词汇 | free-press |
释义 | free press noun[ U ] uk /ˌfriː ˈpres/ us /ˌfriː ˈpres/ If a country has a free press, its newspapers, magazines, and television and radio stations are able to express any opinions they want, even if these criticize the government and other organizations: 新闻自由 How can there be democratic elections without a free press?没有自由的新闻报道,怎么可能有民主选举呢? News reporting & the press ambulance chaser breaking news bury the ledeidiom citizen journalism correspondent dispatch hot off the pressidiom investigative journalism investigative journalist journalism journalist journalistic photojournalism photojournalist press baron press conference scoop spoiler the Associated Press the Press Association Examples of free pressfree press The reform effort also illustrates the role of a freepress and public opinion. Furthermore, there is nothing resembling a freepress, nor open debate, in a majority of poor countries. A nominally freepress is harassed in myriad ways, and the government retains a radio monopoly. But he also sees him as authoritarian to the core, a man who has little use for either a freepress or free expression. They assigned a critical role to a freepress and local forms of representation. Freepress and public debates favour the emergence of a public space. The demand for a freepress was as strong in the 1980s as it had been 50 years before. In this context, liberal demands for a freepress reflected a desire for information, quite as much as they reflected a longing for liberty. Indeed, the two were intimately linked, since government press policy was always responsive to developments in the freepress and never spontaneous. A freepress benefits rulers by improving economic performance, providing more accurate information about society, including citizen preferences, and earning international approval. The spread of communications and a largely freepress have allowed the voice of public opinion to make an impact on governmental decision-making. In some parts of the world, community leaders, non-government organizations, and a freepress (where they exist) have been known to galvanize activity on behalf of the relatively powerless 'pollutees'. For example, although freedom of speech is usually considered axiomatic in a democracy, the newly democratized nations differ in the willingness of their governments to allow a freepress. Not the least of these changes was a freepress, the right to organise unions and the belief that elections, though far from perfect, were not a complete fraud. A freepress and good governance usually go hand in hand. From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English See all examples of free press These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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