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Sandra Braman|SELECTED PUBLICATIONS journalism
The Costs and Benefits of Openness: Sunshine Laws and Higher Education (with Harlan Cleveland).
Minneapolis, MN: Hubert Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, 1984.
The "facts" of El Salvador according to objective and new journalism. Journal of Communication Inquiry, 13(2), 1985, 75-96.
Public expectations versus media codes of ethics. Journalism Quarterly, 62(1), 1988, 71-77, 240.
Joan Didion.
In Tom Connery (Ed.) Reference guide to literary journalism, pp. 353-358. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1992.
The changing information environment.
In John Nerone (Ed.), Last Rights: Revisiting Four Theories of the Press, pp. 153-180. Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1995.
The interpenetration of technical and legal decision-making for the Internet.
Information, Communication, & Society, 13(3), 309-324, 2010.
Tactical memory: The politics of openness in the construction of memory.
First Monday, 11(7), 2006.
Where has media policy gone? Defining the field in the twenty-first century.
Communication Law and Policy, 9(2), 2004, 153-82.
Defining tactical media: An historical overview.
In Barbara Abrash & Faye Ginsburg (Eds.), Tactical media: The virtual casebook. New York University, URL: http://www.nyu.edu/fas/projects/vcb/ , 2002.
The limits of diversity.
In Philip M. Napoli (Ed.), Media diversity and localism: Meaning and metrics, pp. 139-50. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2007.
The ideal vs. the real in media localism: Regulatory implications.
Communication, Law, and Policy, 12(3), 231-278, 2007.
"We are Bradley Manning": The legal subject and the WikiLeaks complex.
International Journal of Communication, 8, 2603-2618, 2014.