food chain, he then added that the gating process can include a news item winding through communication channels in a group. This is the point from which most gatekeeper studies in communication are launched. White (1961) was the person who seized upon Lewin's comments and turned it solidly toward journalism in 1950. In the 1970s McCombs and Shaw took a different direction when they looked at the effects of gatekeepers' decisions. They found the audience learns how much importance to attach to a news item from the emphasis the media place on it. McCombs and Shaw pointed out that the gatekeeping concept is related to the newer concept, agenda-setting. (McCombs et al, 1976). The gatekeeper concept is now 65 years old and has slipped into the language of many disciplines, including gatekeeping in organizations.
The gatekeeper decides which information will go forward, and which will not. In other words a gatekeeper in a social system decides which of a certain commodity – materials, goods, and information – may enter the system. Important to realize is that gatekeepers are able to control the public’s knowledge of the actual events by letting some stories pass through the system but keeping others out. Gatekeepers can also be seen as institutions or organizations. In a political system there are gatekeepers, individuals or institutions which control access to positions of power and regulate the flow of information and political influence. Gatekeepers exist in many jobs, and their choices hold the potential to color mental pictures that are subsequently created in people’s understanding of what is happening in the world around them. Media gatekeeping showed that decision-making is based on principles of news values, organizational routines, input structure and common sense. Gatekeeping is vital in communication planning and almost all communication planning roles include some aspect of gatekeeping.
The gatekeeper’s choices are a complex web of influences, preferences, motives and common values. Gatekeeping is inevitable and in some circumstances, it can be useful. Gatekeeping can also be dangerous, since it can lead to an abuse of power by deciding what information to discard and what to let pass. Nevertheless, gatekeeping is often a routine, guided by some set of standard questions.
Description: http://www.utwente.nl/cw/theorieenoverzicht/Theory%20clusters/Media,%20Culture%20and%20Society/gatekeeping.doc/gatekeeping-1.gif
Source: White (1964)
As earlier noted this theory is related to the mass media and organizations—with the focus being on the relation to mass media. In the mass media the focus is on the organizational structure of newsrooms and events. Take for instance, a wire service editor decides alone what news audiences will receive from another continent—the idea is that if the gatekeeper’s selections are biased, the readers’ understanding will therefore be a little biased.
 In application to this study, the concept of gate keeping theory places certain individual(s) at a rather advantaged position of being decision makes as regards what the audience need to know thus having a control over them and ensuring that the unwanted information stays out. In this regard, these individuals are the news editor of these agencies who decide what news and perspective of news is to be received by the audience.
An overview of Gatekeeping theory according to David Mann White (1950) as regard the selection process in newspapers argue that news items are rejected for three reasons:
·                     1.personal feelings of the gatekeeper
·                     2. insufficient space on the medium
·                     3. The story had appeared previously

AGENDA SETTING THEORY
Maxwell McCombs and Donald Shaw propounded the Agenda Setting theory in 1972/1973. This theory is good at explaining why people with similar media exposure place importance on the same issues.  Although different people may feel differently about the issue at hand, most people feel the same issues are important.  The theory says the media sets the agenda for the general discussion as what the people know is as result of the information gotten from the media, similarly, how much importance he audience gives an issue is largely dependent on how much of same was given the issue by the media. Media influence affects the order of presentation in news

The following is responsible for agenda setting
·                     The number of times an issue is reported 
·                     Using headline and picture display strategies to play up a  report in the media
·                     Reports that give room for points and counter points
 As regards this study, the people actually set the agenda; the media only intensified the effects.
Agenda Setting has two levels.  As mentioned in Theories of Communication, the first level enacts the common subjects that are most important, and the second level decides what parts of the subject are important. These two levels of agenda setting lead path into what is the function of this concept. This concept is process that is divided into three parts according to Rogers and Dearing in their book Agenda Setting Research. The first part of the process is the importance of the issues that are going to be discussed in the media. Second, the issues discussed in the media have an impact over the way the public thinks, this is referred as public agenda. Ultimately the public agenda influences the policy agenda. Furthermore “the media agenda affects the public agenda, and the public agenda affects the policy agenda.” (Littlejohn, 320)

In this research work the concept of gatekeeping and agenda setting are almost interwoven as one invariably affects the other.




