History, asked by Ritickkumar, 11 months ago

how will the information historians get from old newspapers be different from the found in police reports. please give the correct answer and In point​

Answers

Answered by danielshivasai
0

Answer: For the British, the act of writing was important. Every official document had to be clearly written up and preserved. ... The preserved documents could be used as a point of reference whenever required.

Answered by AnIntrovert
25

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The nature of information that the historians get from old newspapers and police reports can be entirely different. Typically, a historian would collect information from a wide variety of sources that includes both official and unofficial documents. The police report comes from an administrative viewpoint and the types of details that we can obtain from them are often restricted.

A police report is strictly confined to the procedures and is concerned with record-keeping, rather than building a narrative. Journalism and reporting tools follow a different approach that might bring out the finer details about an event or a happening. Often police reports might oversee or neglect information that does not directly serve the function of law enforcement.

Being a mass media, newspapers provide more backdrop, context and elaborate descriptions. But the relative merits and accuracy of a piece of information from any source, can only be determined after proper research and investigation. For getting a balanced and clearer picture of a period in history, historians often go through as many sources as possible, while keeping in mind the biases and interests that could be behind them.

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