ABSTRACT

This comprehensive edited collection provides key contributions in the field, mapping out fundamental topics and analysing current trends through an international lens.

Offering a collection of invited contributions from scholars across the world, the volume is structured in seven parts, each exploring an aspect of local media and journalism. It brings together and consolidates the latest research and theorisations from the field, and provides fresh understandings of local media from a comparative perspective and within a global context. This volume reaches across national, cultural, technological and socio-economic boundaries to bring new understandings to the dominant foci of research in the field and highlights interconnection and thematic links. Addressing the significant changes local media and journalism have undergone in the last decade, the collection explores the history, politics, ethics and contents of local media, as well as delving deeper into the business and practices that affect not only the journalists and media-makers involved, but consumers and communities as well.

For students and researchers in the fields of journalism studies, journalism education, cultural studies, and media and communications programmes, this is the comprehensive guide to local media and journalism.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

Demarcating the field of local media and journalism

part I|58 pages

Histories and legacies of local media and journalism

chapter 1|9 pages

Historicising The Afterlife

Local newspapers in the United Kingdom and the ‘art of prognosis’

chapter 3|10 pages

Local News Deserts in Brazil

Historical and contemporary perspectives

chapter 5|9 pages

State of Play

Local media, power and society in the Caribbean

chapter 6|9 pages

‘Peopleization’ of News

The development of the American local television news format

part II|58 pages

Local media policies

chapter 9|10 pages

Local Journalism in Australia

Policy debates

chapter 11|9 pages

Local Media Policies in Poland

Key issues and debates

chapter 12|8 pages

The Impact of Communication Policies in Local Television Models

The cases of Catalonia and Scotland

part III|64 pages

Local media, publics and politics

chapter 13|8 pages

Local Journalism in the United States

Its publics, its problems, and its potentials

chapter 14|9 pages

Remediating the Local Through Localised News Making

India’s booming multilingual press as agent in political and social change

chapter 15|9 pages

De-Professionalization and Fragmentation

Challenges for local journalism in Sweden

chapter 16|9 pages

Central and Local Media in Russia

Between central control and local initiatives

chapter 17|9 pages

The Return of Party Journalism in China and ‘Janusian’ Content

The case of Newspaper X

chapter 18|8 pages

Strategy Over Substance and National in Focus?

Local television coverage of politics and policy in the United States

chapter 19|10 pages

From Journal of Record to the 24/7 News Cycle

Perspectives on the changing nature of court reporting in Australia

part IV|62 pages

Ownership and sustainability of local media

chapter 20|9 pages

Business and Ownership of Local Media

An international perspective

chapter 21|12 pages

Local Media Owners as Saviours in the Czech Republic

They save money, not journalism

chapter 22|10 pages

What Can We Learn from Independent Family-Owned Local Media Groups?

Case studies from the United Kingdom

chapter 23|12 pages

Local Media in France

Subsidized, heavily regulated and under pressure

part V|89 pages

Local journalists and journalistic practices

chapter 27|12 pages

Not All Doom and Gloom

The story of American small-market newspapers

chapter 28|12 pages

Local Journalism in Bulgaria

Trends from the Worlds of Journalism study

chapter 30|9 pages

From Community to Commerce?

Analytics, audience ‘engagement’ and how local newspapers are renegotiating news values in the age of pageview-driven journalism in the United Kingdom

chapter 31|10 pages

Two-Tier Tweeting

How promotional and personalised use of Twitter is shaping local journalistic practices in the United Kingdom

chapter 32|12 pages

Centralised and Digitally Disrupted

An ethnographic view of local journalism in New Zealand

chapter 33|11 pages

Situating Journalistic Coverage

A practice theory approach to researching local community radio production in the United Kingdom

part VI|72 pages

Communities and audiences of local news

chapter 34|11 pages

What Does the Audience Experience as Valuable Local Journalism?

Approaching local news quality from a user’s perspective

chapter 36|10 pages

The Emerging Deficit

Changing local journalism and its impact on communities in Australia

chapter 37|9 pages

Strength in Numbers

Building collaborative partnerships for data-driven community news

chapter 38|10 pages

Bottom-Up Hyperlocal Media in Belgium

Facebook groups as collaborative neighborhood awareness systems