                                                REFERENCE
White, David Manning. (1964). "The 'Gatekeeper': A Case Study In the Selection of News, In: Lewis A. Dexter / David M. White (Hrsg.): People, Society and Mass Communications. London S. 160 - 172. "
Shoemaker & Vos, 2009
McCombs, M., & Shaw, D.L. (1972), the agenda-setting function of the mass media. Public Opinion Quarterly, 36, 176-185.
Solomon Anaeto, olufemi onabanjo and James osifeso (2008), models and theories of communication, United States of America, African Renaissance Books        Incorporated.
 Wilson, James R, and Roy S.Wilson. Mass Media, Mass Culture, Fifth Edition.Boston.Mc Graw Hill, 2001.
 Littlejohn, Stephen W. Theories of Human Communication.  Seventh Edition.Albuquerque, New Mexico. Wadsworth, 2002.










CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
This section of the research is concerned about the processes of data collection, data analyses and the standard method(s) used in the study.
In other words, this chapter explicitly explains how all the data in this study were collected and the principle(s) that dictated such methods. The chapter also states the population that was studied, the sample size and procedure, sample collection method, the instruments used to collect data from the sample, and the approach used to interpret and analyse the data.
Content analysis was adopted in this work. It is said to be one of mass communications’ major contributions to social scientific inquiry. This claim rests on the technique deriving from the communication field. It focuses on the manifest content of communication. (Sobowale, 2008:18)
The system helps the researcher  look at existing records, detect a pattern or patterns and arrive at some conclusions regarding the attitude of the writer(s) of the records or the originators of the message contained in those records. (Sobowale, 2008:18)
However, content analysis is not just analysis of written records only.
Berelson quoted by Stempel III (1989:125) defines it as a research technique for the objective, systematic and qualitative description of the manifest content of communication.
Stempel says the key to understanding the method and performing it competently lies in understanding the meaning of objective, systematic, quantitative and manifest content.
Objective is the exact opposite of subjective and it is one of the core principles of journalism and the scientific method. This work is a foray into an aspect of journalism and adheres strictly to the scientific method, hence objectivity cannot be sacrificed. By being objective, categories are made to be precise such that other researchers can apply the same precision to reach similar results.
Systematic means that all categories are set up so that all the relevant contents are analysed in the same way. In this work, various contents of a newspaper are analysed the same way across sampled publications. These include (1) LEAD STORY (2)EDITORIAL (3)LETTERS TO THE EDITOR (4) OPINION ARTICLES
Quantitative simply means the recording of numerical values or the frequencies with which the various defined types of content occur. Here the five categories listed above are  assigned numbers. This is done in line with three considerations for category constructions:
·                     Categories must be pertinent to the objectives of your sudy
·                     Categories should be functional
·                     The system of categories must be manageable
                                                                                          (Stempel III, 1989)
This work in itself is both a quantitative and qualitative study, hence the methods of data analysis adopt both approaches.
RESEARCH DESIGN
The Research design adopted in this work is analytical. The relationships among the sampled wired services are designed with the aid of the tables and accompanying notes. The comparison also analyses the relevance and effects of the guiding theories in the nexus of the studied situation.
POPULATION
The population of this study consists of all functional news agencies that covered the industrial action by NLC in Nigeria.

