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[ecrea] Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 7.3 published
Wed Nov 14 21:09:15 GMT 2018
Intellect is delighted to announce that the Journal of Applied
Journalism & Media Studies 7.3 is now available! For more information
about the issue, click here >> https://bit.ly/2PUvb1O
Contents
Encountering disruption: Adaptation, resistance and change
Authors: Scott A. Eldridge II And Marcel Broersma
Page Start: 469
‘Professionally we’re definitely in this together’
Authors: Julian Petley
Page Start: 481
In early April 2016, the websites Byline and openDemocracy published a
number of articles alleging that the Culture Secretary, John
Whittingdale, had been involved in a liaison with a prostitute.
Remarkably, given most British national newspapers’ obsession with sex
scandals, the national press not only refused to pick up the story but
also attacked Byline and openDemocracy for running it, arguing that it
was not in the public interest. Byline and openDemocracy responded that
the nationals had refused to run the story because they did not want to
harm Whittingdale, who was known not to be in favour of putting the
recommendations of the Leveson Inquiry into practice. The nationals hit
back by accusing Byline and openDemocracy, which supported Leveson, of
trying to undermine Whittingdale and so improve the chances of the
Leveson recommendations being adopted. But in the course of this
extremely bitter battle between different sections of the news media, it
soon became apparent that the nationals had in fact been sitting on not
only the prostitute story but a number of other scandals as well
concerning Whittingdale. This article will utilize the Whittingdale
controversy to argue that most of the British national press puts
serving its own interests far above serving the public interest, that it
will use every means at its disposal to thwart the creation of the kind
of system of press self-regulation proposed by the Leveson Inquiry and
that it is far too deeply enmeshed in the political system, and in
particular, with Conservative interests, to be considered as a Fourth
Estate of the realm.
‘Disruption’ in UK journalism education? A study of narratives of resilience
Authors: John Steel
Page Start: 501
This article examines the narratives of journalism relevant to
journalism education from the perspective of those who ‘do’ journalism
education in the United Kingdom. It draws on interviews with twelve
individuals between 2006 and 2016 from within two distinct groups, both
of which share a professional interest in journalism education:
journalism educators with the UK Higher Education (HE) sector and former
practicing journalists from within the industry who have a particular
interest in journalism education, either as employers or as trainers
within the industry. Drawing on Bourdieu’s field theory and Carlson’s
theory of metajournalistic discourse the interviews highlight what
Mensing describes as ‘industry-centred journalism education’ as being
particularly resilient in the English HE sector. Despite reflexive
notions of ‘digital disruption’ from within centres of journalism
education, the practice-driven, industry-orientated approach to
journalism education remains remarkably resilient over time.
The grey area in the practice of online journalism in China
Authors: Tianbo Xu
Page Start: 521
Considerable scholarly discussion, in broad terms at least, has focused
on the disruptions that the Internet has delivered to journalistic norms
and the changes to perceptions that journalists hold of their role.
However, such discussion tends to emphasize the Internet as a globally
used form of technology with a singular impact on journalism; it
mentions only in passing that its understanding of this concept is
mainly based on an Anglo-American model. This article explores Chinese
journalists’ ideas about disruption in China. It finds that Chinese
journalists use of the Internet falls within the margins of the
censorship system, leading to a grey area surrounding the practice of
online journalism within which certain specific constraints supposedly
enforced by administration law and departmental policies can be broken
without punishment. While working in this grey area signals a disruption
of journalistic norms in China, the characteristics of this disruption
differ from those found in western countries.
