User:Zoe.Pierson050/Media transparency/Bibliography

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Steven Hoover, command information chief, U.S. Army Garrison Humphreys (right), uses Ustream Producer Pro on an iMac, to broadcast a town hall meeting live to the garrison's Facebook fan page.

Bibliography[edit]

This is where you will compile the bibliography for your Wikipedia assignment. Please refer to the following resources for help:


Following are the sources that I have cultivated in order to edit the page titled, Media transparency.

In order to improve the article, the tone needs to be adjusted. The article written by Changsoo Song and Jooho Lee titled “Citizens' Use of Social Media in Government, Perceived Transparency, and Trust in Government”, offers a positive spin on media transparency and can be used to help the article change its tone by adding other perspectives. This article was found on the uOttawa website and can be accessed through the citation;

Song, C., & Lee, J. (2016). Citizens’ Use of Social Media in Government, Perceived Transparency, and Trust in Government. Public Performance & Management Review, 39(2), 430–453. https://doi.org/10.1080/15309576.2015.1108798

Another source that could be used is the article written by Enrique Bonson titled “Local e-government 2.0: Social media and corporate transparency in municipalities”, which offers another view of media transparency in a positive light which could counteract the negative spin of the article. This article was also found on the uOttawa library website and can be accessed through the citation provided;

Bonsón, E., Torres, L., Royo, S., & Flores, F. (2012). Local e-government 2.0: Social media and corporate transparency in municipalities. Government Information Quarterly, 29(2), 123–132. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.giq.2011.10.001

Another source that could be used to transform the article in question is the article titled "Promoting transparency and accountability through ICTs, social media, and collaborative e-government". This article, written by Bertot, Jaeger and Grimes uncovers and examines different governmental initiatives to build trust within their publics using media, and how media transparency can help grow relations through communities. As explained within the text, "This study used an iterative strategy that involved conducting a literature review, content analysis, and web site analysis, offering multiple perspectives on government transparency efforts, the role of ICTs and social media in these efforts, and the ability of e-government initiatives to foster collaborative transparency through embedded ICTs and social media" (Bertot, etc. 2012). This source was found using the uOttawa library and the citation is as follows;

Carlo Bertot, J., Jaeger, P., & Grimes, J. (2012). Promoting transparency and accountability through ICTs, social media, and collaborative e-government. Transforming Government, 6(1), 78–91. https://doi.org/10.1108/17506161211214831