Journalism research in practice: perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York ; London
Routledge
2021
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Schriftenreihe: | Journalism studies : theory and practice
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | xiv, 154 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9780367469665 9780367496449 |
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adam_text | Contents Citation Information viii Notes on Contributors xii Introduction—Journalism Research in Practice: Strategies, innovation, and Approaches to Change 1 Bonnie Brennen and Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. ADDRESSING JOURNALISM IN TIMES OF SOCIAL CONFLICT 1 Hero or Anti-Hero? Journalists and their Stories 5 Scott A. Eldridge II 2 Journalists Perceptions of Mass Shooting Coverage and Factors Influencing Those Perceptions 10 Nicole Smith Dahmen, Jesse Abdenour and Karen McIntyre 3 Media Criticism from the Far-Right: Attacking from Many Angles 16 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Karoline Andrea Ihlebæk 4 Public Media and Marginalized Publics: Online and Offline Engagement Strategies and Local Storytelling Networks 21 Andrea Wenzel 5 Listen First, Then Ask! Listening-based Journalistic Questioning Training Methods 26 Hailiki Harro-Loit and Kadri Ugur 6 I Was Doing a Good Deed : Exploring the Motivations of Photo Story Subjects in Granting Photojournalists Access 31 Brian P. McDermott, Tara M. Mortensen, Khadija Ejazand Daniel D. Haun 7 Is Journalism Going Global? Finding Answers in Quantitative Studies Employing the Concepts of the Culture Peg and the Culture Link Miki Tanikawa 37
vi CONTENTS 8 Challenging Data-Driven Journalism 42 Renata Faria Brandão 9 A Tale of Two Tragedies: Culpability and Innocence in American Journalism 46 SaifShahin ADVANCEMENTS IN NEW MEDIA AND AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION 10 Five Things We Should Learn from the Messiness of Participation 51 Laura Ahva 11 Disruptive Media Events: Balancing Editorial Control and Open Dissent in the Aftermath of Terror 56 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Kjersti Thorbjørnsrud 12 Insights from a Comparative Study into Convergence Culture in European Newsrooms 61 Manuel Menke, Susanne Kinnebrock, Sonja Kretzschmar, Ingrid Aichberger, Marcel Broersma, Roman Hummel, Susanne Kirchhoff, Dimitri Prandner, Nelson Ribeiro and Ramón Salaverria 13 Automating Complex News Stories by Capturing News Events as Data 66 David Caswell and Konstantin Dörr 14 Remaining in Control with an Illusion of Interactivity: The Paternalistic Side of Data Journalism 71 Ester Appelgren 15 Don t be Stupid.”The Role of Social Media Policies in Journalistic Boundary-Setting 76 Andrew Duffy and Megan Knight 16 What a Story! Interpretative Rhetoric in News Media s Facebook Updates 81 Yngve Benestad Hågvar 17 How Engagement with Journalists on Twitter Reduces Public Perceptions of Media Bias 86 Trevor Diehl, Alberto Ardèvol-Abreu and Homero Gil de Zuniga CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN A CHANGING PROFESSION 18 Fact-checkers as Entrepreneurs Jane B. Singer 91
CONTENTS 19 Careers in Modern Professional Journalism: A Case Study of NYC Journalist Network Histories 2011 -2015 Allie Koštéřích and Matthew S. Weber vii 97 20 From Analog Dollars to Digital Dimes: A Look into the Performance of US Newspapers Hsiang Iris Chyi and Ori Tenenboim 103 21 The Two Faces of Janus: Web Analytics Companies and the Shifting Culture of News Valerie Belair-Gagnon and Avery E. Holton 108 22 Where Do Facts Matter? The Digital Paradox in Magazines Fact-checking Processes Susan Currie Sivek and Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin 113 23 Entrepreneurs and Idealists — Freelance Journalists at the Intersection of Autonomy and Constraints Birgit Røe Mathisen 118 24 Ethical Boundaries among Freelance Journalists Birgit Røe Mathisen 123 POSSIBILITIES FOR JOURNALISM AND SOCIAL CHANGE 25 Total Eclipse of the Social: What Journalism Can Learn from the Fundamentals of Facebook Kristy Hess and Robert E. GutscheJr 26 Pushy or a Princess? Women Experts and UK Broadcast News Lis Howell and Jane B. Singer 128 133 27 Local Journalism and the Information Needs of Local Communities: Toward a Scalable Assessment Approach Philip M. Napoli, Sarah Stonbely, Kathleen McCollough and Bryce Renninger 139 28 Solutions Journalism: The Effects of Including Solution Information in News Stories About Social Problems Karen McIntyre 144 Index 149
