AlthausSL (2003) When news norms collide, follow the lead: New evidence for press independence. Political Communication20(4): 381–414.
2.
BennettWL (1990) Toward a theory of press–state relations. Journal of Communication40(2): 103–127.
3.
BensonR (2006) News media as a ‘journalistic field’: What Bourdieu adds to new institutionalism, and vice versa. Political Communication23(2): 187–202.
4.
FreedmanD (2009) ‘Smooth operator?’ The propaganda model and moments of crisis. Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture6(2): 59–72.
5.
HallinDC (1986) The Uncensored War: The Media and Vietnam. Berkeley: University of California Press.
6.
HermanE (1993) The media’s role in US foreign policy. Journal of International Affairs47(1): 23–45.
7.
HermanE (2000) The propaganda model: A retrospective. Journalism Studies1(1): 101–112.
8.
HermanEChomskyN (1988) Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media. New York: Pantheon.
9.
HertogJ (2000) Elite press coverage of the 1986 US–Libya conflict: A case study of tactical and strategic critique. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly77(3): 612–627.
10.
MerminJ (1999) Debating War and Peace: Media Coverage of US Intervention in the Post- Vietnam Era. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
11.
RobinsonPGoddardPParryKMurrayCTaylorPM (2010) Pockets of Resistance: British News Media, War and Theory in the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. Manchester and New York: University of Manchester Press.
12.
ZollmannF (2011a) Managing the elite consensus: A critical analysis of press discourses over warfare in Iraq. Global Media and Communication7(3): 263–268.
13.
ZollmannF (2011b) Double think in the mass media: Fallujah and the politics of human rights reporting. Ethical Space: The International Journal of Communication Ethics8(12): 25–31.