[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP - Entrepreneurial journalism: emerging models and lived experiences. Looking back and looking forward.
Mon May 31 16:24:49 GMT 2021
https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/announcement/view/29
*Brazilian Journalism Research - **Call for Papers - V. 18, n. 2, 2022*
*Entrepreneurial journalism: emerging models and lived experiences.
Looking back and looking forward.*
*Editors: *Renaud Carbasse (Université Laval, Canada), Olivier Standaert
(Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium), Clare Elizabeth Cook
(University of Central Lancashire, United Kingdom)
This special edition of /Brazilian Journalism Research/ interrogates and
collates the links between entrepreneurialism and journalism, in
emergent journalistic practices and socioeconomic models. The growing
recognition of entrepreneurial values and practices in the journalism
domain has occurred against a backdrop of interlinked changes in
journalism and media in the economic, technological, social, ideological
and regulatory terrains. These are most prominent not only in the
emergence of new digital actors and new configurations of national and
international media landscapes but also in the reframing of normative
journalistic practices, organisational structures, modes of production,
distribution and financial sustainability. In this vein then,
entrepreneurial journalism delineates new relations between actors,
publics and domains of activity (Hang and Van Weezel, 2005; Mitchelstein
and Boczkowski, 2009; Lee-Wright et al., 2012; Mercier and
Pignard-Cheynel, 2014; Carbasse, 2015; Grohmann et al., 2019).
Taking shape in a movement which moves beyond traditional journalism
boundaries (Neff et al., 2005) these transformations have created
favourable conditions for new editorial projects to grow outside of
traditional legacy, corporate or mainstream media. They exist as
heterogeneous independent structures where journalists are confronted
with operational challenges and financial obstacles that question any
hard divide between editorial and business operations, which are little
understood. New journalistic techniques and products are developed and
iterated through a process of experimentation outside of normative
practices. Whether they openly embrace the ‘entrepreneurial journalism’
label (Briggs, 2011) as distinguished at least in part from the other
non-salaried forms of employment such as freelance (De Cock and De
Smaele, 2016) or whether they adhere to certain entrepreneurial
competences and general qualities without wanting to be overtly
labelled, these journalistic projects are united by a certain level in
their journalistic practices of deindustrialization and
decentralisation. They necessitate new definitions and understandings
hinged on flexible structures and new manners of doing and financing
journalism.
In deploying new values, logics and competencies, entrepreneurial
journalism sparks important implications for the journalistic domain,
socio-professional practices, meta-discourse and redefinitions of access
to the profession. Increasingly blurred boundaries between journalism
and other sectors of civil society and business domains brings into
question the very foundations of professional cultures and paradigms
(Lewis and Usher, 2013). In parallel, these changes bring about
increasingly individualistic approaches to journalism careers, prompting
different degrees of self-employment and development of ‘own brand’
journalism with bespoke definitions of professional success, both in the
terrains of economic and personal development (Standaert, 2016).
Over the past 15 years there has been a growing interest in
entrepreneurial journalism, the term most cited in the literature, as an
object of study in its own right despite the fact a precise definition
remains contested, not least against other forms of entrepreneurialism
from other cultural and creative industries (Rafter, 2019). Efforts of
definition “vague enough to result in a variety of constructed meanings”
(Vos and Singer, 2018) delineate based on interactions between economic
and editorial motivations, reception to innovative technologies or
creative forms of journalism production, somewhat detached from the
constraints of traditional media.