The journal Journalism Studies was established at the turn of the new millennium by Bob Franklin. It was launched in the context of a burgeoning interest in the scholarly study of journalism and an expansive global community of journalism scholars and researchers. The ambition was to provide a forum for the critical discussion and study of journalism as a sub ject of intellectual inquiry but also an arena of professional practice. Previously, the study of journalism in the UK and much of Europe was a fairly marginal branch of the larger discip lines of media, communication and cultural studies; only a handful of Universities offered degree programmes in the subject. Journalism Studies has flourished and succeeded in pro viding the intended public space for discussion of research on key issues within the field, to the point where in 2007 a sister journal, Journalism Practice, was launched to enable an enhanced focus on practice-based issues, as well as foregrounding studies of jour nalism education, training and professional concerns. Both journals are among the leading ranked journals within the field and publish six issues annually, in electronic and print formats. More recently, 2013 witnessed the launch of a further companion journal Digital Journalism to provide a site for scholarly discussion, analysis and responses to the wide ran ging implications of digital technologies for the practice and study of journalism. From the outset, the publication of themed issues has been a commitment for all journals. Their pur pose is first, to focus on highly significant or
neglected areas of the field; second, to facilitate discussion and analysis of important and topical policy issues; and third, to offer readers an especially high quality and closely focused set of essays, analyses and discussions. The Journalism Studies: Theory and Practice book series draws on a wide range of these themed issues from all journals and thereby extends the critical and public forum provided by them.The Editor of the journals works closely with guest editors to ensure that the books achieve relevance for readers and the highest standards of research rigour and academic excellence. The series makes a significant contribution to the field of journalism studies by inviting distinguished scholars, academics and journalism practitioners to discuss and debate the central concerns within the field. It also reaches a wider readership of scholars, students and practitioners across the social sciences, humanities and communication arts, encouraging them to engage critically with, but also to interrogate, the specialist scholarly studies of journalism which this series provides. Recent titles in the series;
Contents Citation Information viii Notes on Contributors xii Introduction—Journalism Research in Practice: Strategies, innovation, and Approaches to Change 1 Bonnie Brennen and Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. ADDRESSING JOURNALISM IN TIMES OF SOCIAL CONFLICT 1 Hero or Anti-Hero? Journalists and their Stories 5 Scott A. Eldridge II 2 Journalists Perceptions of Mass Shooting Coverage and Factors Influencing Those Perceptions 10 Nicole Smith Dahmen, Jesse Abdenour and Karen McIntyre 3 Media Criticism from the Far-Right: Attacking from Many Angles 16 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Karoline Andrea Ihlebæk 4 Public Media and Marginalized Publics: Online and Offline Engagement Strategies and Local Storytelling Networks 21 Andrea Wenzel 5 Listen First, Then Ask! Listening-based Journalistic Questioning Training Methods 26 Hailiki Harro-Loit and Kadri Ugur 6 I Was Doing a Good Deed : Exploring the Motivations of Photo Story Subjects in Granting Photojournalists Access 31 Brian P. McDermott, Tara M. Mortensen, Khadija Ejazand Daniel D. Haun 7 Is Journalism Going Global? Finding Answers in Quantitative Studies Employing the Concepts of the Culture Peg and the Culture Link Miki Tanikawa 37
