Business & Economics Books:

Participatory Journalism

Guarding Open Gates at Online Newspapers
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Description

Who makes the news in a digital age? Participatory Journalism offers fascinating insights into how journalists in Western democracies are thinking about, and dealing with, the inclusion of content produced and published by the public. A timely look at digital news, the changes it is bringing for journalists and an industry in crisis Original data throughout, in the form of in-depth interviews with dozens of journalists at leading news organizations in ten Western democracies Provides a unique model of the news-making process and its openness to user participation in five stages Gives a first-hand look at the workings and challenges of online journalism on a global scale, through data that has been seamlessly combined so that each chapter presents the views of journalists in many nations, highlighting both similarities and differences, both national and individual

Author Biography:

David Domingo is a senior lecturer in online journalism atthe Department of Communication Studies of Universitat Rovira iVirgili in Tarragona, Spain. Domingo, who has a Ph.D. in Journalismfrom the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, was a doctoralfellow at the University of Tampere (2004) and visiting assistantprofessor at the University of Iowa (2007-2008). His researchinterests include online journalists' professional ideology andwork routines, as well as the dynamics of innovations such asparticipatory journalism and convergence. He is co-editor, withChris Paterson, of Making Online News: The Ethnography of NewMedia Production (Peter Lang, 2008). Ari Heinonen, Ph.D., is journalism teacher and researcherin the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication at theUniversity of Tampere, Finland. A former newspaper journalist, hehas focused his academic research on explorations of the changingnature of professionalism in journalism, concepts of journalism inthe new media era and journalistic ethics. He has directed andparticipated in a number of national and international research anddevelopment projects in these areas. Alfred Hermida is a digital media scholar, journalismeducator and online news pioneer. Since 2006, he has been anassistant professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at theUniversity of British Columbia, Canada. Hermida was aKnight-Wallace Fellow at the University of Michigan in 2005 and anIBM CAS Canada Research Faculty Fellow in 2010. An award-winningjournalist who served for four years as a Middle Eastcorrespondent, Hermida is a 16-year veteran of the BBC and was afounding news editor of the BBC News website in 1997. He has alsowritten for The Wall Street Journal, The Times ofLondon, The Guardian and NPR. Steve Paulussen, Ph.D., is a part-time lecturer injournalism studies at both the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and theUniversity of Antwerp, as well as a senior researcher at the IBBTresearch group for Media & ICT (MICT) at Ghent University,Belgium. In recent years, he has participated in a number ofprojects on different aspects of today s digital mediaculture. His main research interests lie in the field of journalismstudies, where he has published on developments in onlinejournalism, newsroom convergence and the sociological profile ofprofessional journalists. Between 2006 and 2010, he also wasinvolved in a multi-disciplinary strategic research project ondigital news trends in Flanders, Belgium (FLEET). Thorsten Quandt, Dr. phil. habil, is a professor inCommunication Studies / Interactive Media and Online Communicationat the University of Hohenheim, Germany. He has served as chair ofthe Journalism Studies Division in the German CommunicationAssociation (DGPuK) and as an officer in the Journalism StudiesDivision in the International Communication Association (ICA). Hiswidely published research includes studies on online journalism,media evolution, network communication and computer games. Jane B. Singer is an associate professor in the School ofJournalism and Mass Communication at the University of Iowa, USA,and a visiting professor in the School of Journalism, Media andCommunication at the University of Central Lancashire, UK. From2007 to 2010, she was the Johnston Press Chair in DigitalJournalism at Central Lancashire. Her research explores digitaljournalism, including changing roles, perceptions, norms andpractices. Before earning a Ph.D. in journalism from the Universityof Missouri, Singer was the first news manager of ProdigyInteractive Services. She also has worked as a newspaper reporterand editor. Zvi Reich, Ph.D., is a former journalist and a researcherin journalism studies at the Department of Communication, BenGurion University of the Negev, Israel. His book, Sourcing theNews, was published by Hampton Press in 2009. Reich's researchinterests focus on online news, sociology of news, the relationsbetween reporters and sources, authorship in journalism and the useof communication technologies in journalism. Two of his papers havewon the top three papers prize of the Journalism Studies Divisionat ICA. Other research has appeared in Journalism Studies,Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly andJournalism. He is a member of the editorial board ofJournalism Practice. Marina Vujnovic, Ph.D., is an assistant professor atMonmouth University, USA. Her primary fields of research areparticipatory journalism and new media studies, media history andgender, critical political economy, and cultural studies.Additional research interests include international communicationand the global flow of information, as well as ethnicity and themedia. She is the author of Forging the Bubikopf Nation:Journalism, Gender and Modernity in Interwar Yugoslavia (PeterLang, 2009).
Release date NZ
April 18th, 2011
Audience
  • Professional & Vocational
Pages
240
Dimensions
172x248x13
ISBN-13
9781444332278
Product ID
10046883

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