ABSTRACT

The future of newspapers is hotly contested. Pessimistic pundits predict their imminent demise while others envisage a new era of participatory journalism online, with yet others advocating increased investment "in quality journalism" rather than free gifts and DVDs, as the necessary cure for the current parlous state of newspapers.

Globally, newspapers confront highly variable prospects reflecting their location in different market sectors, countries and journalism cultures. But despite this diversity, they face similar challenges in responding to the increased competition from expansive radio and 24 hour television news channels; the emergence of free "Metro" papers; the delivery of news services on billboards, pod casts and mobile telephony; the development of online editions, as well as the burgeoning of blogs, citizen journalists and User Generated Content. Newspapers’ revenue streams are also under attack as advertising increasingly migrates online.

This authoritative collection of research based essays by distinguished scholars and journalists from around the globe, brings together a judicious mix of academic expertise and professional journalistic experience to analyse and report on the future of newspapers.

This book was published as special issues of Journalism Practice and Journalism Studies

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|8 pages

The Curse of Introversion

chapter 2|12 pages

The Future of Newspapers

Historical perspectives

chapter 3|17 pages

Mapping Professional Imagination

On the potential of professional culture in the newspapers of the future

chapter 4|13 pages

“The Supremacy of Ignorance Over Instruction and of Numbers Over Knowledge”

Journalism, popular culture, and the English constitution

chapter 5|12 pages

Newspapers go for Advertising!

Challenges and opportunities in a changing media environment

chapter 7|22 pages

(No) News on the World Wide Web?

A comparative content analysis of online news in Europe and the United States

chapter 8|20 pages

How Citizens Create News Stories

The “news access” problem reversed

chapter 9|12 pages

Deliberativeness of Online Political Discussion

A content analysis of the Guangzhou Daily website

chapter 10|15 pages

The Consumer as Producer—of What?

User-generated tabloid content in The Sun (UK) and Aftonbladet (Sweden)

chapter 11|12 pages

Attack of the Killer Newspapers!

The “tabloid revolution” in South Africa and the future of newspapers

chapter 12|15 pages

The History of a Surviving Species

Defining eras in the evolution of foreign correspondence

chapter 14|10 pages

What Future for Local News?

The crisis of the French regional daily press

chapter 15|16 pages

Participatory Journalism Practices in the Media and Beyond

An international comparative study of initiatives in online newspapers

chapter 16|14 pages

A Clash of Cultures

The integration of user-generated content within professional journalistic frameworks at British newspaper websites

chapter 17|15 pages

Old Values, New Media

Journalism role perceptions in a changing world

chapter 18|14 pages

The Future of “Responsible Journalism”

Defamation law, public debate and news production

chapter 19|16 pages

Tabloid Nouveau Genre

Format change and news content in Quebec City's Le Soleil

chapter 20|12 pages

Gossip, Sport and Pretty Girls

What does “trivial” journalism mean to tabloid newspaper readers?

chapter 21|13 pages

Newspapers in Education in Flanders

A press policy to support the future readership market for newspapers

chapter 23|9 pages

Obituaries for Sale

Wellspring of cash and unreliable testimony

chapter 24|10 pages

From Newspapers to Multimedia Groups

Business growth strategies of the regional press in Spain

chapter 25|13 pages

“If You Can't Earn Enough—Teach”

Newspaper journalists as journalism lecturers in Israel

chapter 26|11 pages

Newspaper Negotiations

The crossroads of community newspaper journalists' values and labor

chapter 27|14 pages

The Passive Journalist

How sources dominate local news