SAMPLE SIZE
Two news agencies, a foreign and a local agency were chosen. Reasons for this include the following:
·                     To serve as a basis for comparison between a Nigerian news agency and a foreign agency, serving as a platform to compare their level of coverage
·                     NAN is owned by the Nigerian government while UPI is owned by an individual. With this, the extent of tainted reports would be discovered.
·                     Restricting the study to two news agencies  is quite fortuitous for the researchers based on the reasons highlighted above and the factor of short deadline for the work which precludes a larger sample size.
·                     Cost is also a huge factor in the choice of  United Press International as the foreign agency due to the exemption of subscription fee levied before contents are viewed.
The two Wire services selected are:                                   
I.                        News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
II.                        United Press International (UPI)
These news agencies  were purposively selected. Purposiveness is employed because of the probability of selecting a news agency that does not display contents free on line. Per adventure such agency was selected, it would not suit the purpose and objectives of the study.
SAMPLING TECHNIQUE
A period of  7days during which the strike lasted was studied. On line contents of the selected news agencies concerning the industrial action was been studied. Researchers settled on this duration because news is report of current events. As such, the reportage and commentary of the fuel subsidy removal/ industrial action was a major event that caused ripples and is still causing ripples. Therefore January 9-16 of the news agencies content were sampled. The fact that should be noted here is that the fallout between the NLC and the Federal government of that actual event is still creating ripples as the government have constituted necessary bodies to undertake the deregulation of the downstream oil sector.These never ending saga would still make front page promos and even lead stories of  newspapers and agencies such that the subject is protracted and therefore too unwieldy for a study of this level and scope. 7 days help for focus and perspective as the news was still ‘hot and fresh’ and had not split into the many spectres that now exist.
DATA COLLECTION INSTRUMENT
The data collection instrument is the coding sheet.. These were then content analysed according to established categories.
CODING GUIDE
CATEGORIES

·                    News
·                    Editorial

·                    Opinions






UNITS OF ANALYSIS
The editorial matters (articles) of a newspaper are the units of analysis in this work. News stories, Editorials, Letters to the Editor, Opinion Articles are the individual units of newspapers that were content analysed to determine how much of the subject under study was reflected by the sampled agencies.
METHOD OF DATA ANALYSIS
The news agencies contents listed above represent the data sources for this work. These variables were then analysed. It should be noted here that manual coding sheets (tables) were used in the recording.
BRIEF PROFILE OF SAMPLED NEWSPAPERS
For the purpose of this study the two news agencies in question would be given a brief account of.  News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) was established in 1976 with offices in all states of the country and serving both print and broadcast media. The agency comes under the ministry of information and is supervised by a board appointed by the minister. The act establishing NAN guarantees the agency monopoly for gathering and disseminating news in and outside the country. It should be of note that NAN is a government- owned news agency.
Also, the United Press International (UPI) is a once-major international news agency, whose news wire, photo, and audio services provided news material to thousands of newspaper, magazines and radio and television stations for most of the twentieth century. It was created by the 1907 uniting of three smaller news syndicate y mid-west newspaper publisher, E. W. Scripps. It became “United Press International” fifty- one years later with its absorption of the International News Services (INS).





REFERENCES
Amobi, I. (2009). Methods in communication research. An unpublished
Work Presented in Foundation of Communication Research class at the Department of Mass Communication, University of Lagos
Berger, A.A. (2000). Media and communication research methods: An
         Introduction to qualitative and quantitative approaches. USA: Sage
       Publications.
Paul, L. (1985). Foundations of behavioural research (3rd Ed.). New York:
        Rinehart and Winston.
Sobowale, I. (1983). Scientific journalism: what tools for the precision journalist?
Omojola, O. (2010). Mass Media Interest and Corruption in Nigeria.
        Communication review. Vol. 4 (2), 21-40
Sobowale I., (2008). Scientific journalism (2nd Ed.) Nigeria: School of
        Communication & Information Science, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-
         Iwoye. Ogun State.
Tejumaiye, A. (2003). Mass communication research: An Introduction. Ibadan: Sceptre Prints Limited.
Guido, H Stempel III (1989). Content Analysis (pp124-136). In Stempel III, G.
        H. & Westley, B. H. (eds)(1989). Research methods in mass communication.
       New Jersey: Prentice-Hall Inc.