Scholarly attention in the literature to the challenges and
opportunities emerging from the terrain have been thus far fragmented,
and only partially address emergent models for these types of practice
as well as their mode of operandi. There exist persistent gaps in
surfacing workable models in the local, national and international
landscape (Damian-Gaillard et al., 2009; Briggs, 2011; Meyer, 2011;
Dvorkin, 2012; Berkey-Gerard, 2012; Brouwers, 2017; Salles, 2019),
effective business models in Western markets (Bruno et Nielsen, 2012;
Sirkkunen et Cook, 2012; Naldi and Picard, 2012; Charon, 2015; Robinson
et al., 2015; Nicholls et al., 2016), the degree of compatibility and
recognisable formats to tie down and redefine entrepreneurial identities
and meta-journalistic discourse with the link to atypical ways of
working (Benedetti et al., 2015; Carbasse, 2015; Carlson and Usher,
2016; Fulton, 2016; Porlezza and Splendore, 2016; Siapera and
Papadopoulou, 2016; Vos and Singer, 2016; Mathisen, 2018; Liang, 2020;
Nel et al., 2020), the implications of precarious working and changed
career trajectories (Cohen, 2015; Standaert, 2016; Anciaux et al., 2018;
Leung and Cossu, 2019), or the importance of entrepreneurial journalism
training in modern journalism curricula from student and trainer
perspectives (Baines and Kennedy, 2010; Hunter and Nel, 2011; Ferrier,
2013; Chimbel, 2016; Rafter, 2016; Broersma and Singer, 2020; Buschow
and Laugemann, 2020; Caplan et al., 2020).
In order to address these gaps in existing research and to synthesise
available findings and theorising, contributions to this special issue
are welcomed in the following areas, but are not limited to:
- What structural affordance do digital and platforms play in the
link(s) between journalism and entrepreneurialism?
- How have social, political and regulatory contexts affected the
closeness between journalism and entrepreneurialism, for better or worse?
- What are the new market approaches to journalism in these contexts and
has it led to the emergence of sustainable models to produce, distribute
or pay for journalism?
- In what ways does entrepreneurialism contribute to innovation in
journalistic formats or the reconfiguration of journalism roles?
- How do entrepreneurial competencies play out in daily routines,
professional practices or career management for journalists?
- How has the concept of a journalist entrepreneur evolved, been
redefined or integrated in the past decade?
- How have journalists, audiences, public stakeholders or
socioprofessional groups shaped and defined our understanding of
entrepreneurial journalism?
- How is entrepreneurialism shaped, welcomed or integrated in the
meta-discourse of local, national or international journalists groups?
- What tensions exist for journalist entrepreneurs and how are they
shaped or negotiated?
- How is entrepreneurial journalism included in journalism curricula and
what changes are needed?
- Exploration of methodological challenges and opportunities to
researching entrepreneurial journalism
- What challenges and impacts on the operations and sustainability of
entrepreneurial journalism did arise within the global sanitary and
economic context? What adaptations are needed by actors in this space?
Both single-country and comparative research are welcome, as well as
both theoretical and empirical manuscripts. Quantitative, qualitative or
mixed methods approaches can be used also action research or critical
theory. Conceptual and theoretical advancements in understanding
entrepreneurial journalism are welcomed. The intention is to draw
together a theoretically and methodologically rich set of
interdisciplinary perspectives to deepen knowledge around these questions.
Articles must be 40,000 to 55,000 characters (including references and
spaces) submitted by November 30 2021.
The BJR accepts manuscripts in Portuguese, Spanish, French and English.
Authors submitting in Portuguese, Spanish or French must provide an
English translation a month after receiving acceptance for publication.
No payment from the authors will be required.
The manuscripts must be submitted via the journal’s electronic platform
at : _http://bjr.sbpjor.org.br <http://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/>_
Contact for more information : _bjreditor@gmail.
<mailto:(bjreditor /at/ gmail.com)>com <mailto:(bjreditor /at/ gmail.com)>_ and
(_renaud.carbasse /at/ com.ulaval.ca) <mailto:(renaud.carbasse /at/ com.ulaval.ca)>_
Instructions for authors:
_https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/about/editorialPolicies#custom-0
<https://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/about/editorialPolicies#custom-0>_
Date of manuscript submission *November 30 2021*
Notification of acceptance: *April 30 2022*
Date of publication: *August 30 2022*
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]