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In the face of ongoing digitisation, The Markets for News examines
how certain established economic features of the news industry have
persisted and what makes them such stable frameworks for
journalistic organisations. Drawing on an analysis of Scandinavian
news industries, this text revises journalism's economic
foundations in the context of the algorithmically driven platform
economy. Exploration of features such as journalism's two-sided
market model, the network effect of platforms, and chain ownership,
leads to a discussion about how journalism faces disruption from
the introduction of artificial intelligence in the production,
dissemination, and sale of news. As journalism undergoes
transformations due to revenue losses, this book recognises a
return to certain enduring features of journalism's organisational
form, in particular the chain ownership form, that enables scale in
adapting to platform logics and economics. This text serves as a
basis for a theoretical discussion about strategic media management
and critical political economy in the age of digital disruption.
This is an insightful book for academics and researchers in the
fields of journalism, media industries, media policy and,
communication studies.
Using the Nordic media model as an empirical backdrop, Journalism
Between the State and the Market defines and analyzes journalism's
fundamental problem: its shifting location between the state and
the market. This book examines how this distance is decreasing as
journalism steps closer to both the market (algorithmically
monetizing audiences) and the state (lobbying governments for
subsidies and attacking public service broadcasting). The book
analyzes journalism's negotiated position between the market and
the state in the age of disruptions, offering a theoretical
foundation that seeks to account for the structural conditions of
journalism in the digital age. For scholars, graduates and students
in journalism, news sociology and media and communication studies,
Journalism Between the State and the Market provides a theoretical
perspective that can be used as a valuable tool when studying and
observing the current developments in journalism.
The digital era has posed innumerable challenges to the business
and practice of journalism. Journalism Re-examined sets out an
institutional theoretical framework for exploring the journalistic
institution in the digital age and analyses how it has responded to
those profound changes in its social and professional practices,
norms and values. Building their analysis around the concept of
these changes as reorientations, the contributors present a number
of case studies, with a particular emphasis on journalism in the
Nordic countries. They explore not just straight news and
investigative journalism, but also delve into lifestyle and
documentary coverage, all with the aim of understanding the
reorientations facing journalism and the ways they might present a
sustainable future path.
Using the Nordic media model as an empirical backdrop, Journalism
Between the State and the Market defines and analyzes journalism's
fundamental problem: its shifting location between the state and
the market. This book examines how this distance is decreasing as
journalism steps closer to both the market (algorithmically
monetizing audiences) and the state (lobbying governments for
subsidies and attacking public service broadcasting). The book
analyzes journalism's negotiated position between the market and
the state in the age of disruptions, offering a theoretical
foundation that seeks to account for the structural conditions of
journalism in the digital age. For scholars, graduates and students
in journalism, news sociology and media and communication studies,
Journalism Between the State and the Market provides a theoretical
perspective that can be used as a valuable tool when studying and
observing the current developments in journalism.
The digital infrastructure of media production, dissemination and
consumption is becoming increasingly complex, presenting the
challenge of how we should research the digital journalism
environment. Digital journalism takes many forms - we therefore
need to revise, improve, adjust and even invent methods to
understand emerging forms of journalism. In this book, scholars at
the forefront of methodological innovations in digital journalism
research share their insights on how to collect, process and
analyse the diverse expressions of digital journalism, including
online news, search results, hyperlinks and social media posts. As
digital journalism content often comes in the form of big data,
many of these new approaches depart from the traditional methods
used in media research in significant ways. As we move towards new
ways of understanding digital journalism, the methods developed for
such purposes also need to be grounded in scientific rigour. This
book aims to share some of the emerging processes by which these
methods, tools and approaches are designed, implemented and
validated. As such, this book not only constitutes a benchmark for
thinking about research methods in digital journalism, it also
provides an entry point for graduate students and seasoned scholars
aiming to do research on digital journalism. This book was
originally published as a special issue of Digital Journalism.
The digital infrastructure of media production, dissemination and
consumption is becoming increasingly complex, presenting the
challenge of how we should research the digital journalism
environment. Digital journalism takes many forms - we therefore
need to revise, improve, adjust and even invent methods to
understand emerging forms of journalism. In this book, scholars at
the forefront of methodological innovations in digital journalism
research share their insights on how to collect, process and
analyse the diverse expressions of digital journalism, including
online news, search results, hyperlinks and social media posts. As
digital journalism content often comes in the form of big data,
many of these new approaches depart from the traditional methods
used in media research in significant ways. As we move towards new
ways of understanding digital journalism, the methods developed for
such purposes also need to be grounded in scientific rigour. This
book aims to share some of the emerging processes by which these
methods, tools and approaches are designed, implemented and
validated. As such, this book not only constitutes a benchmark for
thinking about research methods in digital journalism, it also
provides an entry point for graduate students and seasoned scholars
aiming to do research on digital journalism. This book was
originally published as a special issue of Digital Journalism.
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