ABSTRACT

The Future of Journalism: Developments and Debates analyses the radical shifts in journalism which are changing every aspect of the gathering, reporting and reception of news. The drivers of these changes include the rapid innovations in communication technologies, the competitive and fragmenting markets for audiences and advertising revenues, and the collapse of traditional business models for financing media organisations, as well as changing audience requirements for news, the ways in which it is presented and the expansive number of (increasingly mobile) devices on which it is produced and consumed. Each of these trends has significant implications for journalists - for their jobs, workplaces, products and perceptions of their professional roles, ethical judgements and day-to-day practice. They also pose significant challenges for the future funding of a sustainable, critical and high ‘quality’ democratic journalism.

The Future of Journalism: Developments and Debates comprises the research-based responses of distinguished academic specialists and professional journalists to the challenging issues involved in assessing the future of journalism. It is essential reading for everyone interested in the changing role of journalism in the economic, democratic and cultural life of communities locally, nationally and globally.

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

chapter |19 pages

Introduction The Future of Journalism

Developments and debates

chapter |13 pages

Farewell to Journalism?

Time for a rethinking

chapter |11 pages

Journalism to Go

The changing spaces of news consumption

chapter |12 pages

The Effect of Soft News on Public Attachment to the News

Is "infotainment" good for democracy?

chapter |11 pages

Determinants of News Content

Comparing journalists' perceptions of the normative and actual impact of different event properties when deciding what's news

chapter |11 pages

Aggregation, Content Farms and Huffinization

The rise of low-pay and no-pay journalism

chapter |10 pages

The 4C'S of Mobile News

Channels, conversation, content and commerce

chapter |10 pages

Crowdfunding and Non-Profit Media

The emergence of new models for public interest journalism

chapter |10 pages

Converging Journalism

Producing and publishing for multi-platform conglomerates in Canada

chapter |12 pages

Who Pays for Good Journalism?

Accountability journalism and media ownership in the Central and Eastern European countries

chapter |11 pages

The Algorithms Behind the Headlines

How machine-written news redefines the core skills of human journalists

chapter |10 pages

Tweets and Truth

Journalism as a discipline of collaborative verification

chapter |10 pages

Share, Like, Recommend

Decoding the social media news consumer

chapter |16 pages

The Future of Personalization at News Websites

Lessons from a longitudinal study

chapter |14 pages

Researching News Discussion on Twitter

New methodologies

chapter |10 pages

The Journalistic Hyperlink

Prescriptive discourses about linking in online news

chapter |9 pages

Breaking News Online

How news stories are updated and maintained around-the-clock

chapter |12 pages

The Re-Birth of the "Beat"

A hyperlocal online newsgathering model

chapter |11 pages

The Printed Rise of the Common Man

How Web 2.0 has changed the representation of ordinary people in newspapers

chapter |10 pages

"We Used to be Queens and Now We are Slaves"

Working conditions and career strategies in the journalistic field

chapter |12 pages

Russian and Swedish Journalists

Professional roles, ideals and daily reality

chapter |11 pages

Three Generations of Polish Journalists

Professional roles and identities

chapter |10 pages

Which Future for Foreign Correspondence?

London foreign correspondents in the age of global media

chapter |11 pages

Wikileaks: Ethical Minefield or a Democratic Revolution in Journalism?

A case study of the impact of Afghanistan coverage in the Norwegian daily, Aftenposten

chapter |12 pages

The Newsroom of the Future

Newsroom convergence models in China

chapter |10 pages

The Convergence Process in Public Audiovisual Groups

The case of Basque public radio television (EITB)