vi CONTENTS 8 Challenging Data-Driven Journalism 42 Renata Faria Brandão 9 A Tale of Two Tragedies: Culpability and Innocence in American Journalism 46 SaifShahin ADVANCEMENTS IN NEW MEDIA AND AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION 10 Five Things We Should Learn from the Messiness of Participation 51 Laura Ahva 11 Disruptive Media Events: Balancing Editorial Control and Open Dissent in the Aftermath of Terror 56 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Kjersti Thorbjørnsrud 12 Insights from a Comparative Study into Convergence Culture in European Newsrooms 61 Manuel Menke, Susanne Kinnebrock, Sonja Kretzschmar, Ingrid Aichberger, Marcel Broersma, Roman Hummel, Susanne Kirchhoff, Dimitri Prandner, Nelson Ribeiro and Ramón Salaverria 13 Automating Complex News Stories by Capturing News Events as Data 66 David Caswell and Konstantin Dörr 14 Remaining in Control with an Illusion of Interactivity: The Paternalistic Side of Data Journalism 71 Ester Appelgren 15 Don t be Stupid.”The Role of Social Media Policies in Journalistic Boundary-Setting 76 Andrew Duffy and Megan Knight 16 What a Story! Interpretative Rhetoric in News Media s Facebook Updates 81 Yngve Benestad Hågvar 17 How Engagement with Journalists on Twitter Reduces Public Perceptions of Media Bias 86 Trevor Diehl, Alberto Ardèvol-Abreu and Homero Gil de Zuniga CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN A CHANGING PROFESSION 18 Fact-checkers as Entrepreneurs Jane B. Singer 91
CONTENTS 19 Careers in Modern Professional Journalism: A Case Study of NYC Journalist Network Histories 2011 -2015 Allie Koštéřích and Matthew S. Weber vii 97 20 From Analog Dollars to Digital Dimes: A Look into the Performance of US Newspapers Hsiang Iris Chyi and Ori Tenenboim 103 21 The Two Faces of Janus: Web Analytics Companies and the Shifting Culture of News Valerie Belair-Gagnon and Avery E. Holton 108 22 Where Do Facts Matter? The Digital Paradox in Magazines Fact-checking Processes Susan Currie Sivek and Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin 113 23 Entrepreneurs and Idealists — Freelance Journalists at the Intersection of Autonomy and Constraints Birgit Røe Mathisen 118 24 Ethical Boundaries among Freelance Journalists Birgit Røe Mathisen 123 POSSIBILITIES FOR JOURNALISM AND SOCIAL CHANGE 25 Total Eclipse of the Social: What Journalism Can Learn from the Fundamentals of Facebook Kristy Hess and Robert E. GutscheJr 26 Pushy or a Princess? Women Experts and UK Broadcast News Lis Howell and Jane B. Singer 128 133 27 Local Journalism and the Information Needs of Local Communities: Toward a Scalable Assessment Approach Philip M. Napoli, Sarah Stonbely, Kathleen McCollough and Bryce Renninger 139 28 Solutions Journalism: The Effects of Including Solution Information in News Stories About Social Problems Karen McIntyre 144 Index 149
The journal Journalism Studies was established at the turn of the new millennium by Bob Franklin. It was launched in the context of a burgeoning interest in the scholarly study of journalism and an expansive global community of journalism scholars and researchers. The ambition was to provide a forum for the critical discussion and study of journalism as a sub ject of intellectual inquiry but also an arena of professional practice. Previously, the study of journalism in the UK and much of Europe was a fairly marginal branch of the larger discip lines of media, communication and cultural studies; only a handful of Universities offered degree programmes in the subject. Journalism Studies has flourished and succeeded in pro viding the intended public space for discussion of research on key issues within the field, to the point where in 2007 a sister journal, Journalism Practice, was launched to enable an enhanced focus on practice-based issues, as well as foregrounding studies of jour nalism education, training and professional concerns. Both journals are among the leading ranked journals within the field and publish six issues annually, in electronic and print formats. More recently, 2013 witnessed the launch of a further companion journal Digital Journalism to provide a site for scholarly discussion, analysis and responses to the wide ran ging implications of digital technologies for the practice and study of journalism. From the outset, the publication of themed issues has been a commitment for all journals. Their pur pose is first, to focus on highly significant or
