ABSTRACT

The development of digital media has delivered innovations and prompted tectonic shifts in all aspects of journalism practice, the journalism industry and scholarly research in the field of journalism studies; this book offers detailed accounts of changes in all three arenas. The collapse of the ‘advertising model’, in tandem with the impact of the continuing global recession, has created economic difficulties for legacy media, and an increasingly frenzied search for new business strategies to resource a sustainable journalism, while triggering concerns about the very future of journalism and journalists.

The Future of Journalism: In an Age of Digital Media and Economic Uncertainty brings together the research conversation conducted by a distinguished group of scholars, researchers, journalists and journalism educators from around the globe and hosted by ‘The Future of Journalism’ at Cardiff University in September 2013. The significance of their responses to these pressing and challenging questions is impossible to overstate. Divided into nine sections, this collection analyses and discusses the future of journalism in relation to: Revenues and Business Models; Controversies and Debates; Changing Journalism Practice; Social Media; Photojournalism and visual images of News; Local and Hyperlocal journalism; Quality, Transparency and Accountability; and Changing Professional Roles and Identities.

This book is essential reading for everyone interested in the prospects for journalism and the consequent implications for communications within and between local, national and international communities, for economic growth, the operation of democracy and the maintenance and development of the social and cultural life of societies around the globe. This book was originally published as special issues of Digital Journalism, Journalism Practice and Journalism Studies.

chapter |11 pages

The Future of Journalism

In an age of digital media and economic uncertainty

chapter 1|11 pages

Twilight or New Dawn of Journalism?

Evidence from the changing news ecosystem

chapter 2|11 pages

Homogenisation or Differentiation?

The effects of consolidation in the regional newspaper market

chapter 3|9 pages

Paid Content

A successful revenue model for publishing houses in Germany?

chapter 6|12 pages

Energy use and Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Digital News Media

Ethical implications for journalists and media organisations

chapter 10|10 pages

Morbid Symptoms

Between a dying and a re-birth (apologies to Gramsci)

chapter 11|10 pages

Constructing the Crisis of Journalism

Towards a cultural understanding of the economic collapse of newspapers during the digital revolution

chapter 12|11 pages

Code, Collaboration, and the Future of Journalism

A case study of the Hacks/Hackers global network

chapter 14|12 pages

Journalism In Dispersion

Exploring the blurring boundaries of newsmaking through a controversy

chapter 15|13 pages

Enter the Robot Journalist

Users' perceptions of automated content

chapter 16|12 pages

Data Journalism in Sweden

Introducing new methods and genres of journalism into “old” organizations

chapter 17|10 pages

Visualizing News

Make it work

chapter 18|12 pages

A Time of Uncertainty

The effects of reporters' time schedule on their work

chapter 19|12 pages

The Future of Breaking News Online?

A study of live blogs through surveys of their consumption, and of readers' attitudes and participation

chapter 20|12 pages

Follow-Up Communication in the Blogosphere

A comparative study of bloggers' linking to professional and participatory media

chapter 21|12 pages

Media Convergence Revisited

Lessons learned on newsroom integration in Austria, Germany and Spain

chapter 22|10 pages

Journalism and the City

Redefining the spaces of foreign correspondence

chapter 23|11 pages

Networking or Not Working?

A comparison of Arab Spring coverage in Belgian newspapers and TV news

chapter 24|10 pages

Citation Needed

Investigating the use of hyperlinks to display sources in news stories

chapter 25|17 pages

Revealing the News

How online news changes without you noticing

chapter 26|10 pages

Tailor-made News

Meeting the demands of news users on mobile and social media

chapter 27|10 pages

Social Media References in Newspapers

Facebook, Twitter and YouTube as sources in newspaper journalism

chapter 28|9 pages

Engaging the Social News User

Comments on news sites and Facebook

chapter 29|12 pages

Identifying and Verifying News through Social Media

Developing a user-centred tool for professional journalists

chapter 30|9 pages

Digital Gatekeeping

News media versus social media

chapter 31|12 pages

Proximity as a Journalistic Keyword in the Digital Era

A study on the “closeness” of amateur news images

chapter 32|10 pages

The Robot Eye Witness

Extending visual journalism through drone surveillance

chapter 33|11 pages

Anyone Can Take a Photo, But

Is there space for the professional photographer in the twenty-first century newsroom?

chapter 34|13 pages

Textual DNA

The hindered authorship of photojournalists in the Western press

chapter 36|12 pages

The Undressed Newsroom

The application of visual ethnography in media research

chapter 37|13 pages

Re-Establishing the Relationship with the Public

Regional journalism and citizens' involvement in the news

chapter 38|14 pages

The Hyperlocal in Practice

Innovation, creativity and diversity

chapter 40|11 pages

You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet

Transparency's (lack of) effect on source and message credibility

chapter 41|10 pages

Accounting for Journalism

chapter 42|15 pages

The Journalistic Quality of Internet Formats and Services

Results of a user survey

chapter 43|11 pages

Mr. Gates Returns

Curation, community management and other new roles for journalists

chapter 44|11 pages

The Dynamics of Professional Identity

Why journalists view journalists working with PR as a threat to journalism

chapter 45|14 pages

To Intervene or be Neutral, to Investigate or Entertain?

National and intranational factors in the formation of Nordic journalism students' role perceptions

chapter 46|10 pages

Towards the Liberal Model

The professional identity of Swedish journalists