Race matters
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "African Americans and the Information Age: Life in the Pay-Per
Society," pp. 455-489 in U. Bailey & L. Morris (eds), One-Third of a Nation.
African American Perspectives, Howard University Press, 2001.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Racial identity, media use, and the social construction of
risk among African Americans." Journal of Black Studies, 31(5):600-618.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Race, ethnicity, and the segmentation of media markets,"
pp. 44-69 in J. Curran & M. Gurevitch [eds] Mass Media and Society, 3rd Edition,
Arnold and Oxford, 2000.
- Jessica L. Davis and Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Racial identity and media orientation:
Exploring the nature of constraint." Journal of Black Studies, Vol 29 (January,
1999): 367-397.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Community pluralism and the 'tipping point': Editorial
responses to race and related structural change." In K. Viswanath and D. Demers [eds]
Mass Media, Social Control, and Social Change: A Macrosocial Perspective. Iowa State
University Press, 1999.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. and Jonathan Baron. "Inequality. It is all in the way you look
at it." Communication Research, 25 (4)(October, 1998): 505-527.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. Communication and Race: A Structural Perspective. EdwardArnold/Oxford University Press,
1998.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Katharina Kopp, Tanya Hands, Karen Frazer, and David Phillips.
"Race and risk: Factors affecting the framing of stories about inequality,
discrimination, and just plain bad luck." Public Opinion Quarterly, 61 (Spring,
1997): 158-182.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "If it weren't for bad luck...Framing stories of racially
comparative risk." pp55-75 in V. Berry and C. Manning-Miller [Eds]. Mediated Messages
and African-American Culture: Contemporary Issues. Sage 1996.
- Kent Goshorn and Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Race, risk and responsibility: Editorial
constraint in the framing of inequality." Journal of Communication, 45 (2) Spring,
1995: 133-151. [RTF copy]
- Marilyn Kern-Foxworth, Oscar Gandy, Barbara Hines and Debra A. Miller. "Assessing
the managerial role of Black female public relations practitioners using individual and
organizational discriminants." Journal of Black Studies, 24 (4) June, 1994: 416-434.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "African Americans and Privacy. Understanding the Black
Perspective in the emerging policy debate." Journal of Black Studies, 24 (2)
(December, 1993): 178-195.
- John T. Barber and Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Press portrayals of Black and White U.S.
representatives." Howard Journal of Communications, 2 (2), Spring, 1990: 213-225.
- Paula W. Matabane and Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "Through the prism of race and
controversy, did viewers learn anything from The Africans?" Journal of Black Studies,
19 (1), September, 1988: 3-16.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Paula Matabane, John Omachonu. "Media use, reliance and active
participation: Exploring student awareness of the South African Conflict."
Communication Research, 14 (6), December, 1987: 644-663.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. and Larry G. Coleman."The Jackson Campaign: Mass Media and
Black Student Perceptions." Journalism Quarterly, 3 (1), Spring, 1986:138-143;154.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. and Larry G. Coleman. "Watch Jesse Run and Tell Me What You
See: A First Look at Student Perceptions of the Jesse Jackson Presidential
Candidacy." Journal of Black Studies, 16 (3), March, 1986: 293-306.
- Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. and Mohammed El Waylly. "The Knowledge Gap and Foreign Affairs:
The Palestinian-Israeli Conflict" Journalism Quarterly, 62 (4), Winter, 1985:
777-783.(3), March, 1986: 293-306.
- Jannette Lake Dates and Oscar H. Gandy, Jr. "How Ideological Constraints Affected
Coverage of the Jesse Jackson Campaign." Journalism Quarterly, 62 (3), Autumn, 1985:
595-600;625.
- Jorge Schement, Felix Gutierrez with Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Tim Haight and Steven Soriano.
"The Anatomy of a Liscence Challenge." Journal of Communication, 27(1),1977:
89-94.