neglected areas of the field; second, to facilitate discussion and analysis of important and topical policy issues; and third, to offer readers an especially high quality and closely focused set of essays, analyses and discussions. The Journalism Studies: Theory and Practice book series draws on a wide range of these themed issues from all journals and thereby extends the critical and public forum provided by them.The Editor of the journals works closely with guest editors to ensure that the books achieve relevance for readers and the highest standards of research rigour and academic excellence. The series makes a significant contribution to the field of journalism studies by inviting distinguished scholars, academics and journalism practitioners to discuss and debate the central concerns within the field. It also reaches a wider readership of scholars, students and practitioners across the social sciences, humanities and communication arts, encouraging them to engage critically with, but also to interrogate, the specialist scholarly studies of journalism which this series provides. Recent titles in the series;
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adam_txt |
Contents Citation Information viii Notes on Contributors xii Introduction—Journalism Research in Practice: Strategies, innovation, and Approaches to Change 1 Bonnie Brennen and Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. ADDRESSING JOURNALISM IN TIMES OF SOCIAL CONFLICT 1 Hero or Anti-Hero? Journalists and their Stories 5 Scott A. Eldridge II 2 Journalists' Perceptions of Mass Shooting Coverage and Factors Influencing Those Perceptions 10 Nicole Smith Dahmen, Jesse Abdenour and Karen McIntyre 3 Media Criticism from the Far-Right: Attacking from Many Angles 16 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Karoline Andrea Ihlebæk 4 Public Media and Marginalized Publics: Online and Offline Engagement Strategies and Local Storytelling Networks 21 Andrea Wenzel 5 "Listen First, Then Ask!" Listening-based Journalistic Questioning Training Methods 26 Hailiki Harro-Loit and Kadri Ugur 6 "I Was Doing a Good Deed": Exploring the Motivations of Photo Story Subjects in Granting Photojournalists Access 31 Brian P. McDermott, Tara M. Mortensen, Khadija Ejazand Daniel D. Haun 7 Is Journalism Going Global? Finding Answers in Quantitative Studies Employing the Concepts of the "Culture Peg" and the "Culture Link" Miki Tanikawa 37
vi CONTENTS 8 Challenging Data-Driven Journalism 42 Renata Faria Brandão 9 A Tale of Two Tragedies: Culpability and Innocence in American Journalism 46 SaifShahin ADVANCEMENTS IN NEW MEDIA AND AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION 10 Five Things We Should Learn from the Messiness of Participation 51 Laura Ahva 11 Disruptive Media Events: Balancing Editorial Control and Open Dissent in the Aftermath of Terror 56 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Kjersti Thorbjørnsrud 12 Insights from a Comparative Study into Convergence Culture in European Newsrooms 61 Manuel Menke, Susanne Kinnebrock, Sonja Kretzschmar, Ingrid Aichberger, Marcel Broersma, Roman Hummel, Susanne Kirchhoff, Dimitri Prandner, Nelson Ribeiro and Ramón Salaverria 13 Automating Complex News Stories by Capturing News Events as Data 66 David Caswell and Konstantin Dörr 14 Remaining in Control with an Illusion of Interactivity: The Paternalistic Side of Data Journalism 71 Ester Appelgren 15 "Don't be Stupid.”The Role of Social Media Policies in Journalistic Boundary-Setting 76 Andrew Duffy and Megan Knight 16 What a Story! Interpretative Rhetoric in News Media's Facebook Updates 81 Yngve Benestad Hågvar 17 How Engagement with Journalists on Twitter Reduces Public Perceptions of Media Bias 86 Trevor Diehl, Alberto Ardèvol-Abreu and Homero Gil de Zuniga CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN A CHANGING PROFESSION 18 Fact-checkers as Entrepreneurs Jane B. Singer 91
CONTENTS 19 Careers in Modern Professional Journalism: A Case Study of NYC Journalist Network Histories 2011 -2015 Allie Koštéřích and Matthew S. Weber vii 97 20 From Analog Dollars to Digital Dimes: A Look into the Performance of US Newspapers Hsiang Iris Chyi and Ori Tenenboim 103 21 The Two Faces of Janus: Web Analytics Companies and the Shifting Culture of News Valerie Belair-Gagnon and Avery E. Holton 108 22 Where Do Facts Matter? The Digital Paradox in Magazines' Fact-checking Processes Susan Currie Sivek and Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin 113 23 Entrepreneurs and Idealists — Freelance Journalists at the Intersection of Autonomy and Constraints Birgit Røe Mathisen 118 24 Ethical Boundaries among Freelance Journalists Birgit Røe Mathisen 123 POSSIBILITIES FOR JOURNALISM AND SOCIAL CHANGE 25 Total Eclipse of the Social: What Journalism Can Learn from the Fundamentals of Facebook Kristy Hess and Robert E. GutscheJr 26 Pushy or a Princess? Women Experts and UK Broadcast News Lis Howell and Jane B. Singer 128 133 27 Local Journalism and the Information Needs of Local Communities: Toward a Scalable Assessment Approach Philip M. Napoli, Sarah Stonbely, Kathleen McCollough and Bryce Renninger 139 28 Solutions Journalism: The Effects of Including Solution Information in News Stories About Social Problems Karen McIntyre 144 Index 149
