ABSTRACT

Changing the News examines the difficulties in changing news processes and practices in response to the evolving circumstances and struggles of the journalism industry. The editors have put together this volume to demonstrate why the prescriptions employed to salvage the journalism industry to date haven’t worked, and to explain how constraints and pressures have influenced the field’s responses to challenges in an uncertain, changing environment.

If journalism is to adjust and thrive, the following questions need answers: Why do journalists and news organizations respond to uncertainties in the ways they do? What forces and structures constrain these responses? What social and cultural contexts should we take into account when we judge whether or not journalism successfully responds and adapts? The book tackles these questions from varying perspectives and levels of analysis, through chapters by scholars of news sociology and media management. Changing the News details the forces that shape and challenge journalism and journalistic culture, and explains why journalists and their organizations respond to troubles, challenges and uncertainties in the way they do.

part I|42 pages

Introduction

part II|114 pages

Ideology, Culture, and Institutions

part III|130 pages

Markets, Organizations, and Profession

chapter 9|18 pages

Market Journalism

chapter 13|19 pages

“So Many Stories, So Little Time”

Economics, Technology, and the Changing Professional Environment for News Work

chapter 14|21 pages

Where Professionalism Begins

chapter 15|17 pages

Connective Journalism