ChangT KChenC HZhangG Q, 1993, ‘Rethinking the Mass Propaganda Model: Evidence from the Chinese Regional Press’, Gazelle: The International Journal for Mass Communication StudiesLI, 3, 173–95.
2.
CheekT, 1989, ‘Redefining Propaganda: Debates on the Role of Journalism in Post-Mao Mainland China’, Issues and Studies, XXV, 2, 47–75.
3.
ChuL, 1986, ‘Mass Communication Theory: The Chinese Perspective’, Media Asia, XIII, 1, 14–19.
4.
EdelsteinA SLiuA P, 1963, ‘Anti-Americanism in Red China's People's Daily: A Functional Analysis’, Journalism Quarterly, XL, 2, 187–95.
5.
Friedman, 1994‘The Oppositional Decoding of China's Leninist Media’, China's Media, Media's China, ed LeeC-C, Westview Press, Boulder.
6.
GoodmanD S G, 1994, ‘The Politics of Regionalism: Economic Development, Conflict and Negotiation’, China Deconstructs: Politics, Trade and Regionalism, eds GoodmanD S GSegalGerald, Routledge, London.
7.
GoodmanD S GSegalG, 1995, China Without Deng, Editions (Tom Thompson Imprint), Sydney.
8.
HallSCritcherCJeffersonTClarkeCRobertsB, 1978, Policing the Crisis: Mugging, the Stale and law and Order, Macmillan, London.
9.
HoodM, 1994, The Use and Abuse of Mass Media by Chinese Leaders during the 1980s', China's Media, Media's China, ed LeeC-C, Westview Press, Boulder.
10.
HsiaoC-CYangM-R, 1994, “‘Don't Force us to Lie”: The Case of the World Economic Herald’, China's Media, Media's China, ed. LeeC-C, Westview Press, Boulder.
11.
LeeC-C, 1994, ‘Ambiguities and Contradiction; Issues in China's Changing Political Communication’, Gazette: The International Journal for Mass Communication Studies, LIII, 1–2, 7–22.
12.
LeeC-C, 1990, ‘Mass media: Of China, about China’, Voices of China: The Interplay of Politics and Journalism, ed LeeC-C, Guilford Communicaton Series, New York.
13.
LewisGSunW, 1994, ‘Discourses About “Learning From Japan” in Post-1979 Mainland Chinese Management Journals’, Issues and Studies, XXX, 5, 63–76.
14.
LiC, 1986, ‘News and Propaganda’ (Xin wen yu xuan chuan), Contemporary Studies of Journalism (Dang dai xin wen xue), ed ZhengK, Chang 51–71, Zheng Press, Beijing.
15.
LiuA P L, 1991, ‘Communications and Development in Post-Mao Mainland China’, Issues and Studies, XXVII, 12, 73–99.
16.
MingA-X, 1987, ‘China's Mass Communication; For The Two Civilisations – Some Aspects of the Transformation of the Mass Communication System in China’, paper prepared by the International Association for Mass Communication Research (IAMCR), Beijing.
17.
PolubaumJ, 1990, ‘The Tribulations of China's Journalists after a Decade of Reform’, Voices of China: The Interplay of Politics and Journalism, ed LeeC-C, Guildford Communication Series, New York.
18.
SchurmannF, 1968, Ideology and Organisation in Communist China, University of California Press, Los Angeles.
19.
SunW, 1995The People's Daily, China and Japan: Narrative Analysis', Gazette: The International Journal for Mass Communications Studies, LIV, 3, 195–207.
20.
SunX, 1994, Xin Wen Xue Xin Lun (New Theories of Journalism Research), Contemporary China Publishing House, Beijing, 356.
21.
WangG, 1984, ‘The People's Daily and Nixon's Visit to China’ in, The News Media in National and International Conflict, eds, ArnoADissanayakeW, Westview Press, Boulder.
22.
WangY, 1986, ‘News Values’ (Xin Wen Jia Zhi), Contemporary Studies of Journalism (Dang Dai Xin Wen Xue), 21–50.
23.
WuG, 1994, ‘Command Communication: The Politics of Editorial Formulation in the People's Daily‘, China Quarterly, CXXXVII. 1, 194–211.
24.
YuJ, 1990, ‘The Structure and Function of Chinese Television 1979–1989’, Voices of China: The Interplay of Politics and Journalism, ed LeeC-C, Guilford Communication Series, New York.
25.
YuX, 1994, ‘Professionalization Without Guarantees: Changes of the Chinese Press in Post-1989 Years’, Gazette: The International Journal for Mass Communication Studies, LIII. 1–2, 23–42.