The journal Journalism Studies was established at the turn of the new millennium by Bob Franklin. It was launched in the context of a burgeoning interest in the scholarly study of journalism and an expansive global community of journalism scholars and researchers. The ambition was to provide a forum for the critical discussion and study of journalism as a sub ject of intellectual inquiry but also an arena of professional practice. Previously, the study of journalism in the UK and much of Europe was a fairly marginal branch of the larger discip lines of media, communication and cultural studies; only a handful of Universities offered degree programmes in the subject. Journalism Studies has flourished and succeeded in pro viding the intended public space for discussion of research on key issues within the field, to the point where in 2007 a sister journal, Journalism Practice, was launched to enable an enhanced focus on practice-based issues, as well as foregrounding studies of jour nalism education, training and professional concerns. Both journals are among the leading ranked journals within the field and publish six issues annually, in electronic and print formats. More recently, 2013 witnessed the launch of a further companion journal Digital Journalism to provide a site for scholarly discussion, analysis and responses to the wide ran ging implications of digital technologies for the practice and study of journalism. From the outset, the publication of themed issues has been a commitment for all journals. Their pur pose is first, to focus on highly significant or
neglected areas of the field; second, to facilitate discussion and analysis of important and topical policy issues; and third, to offer readers an especially high quality and closely focused set of essays, analyses and discussions. The Journalism Studies: Theory and Practice book series draws on a wide range of these themed issues from all journals and thereby extends the critical and public forum provided by them.The Editor of the journals works closely with guest editors to ensure that the books achieve relevance for readers and the highest standards of research rigour and academic excellence. The series makes a significant contribution to the field of journalism studies by inviting distinguished scholars, academics and journalism practitioners to discuss and debate the central concerns within the field. It also reaches a wider readership of scholars, students and practitioners across the social sciences, humanities and communication arts, encouraging them to engage critically with, but also to interrogate, the specialist scholarly studies of journalism which this series provides. Recent titles in the series;
Contents Citation Information viii Notes on Contributors xii Introduction—Journalism Research in Practice: Strategies, innovation, and Approaches to Change 1 Bonnie Brennen and Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. ADDRESSING JOURNALISM IN TIMES OF SOCIAL CONFLICT 1 Hero or Anti-Hero? Journalists and their Stories 5 Scott A. Eldridge II 2 Journalists' Perceptions of Mass Shooting Coverage and Factors Influencing Those Perceptions 10 Nicole Smith Dahmen, Jesse Abdenour and Karen McIntyre 3 Media Criticism from the Far-Right: Attacking from Many Angles 16 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Karoline Andrea Ihlebæk 4 Public Media and Marginalized Publics: Online and Offline Engagement Strategies and Local Storytelling Networks 21 Andrea Wenzel 5 "Listen First, Then Ask!" Listening-based Journalistic Questioning Training Methods 26 Hailiki Harro-Loit and Kadri Ugur 6 "I Was Doing a Good Deed": Exploring the Motivations of Photo Story Subjects in Granting Photojournalists Access 31 Brian P. McDermott, Tara M. Mortensen, Khadija Ejazand Daniel D. Haun 7 Is Journalism Going Global? Finding Answers in Quantitative Studies Employing the Concepts of the "Culture Peg" and the "Culture Link" Miki Tanikawa 37