CHAPTER FOUR
This chapter analyses all data gathered as related to the coverage of the Industrial action concerning the fuel subsidy removal by the News agency of Nigeria (NAN) and United Press International (UPI).
As stated in Chapter one and three, due to time constraint, we could only access data on the media’s websites such as pictures, news reports, news analysis and viewpoints/opinions published on the websites between January 9 and January 16, 2012 which are the subjects of study. In all, a total of 24 news stories, news analysis and opinions were studied. And this was basically executed through the archives of the news agencies website.
RQ 1: WHAT WAS THE LEVEL OF COVERAGE BY THE TWO WIRE SERVICES?
Total fuel-subsidy protest related time published by the two wire services
Media
News Reports
News Analysis
Pictures
Opinion
Total
NAN
11
-
11
-
22
UPI
*13
1
1
-
15
Total
24
1
12
-
37
*1 of it had a video clip accompanying it
From the above table we can deduce that the news agency jointly churned out 24 news reports, with UPI having the highest number of reports in the tune of 13 news reports, 54% of the total news published. NAN fell short of UPI’s number reports published by 2 stories, Hence, making NAN reports amount to 11 news reports, 46% of the reports published.
UPI had a news analysis and a picture to accompany their stories. It is however noteworthy that all of NAN reports had pictures to accompany it. Measuring the level of coverage by the number of news report, UPI had a better coverage of the 7-day industrial strike action but had no picture to back their story.





RQ 2: DOES COVERAGE REFLECT/INDICATE BIAS?
Frequency of news reports published

Jan 9
Jan 10
Jan 11
Jan 12
Jan 13
Jan 14
Jan 15
Jan 16

NAN
2
-
1
-
1
2
1
4
11
UPI
2
1
1
2
3
-
1
2
13









Total=24

From this table, UPI did not publish a story concerning the NLC strike action on Jan 14, which happens to be a day. Conversely, NAN didn’t publish any report for 2 days on the industrial action.
These signs are pointers indicating undertones of government influence in the exercising the powers of a gatekeeper.
Furthermore, NAN failed to publish stories involving the death of citizens during the protest. A report UPI did not fail to uncover carrying the headline 3 killed in Nigeria fuel protest.
Also, NAN published reports praising the government’s decision in the reduction of the pump price carrying headlines such as NGO, Citizens laud FG on reduction of petrol price, and Nigerians living in US applaud reduction in fuel price. While UPI still published unfavourable story against the Nigerian government despite the reduction in the pump price with a headline Nigeria Unions upset despite fuel moves.
From all indications, NAN were found wanting in given the strike action extensive coverage. The ownership structure played a part in the downplaying of some stories such as the death of people during the strike. And in turn, reflected the invisible influence of the gatekeepers (government) in the stories published. NAN also published some image making stories to ease the tension of the strike and portray the government in good light. This however reflected NAN’s bias in favour of the Federal government.
UPI on the other hand further underlined the raging agitation for equilibrium of information flow by still carrying disparaging report of the Nigerian government despite the resolution of the conflict.
In summary, UPI presented more reports than NAN and portrayed little or infinitesimal ownership bias while NAN stories had ‘’we are for the federal government’” written all over it. Hence, the ownership structure affected the degree of reportage the industrial action was given.


                                                CHAPTER FIVE
“There is no institution where deterioration does not set in at some point...Emile Durkheim
The research was aimed comparing both wire service level of prominence that was given to the industrial action that took place in Nigeria, in the month of January.  The study sought to determine the both agencies’ coverage on the basis of degree of attention and frequency. This was however done to determine the level of influence by the ownership hierarchy, having in mind that NAN is owned by the government and UPI is owned by an individual.
Thus, the research was able to deduce that ownership influence is still predominant in the news media terrain. Because from chapter four, it was apparent that UPI dished out more reports than NAN and had just a day of hiatus from the brouhaha. Unlike NAN that failed to publish on two different occasions.

