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[ecrea] New book: 'Journalists in the UK'.
Mon May 09 22:31:43 GMT 2016
I thought you might be interested in my new book -- ‘Journalists in the
UK’ -- published today by Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
at the University of Oxford
It examines journalists' views on the ethics and practices of
journalism, how they regard their role, pay and diversity within the
profession, who they trust, and the changing pressures of the news
environment.
I've highlighted some of the key findings below, and if you want to read
the full book it's available, free-of-charge, to download here:
http://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/publication/journalists-uk
Best wishes
Neil
Dr Neil Thurman, Professor of Communication, City University London /
University of Munich
Key Findings:
** Post-Leveson, UK journalists still more likely to push boundaries to
get the story*
53% think it is justified to pay for confidential information in the
public interest compared with just 5% of American journalists. 81% think
it is acceptable, when stories are in the public interest, to use
confidential business or government documents without permission. This
compares with just 58% of journalists in the United States.(p.54)
** Over half of the journalists surveyed now work online*
Since 2012, the proportion of journalists in the UK working in print
versions of newspapers has fallen from 56% to 44%, while the proportion
working online has risen from 26% to 52%. However, the median pay of
those working exclusively online is lower than that of journalists who
continue to do all their work for printed newspapers. (p.57)
** 86% of journalists thought that the time available for researching
stories had decreased*
The book says more online working may be part of the reason, with
journalists who work online producing 71% more stories than other
journalists. Journalists who only work online were found to produce 186%
more stories than those who did not. (p.28)
** About twice as many journalists believe their editorial freedom has
decreased over time as believe it has increased*
The book argues this could be because of the increasing influence of
audiences and public relations communications. 41% of journalists
surveyed for the report said data and research on what audiences like to
read is now ‘very’ or ‘extremely’ influential; 61% thought the influence
of public relations had increased over the last five years. (p.36)
**Journalists have little trust in religious leaders and trade unions*
76% of journalists think religion has little or no influence on their
work and 61% are not members of a formal faith, a lower percentage than
in the general population. They trust religious leaders and trade unions
less than Parliament, the police, and the military, although politicians
and political parties are at the bottom of their list. (p.48)
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