vi CONTENTS 8 Challenging Data-Driven Journalism 42 Renata Faria Brandão 9 A Tale of Two Tragedies: Culpability and Innocence in American Journalism 46 SaifShahin ADVANCEMENTS IN NEW MEDIA AND AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION 10 Five Things We Should Learn from the Messiness of Participation 51 Laura Ahva 11 Disruptive Media Events: Balancing Editorial Control and Open Dissent in the Aftermath of Terror 56 Tine Ustad Figenschou and Kjersti Thorbjørnsrud 12 Insights from a Comparative Study into Convergence Culture in European Newsrooms 61 Manuel Menke, Susanne Kinnebrock, Sonja Kretzschmar, Ingrid Aichberger, Marcel Broersma, Roman Hummel, Susanne Kirchhoff, Dimitri Prandner, Nelson Ribeiro and Ramón Salaverria 13 Automating Complex News Stories by Capturing News Events as Data 66 David Caswell and Konstantin Dörr 14 Remaining in Control with an Illusion of Interactivity: The Paternalistic Side of Data Journalism 71 Ester Appelgren 15 "Don't be Stupid.”The Role of Social Media Policies in Journalistic Boundary-Setting 76 Andrew Duffy and Megan Knight 16 What a Story! Interpretative Rhetoric in News Media's Facebook Updates 81 Yngve Benestad Hågvar 17 How Engagement with Journalists on Twitter Reduces Public Perceptions of Media Bias 86 Trevor Diehl, Alberto Ardèvol-Abreu and Homero Gil de Zuniga CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS IN A CHANGING PROFESSION 18 Fact-checkers as Entrepreneurs Jane B. Singer 91
CONTENTS 19 Careers in Modern Professional Journalism: A Case Study of NYC Journalist Network Histories 2011 -2015 Allie Koštéřích and Matthew S. Weber vii 97 20 From Analog Dollars to Digital Dimes: A Look into the Performance of US Newspapers Hsiang Iris Chyi and Ori Tenenboim 103 21 The Two Faces of Janus: Web Analytics Companies and the Shifting Culture of News Valerie Belair-Gagnon and Avery E. Holton 108 22 Where Do Facts Matter? The Digital Paradox in Magazines' Fact-checking Processes Susan Currie Sivek and Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin 113 23 Entrepreneurs and Idealists — Freelance Journalists at the Intersection of Autonomy and Constraints Birgit Røe Mathisen 118 24 Ethical Boundaries among Freelance Journalists Birgit Røe Mathisen 123 POSSIBILITIES FOR JOURNALISM AND SOCIAL CHANGE 25 Total Eclipse of the Social: What Journalism Can Learn from the Fundamentals of Facebook Kristy Hess and Robert E. GutscheJr 26 Pushy or a Princess? Women Experts and UK Broadcast News Lis Howell and Jane B. Singer 128 133 27 Local Journalism and the Information Needs of Local Communities: Toward a Scalable Assessment Approach Philip M. Napoli, Sarah Stonbely, Kathleen McCollough and Bryce Renninger 139 28 Solutions Journalism: The Effects of Including Solution Information in News Stories About Social Problems Karen McIntyre 144 Index 149
The journal Journalism Studies was established at the turn of the new millennium by Bob Franklin. It was launched in the context of a burgeoning interest in the scholarly study of journalism and an expansive global community of journalism scholars and researchers. The ambition was to provide a forum for the critical discussion and study of journalism as a sub ject of intellectual inquiry but also an arena of professional practice. Previously, the study of journalism in the UK and much of Europe was a fairly marginal branch of the larger discip lines of media, communication and cultural studies; only a handful of Universities offered degree programmes in the subject. Journalism Studies has flourished and succeeded in pro viding the intended public space for discussion of research on key issues within the field, to the point where in 2007 a sister journal, Journalism Practice, was launched to enable an enhanced focus on practice-based issues, as well as foregrounding studies of jour nalism education, training and professional concerns. Both journals are among the leading ranked journals within the field and publish six issues annually, in electronic and print formats. More recently, 2013 witnessed the launch of a further companion journal Digital Journalism to provide a site for scholarly discussion, analysis and responses to the wide ran ging implications of digital technologies for the practice and study of journalism. From the outset, the publication of themed issues has been a commitment for all journals. Their pur pose is first, to focus on highly significant or