RECOMMENDATIONS
The researcher has herein been able to establish that ownership has some influence (bias) on coverage of news. For the purpose of academic development, the researcher would allow for the following recommendation:
·                     More private corporations should own news agencies in the African region to allow for free flow of information on the continent.
·                     According to Croteau and Hoynes “The government should adopt a hands-off approach towards the media”. The government should be less participatory in the issues affecting the news media. Government should strive continuously to hands-off the running of their media outfit. They must understand that, though, media set up primarily as a business concern, the media are an inevitable agent of national development and human emancipation as elicited in the opener of the introductory chapter. Leaving news in the hands of newsmen, like leaving musicians to do music, is the best approach to enabling development and imbuing reputation of newspaper and proprietors.
·                     It would be an intellectual inadequacy if the researcher believes that this comparative analysis was a thorough. Thus, the researcher implores more study into this issue.


BIBLIOGRAPHY
Amobi, I. (2009). Methods in communication research. An unpublished work in international                                         communication class
Work Presented in Foundation of Communication Research class at the Department of Mass      Communication, University of Lagos
Berger, A.A. (2000). Media and communication research methods: An introduction to        qualitative and quantitative approaches. USA: Sage Publications.
Collingwood (1999), the increasing importance of news agencies provided a basis for the research, Birmingham, Princeton ville.
Frijters, P, &Velamuri, M (2009), is the internet bad news? The online news era and the market for high-quality news. MPRA paper, no. 15723. University Library of Munich
Guido, H Stempel III (1989). Content Analysis (pp124-136). In Stempel III, G.
H. & Westley, B. H. (eds)(1989). Research methods in mass communication. New Jersey:     Prentice-Hall Inc.
Jonathan Silberstein (2007), International news agencies and their cartel in the context of business history, Boston, Havard Business School Press.
Mcchesney, R. (2008), the political economy of media: enduring issues, emerging dilemmas, Newyork, Monthly review press.
Murdock .G. (1989), Cultural studies at the cross roads, Australian journal of communication, 16, 37-McCombs, M., & Shaw, D.L. (1972), the agenda-setting function of the mass media. Public Opinion Quarterly, 36, 176-185.
Omojola, O. (2010). Mass Media Interest and Corruption in Nigeria. Communication review. Vol. 4 (2), 21-40
Paul, L. (1985). Foundations of behavioural research (3rd Ed.). New York: Rinehart and Winston Solomon Anaeto, olufemi onabanjo and James osifeso (2008), models and theories of communication, United States of America, African Renaissance Books Incorporated.
Strentz, H (1989). News reporters and news sources: accomplices in shaping and misshaping  the news (2nd ed.) (pp. 79-80). Iowa, US: Iowa State UniversityPress Shoemaker & Vos, 2009
Sobowale, I. (1983). Scientific journalism: what tools for the precision journalist?
Sobowale I., (2008). Scientific journalism (2nd Ed.) Nigeria: School of Communication & Information Science, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago- iwoye, Ogun State.
Tejumaiye, A. (2003). Mass communication research: An Introduction. Ibadan: Sceptre Prints Limited
Wadsworth (2002).Littlejohn, Stephen W. Theories of Human Communication.  Seventh Edition.Albuquerque, New Mexico.
White, David Manning. (1964). "The 'Gatekeeper': A Case Study In the Selection of News, In: Lewis A. Dexter / David M. White (Hrsg.): People, Society and Mass Communications. London S. 160 - 172. "
 Wilson, James R., and Roy Wilson. Mass Media, Mass Culture, Fifth Edition.Boston.Mc Graw Hill, 2001.         
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AMOSU SEYI
FALADE SORE
JOHN JEAN
LADIPO SEUN
AKINOLA ROTIMI
ADIGUN TOYITAN
AGBAJOR DAMILOLA
ADELEKAN TAYO
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IROHA NOMSO
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