Repairing a fractured field: Dynamics of collaboration, normalization
and appropriation at intersections of newswork
Authors: Scott A. Eldridge II
Page Start: 541
New patterns of journalistic endeavour have altered the ways in which
news and information reach the public, with new technologies enabling
new types of journalistic actors to produce news both on their own and
in collaborative arrangements with traditional journalists. From these
intersections, new questions for understanding journalism amid change
ask whether we are facing a fractured or more consolidated journalistic
field. This article explores intersections of traditional and emergent
news actors as disruptions to the dominant vision of the field. It shows
the treatment of autonomous work of digital interlopers in news texts as
reinforcing prevailing views of journalism by invoking traditional
information authority and paradigmatic news-source relationships. Using
field theory and analysis of narratives of journalistic roles in news
texts to support its thesis, this article looks at reactions to the
emergence of two independent news actors – WikiLeaks and ProPublica –
representing distinct approaches to newswork born of a digital age. In
its conclusion, this article outlines the initial framework for an
‘appropriation thesis’ that extends paradigm repair in instances when
new journalistic actors’ newswork is subsumed under traditional
routines, thereby muting narratives of a heterogeneous field that would
contradict the field’s dominant vision and authority.
Local news in a digital world: Stand up and start up, instead of copy
and paste
Authors: Bart Brouwers
Page Start: 561
For legacy media companies, the digital world seemed to be the perfect
place for scalable initiatives in local journalism. But up until now,
the scalability nut hasn’t been thoroughly cracked. Media companies have
tried to copy the old habits and paste them into a new digital world,
without asking themselves what problem – and whose problem – they were
going to solve. The profession needs to realize that scaling isn’t
something that comes automatically with the digital world, but has to be
derived from the value proposition of the news product itself. To really
internally reinvent the local news in an online world, it has to stand
up and start up all over again, before it can scale up and – finally –
stay up again.
Constructive journalism
Authors: Chrysi Dagoula
Page Start: 569
Danielle Batist is a freelance journalist and editor who embraces an
entrepreneurial and positive approach to journalism. She has lived and
worked in several countries around the globe. In the fifteen years she
has been working as a journalist, she has developed an interest in
social change, which she pursued in her work as the editor of the
International Network of Street Papers (INSP), reaching six million
readers in over 40 countries, and which underpins her current focus on
‘Constructive Journalism’ – a project she co-founded in 2014. Drawing on
a variety of behavioural and audience studies, constructive journalism
can be defined as ‘as rigorous, compelling reporting that includes
positive and solutionfocused elements in order to empower audiences and
present a fuller picture of truth, while upholding journalism’s core
functions and ethics’ – in other words, an approach that attempts to
bring positive elements to conventional reporting. By using a
‘wellbeing’ model of the world instead of a ‘disease’ model, stories
about what is working – rather than just what is broken – become part of
the news eco-system. Last year, Danielle got involved in the re-launch
of Positive News, founded in 1993 and re-launched in 2016 as a magazine.
The publication showcases a new model for media ownership, as well as a
new way to tell news stories. Owned by a community of 1526 journalists,
readers and supporters from 33 countries, the magazine features
‘Constructive Conversation’, where thought leaders are challenged to
find common ground; ‘Solutions Lab’, where forward-thinking responses to
difficult social issues are unearthed; ‘What Happened Next?’ where
stories reported upon previously are updated. All these aspects are
highlighted in a conversation with Danielle Batist, who gives her
insight on the discussed matters.
Making sense of innovative and disruptive news in the digital age
Authors: Chrysi Dagoula
Page Start: 575
Launched in 2012, Zetland (zetland.dk <http://zetland.dk>) is a Danish
media company that approaches digital journalism as ‘a force of good’.
Its mission contains a paradox: it is simple but simultaneously complex
– not to make news but to make sense of it. Through its diverse
practices that vary from daily publications in a custom-built platform
to pioneering shows of ‘performed’ journalism, Zetland’s aim is to tell
stories worth remembering that integrate audiences – as co-creators in
all journalistic processes – to be able to distribute knowledge and
build a well-informed community. Since their founding, a lot has
changed. Although its core remained the same, Zetland recently expanded,
raising two million euros, broadening its team with 25 new members and
adding the publication of a daily in-depth digital newspaper, all the
while experimenting with new paradigms of digital journalism.
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