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[Commlist] CFP – Reappraising UK local and community news media practice and policy
Tue Sep 15 08:48:55 GMT 2020
*CFP: Reappraising UK local and community news media practice and policy.*
Edited by: Rachel Matthews and David Harte
Abstract submission, 300 words: September 25^th 2020
Full chapter submission, 5000 words: February 15^th 2021
The landscape for local and community news media in the UK has been
undergoing a period of rapid change in recent years in the wake of the
disruption of traditional business models and the advent of diverse,
entrepreneurial reactions to the spaces created. The impact of Covid-19
on the local news landscape sees the prospect of an acceleration of
changes already underway, with both commentators and governments
concerned about the consequences of news ‘deserts’ opening up as large
commercial news providers look to protect their business models by
closing local titles and making journalists redundant. Do such changes
offer routes for alternative models of sustaining local news? How might
community media operations make the most of this moment or have
audiences already migrated to networked spaces where rumour and
conspiracy fill information gaps?
This volume, intended to be published as part of the Routledge
*/Disruptions: Studies in Digital Journalism /*book series, seeks
contributions that offer insights into the emergent local and community
news media landscape and considers how policy responses that have begun
to situate local news as an essential, subsidised public service might
play out in different contexts. The editors wish to invite contributions
that consider the role of local and regional television along with local
and community radio, as well as print and local online news outlets.
An overview of areas which might be addressed include, but are not
limited to, the implications of local and community media practices and
policies for:
·Local democratic processes
·Social justice
·Information provision
·Local media ecosystems
·Community development
·Government policy – present and future
·Local minority ethnic media
·The regulatory environment
·Public subsidy
·Media entrepreneurs and emerging business models
·The local media workforce and platforms
·Alternative local and community media
·State policy interventions
·Interventions by technology platforms or companies
We are particularly interested in contributions that deal
with government and industry policy and some of the contradictions and
potential tensions therein (eg: the use of BBC and Facebook funding for
local news reporters for local papers).
This volume is designed as a rapid response to changes in this area. We
therefore invite abstracts of no more than 300 words by 25^th September
2020. We will inform successful authors by 8^th October who will be
invited to submit full chapters of 5,000 words by 15^th February 2021,
pending contract.
Responses to (dave.harte /at/ bcu.ac.uk) <mailto:(dave.harte /at/ bcu.ac.uk)>
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