neglected areas of the field; second, to facilitate discussion and analysis of important and topical policy issues; and third, to offer readers an especially high quality and closely focused set of essays, analyses and discussions. The Journalism Studies: Theory and Practice book series draws on a wide range of these themed issues from all journals and thereby extends the critical and public forum provided by them.The Editor of the journals works closely with guest editors to ensure that the books achieve relevance for readers and the highest standards of research rigour and academic excellence. The series makes a significant contribution to the field of journalism studies by inviting distinguished scholars, academics and journalism practitioners to discuss and debate the central concerns within the field. It also reaches a wider readership of scholars, students and practitioners across the social sciences, humanities and communication arts, encouraging them to engage critically with, but also to interrogate, the specialist scholarly studies of journalism which this series provides. Recent titles in the series; |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV046913226 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T15:28:50Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T08:57:20Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780367469665 9780367496449 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-032322630 |
oclc_num | 1200025900 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-188 DE-384 DE-706 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-188 DE-384 DE-706 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | xiv, 154 Seiten Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2021 |
publishDateSearch | 2021 |
publishDateSort | 2021 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Journalism studies : theory and practice |
spelling | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions edited by Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. and Bonnie Brennen New York ; London Routledge 2021 xiv, 154 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Journalism studies : theory and practice Journalismus (DE-588)4028779-8 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Journalismus (DE-588)4028779-8 s DE-604 Gutsche, Robert E. Jr. 1980- (DE-588)1083829009 edt Brennen, Bonnie S. 1952- (DE-588)1165353539 edt Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000005&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000007&line_number=0004&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions Journalismus (DE-588)4028779-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4028779-8 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions |
title_auth | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions |
title_exact_search | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions |
title_exact_search_txtP | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions |
title_full | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions edited by Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. and Bonnie Brennen |
title_fullStr | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions edited by Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. and Bonnie Brennen |
title_full_unstemmed | Journalism research in practice perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions edited by Robert E. Gutsche, Jr. and Bonnie Brennen |
title_short | Journalism research in practice |
title_sort | journalism research in practice perspectives on change challenges and solutions |
title_sub | perspectives on change, challenges, and solutions |
topic | Journalismus (DE-588)4028779-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Journalismus Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000005&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032322630&sequence=000007&line_number=0004&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT gutscheroberte journalismresearchinpracticeperspectivesonchangechallengesandsolutions AT brennenbonnies journalismresearchinpracticeperspectivesonchangechallengesandsolutions |
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