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    • The press

      • The term "fourth estate" is used to describe the press. Describing journalists and the news outlets for which they work as members of the fourth estate is an acknowledgment of their influence and status among the greatest powers of a nation, the author William Safire once wrote.
      www.thoughtco.com/what-is-the-fourth-estate-3368058
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  2. In the United States government's Department of Defense, the "fourth estate" (also called the "back office") refers to 28 agencies that do not fall under the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force.

  3. Jan 16, 2020 · In the United States, the term fourth estate is sometimes used to place the press alongside the three branches of government: legislative, executive and judicial. The fourth estate refers to the watchdog role of the press, one that is important to a functioning democracy.

    • Kathy Gill
  4. Aug 9, 2016 · MEANING. the fourth estate: the press; the profession of journalism. ORIGIN. The first known user of the expression, designating the ordinary people, was the English author and magistrate Henry Fielding (1707-54) writing, under the pseudonym of Sir Alexander Drawcansir, Knt. Censor of Great Britain, in The Covent-Garden Journal of Saturday 13th ...

  5. The Fourth Estate” refers to the news media, especially with regards to their role in the political process. The phrase has its origins in the French Revolution, where the church, nobility and commoners comprised the first, second, and third estates.

  6. The Fourth Estate is a term that describes the media's role in society as an independent social and political force, capable of influencing public opinion and policy by disseminating information and acting as a watchdog over government actions. Its function is crucial for democracy, ensuring transparency and accountability from those in power.

  7. Sep 17, 2018 · The Fourth Estate has an obvious assignment of counteracting problematic structures of silence (if certain important voices are not being heard). In this article, we will, however, bring out assignments of creating spaces of silence in the public sphere: by (a) silencing certain dominant voices, (b) making room for an increased lack of answers ...

  8. 4 days ago · A vague metaphor that draws upon the medieval concept of the three estates of the realm: the spiritual authority of the church, the secular authority of nobles, and the mass authority of the ‘commons’ (or the people, later the bourgeoisie). The concept is attributed to the Irish statesman Edmund Burke (1729–97). 2.

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