ISSN: 1550-7521

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Citations Report

Articles published in Global Media Journal have been cited by esteemed scholars and scientists all around the world. Global Media Journal has got h-index 35, which means every article in Global Media Journal has got 35 average citations.

Following are the list of articles that have cited the articles published in Global Media Journal.

  2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016

Year wise published articles

60 32 39 68 34 90

Year wise citations received

540 587 497 402 379 323
Journal total citations count 5422
Journal h-index 35
Journal h-index since 2018 24
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    Moberg, M., Sjö, S., Golo, B. W. K., Erdiş Gökçe, H., Hart, R. F., Cardenas, S. C., ... & Jó, M. J. V. (2019). From socialization to self-socialization? Exploring the role of digital media in the religious lives of young adults in Ghana, Turkey, and Peru. Religion, 49(2), 240-261.

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    Mishra, S., & Basu, S. (2014). Family honor, cultural norms and social networking: Strategic choices in the visual self-presentation of young Indian Muslim women. Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace, 8(2).

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    Tuukkanen, T. (2014). A framework for children's participation in online environments. Jyväskylä studies in education, psychology and social research, (510).

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    Marcotte, R. D. (2016). Fatwa online: novel patterns of production and consumption. In Political Islam and Global Media (pp. 231-245). Routledge.

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    Leurs, K. (2018). Young Connected Migrants: Remaking Europe from Below Through Encapsulation and Cosmopolitanisation. In Diaspora and media in Europe (pp. 25-49). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

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    Leurs, K. H. A. (2012). Migrant youth invading online spaces: intersectional performativity of self in socio-technological networks.

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    Miranda, M. E. (2009). Brazilian Migrants in the Netherlands. University of Amsterdam.

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    Leurs, K., & Ponzanesi, S. (2014). Remediating religion as everyday practice: Postsecularism, postcolonialism, and digital culture. In Transformations of Religion and the Public Sphere (pp. 152-174). Palgrave Macmillan, London.

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    Piela, A. (2015). Muslim Women Speak Online: Religion, Conversion, Activism, and Art. hawwa, 13(3), 271-278.

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    Leurs, K. (2014). ‘Ik wil niet dat mijn moeder achter me staat snap je?’-Hoe Marokkaans-Nederlandse jongeren zich het internet eigen maken. Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies, 17(1), 5-26.

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    Van der Valk, L. (2016). Steun zoeken bij Allah. Religiositeit, bidden en religieuze coping van Nederlandse hoogopgeleide Moslima’s van Marokkaanse afkomst [Seeking support from Allah. Religiosity, praying and religious coping of Dutch highly educated Islamic women of Moroccan descent](Dissertation). Delft: Eburon.

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    Serkei, D. C., & Bink, S. (2011). De emanciperende werking van online media.

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    Miranda, M. E. University of Amsterdam (UvA) ISHSS Masters in Social Policy and Social Work in Urban Areas.

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    Moberg, M., & Sjö, S. (Eds.). (2020). Digital Media, Young Adults and Religion: An International Perspective. Routledge.

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    Ting, M. (2019). Exploring information seeking in new media among convert Chinese Muslim (Doctoral dissertation, Universiti Utara Malaysia).

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    Piela, A. (2013). Taylor & Francis.

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    van der Duyn Schouten, F. A., & Alinejad, D. Next Generation Diaspora: the formation of Iranian American-ness among second-generation migrant internet users in Los Angeles.

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    Midden, E. (2015). digital Religion. Postcolonial Transitions in Europe: Contexts, Practices and Politics, 273.

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    Midden, E. (2015). digital Religion. Postcolonial Transitions in Europe: Contexts, Practices and Politics, 273.

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    Cheruto, S. K. (2021). How the healthcare-seeking socio-cultural context shapes maternal health clients' mHealth utilisation in a Kenyan context.

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