Journalism Research That Matters
Herausgeber: Bélair-Gagnon, Valérie; Usher, Nikki
Journalism Research That Matters
Herausgeber: Bélair-Gagnon, Valérie; Usher, Nikki
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Despite the looming crisis in journalism, scholarly research on the topic is often disconnected from the research that the news industry and journalists need and want, but do not have the time or expertise to do. This book provides valuable insights for journalists and scholars about news business models, audience research, misinformation, diversity and inclusivity, and news philanthropy, offering journalists a guide to what they need to know and a call to action for what kind of research journalism scholars can do to best help the news industry reckon with disruption.
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Despite the looming crisis in journalism, scholarly research on the topic is often disconnected from the research that the news industry and journalists need and want, but do not have the time or expertise to do. This book provides valuable insights for journalists and scholars about news business models, audience research, misinformation, diversity and inclusivity, and news philanthropy, offering journalists a guide to what they need to know and a call to action for what kind of research journalism scholars can do to best help the news industry reckon with disruption.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Journalism and Political Communication Unbound
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 396g
- ISBN-13: 9780197538487
- ISBN-10: 0197538487
- Artikelnr.: 61398855
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Journalism and Political Communication Unbound
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 396g
- ISBN-13: 9780197538487
- ISBN-10: 0197538487
- Artikelnr.: 61398855
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Valérie Bélair-Gagnon is an Assistant Professor of Journalism Studies at the Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication and affiliated faculty at the Department of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. She is also an affiliated fellow at the Yale Law School Information Society Project. Her research looks at how organizations adapt and respond to technology and how the business of journalism is changing the news media industry and its role. She is the author of Social Media at BBC News and her research has been published in Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, New Media & Society, Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism, Symbolic Interaction, Digital Journalism and Nieman Journalism Lab, and Columbia Journalism Review, among others. She is a past fellow at the Columbia University's Tow Center for Digital Journalism and OsloMet Digital Journalism fellow. Nikki (Nik) Usher is an Associate Professor at the University of San Diego. Prior to this, they were a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the College of Media, with affiliate appointments in Communication and Political Science. Their research looks at the connections between elite news media, politics, and technology through the lens of production studies. They are the author of Making News at The New York Times, Interactive Journalism: Hackers, Data, and Code, and News for the Rich, White, and Blue: How Place and Power Distort American Journalism. They are a past fellow at the Columbia University's Tow Center for Digital Journalism and an academic policy fellow with the Open Markets Institute.
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Introduction: Improving Journalism with Academic Research
* Valérie Bélair- Gagnon and Nikki Usher
* Part I. The Research-Practice Gap
* 1. Recovering the Midwestern Ethos of Journalism Research
* Jane Yeahin Pyo and Nikki Usher
* 2. Groundwork for the Public: How Grey Literature Is Shaping What We
Know about Local News
* Jesse Holcomb
* 3. Advocating for Journalism Studies' Impact on Policymaking
* Matthew S. Weber
* 4. Sharing Research Amidst the Cat Videos and Clickbait: You'll Never
Believe What Happens Next
* Benjamin Toff
* 5. Critiquing Ethnocentrism and Hierarchy in International
Journalism: Critical Research for More Equitable Practice
* Lindsay Palmer
* Part II. Answering the Crisis in Journalism: Key Research Areas
* 6. Why News Literacy Matters
* Melissa Tully
* 7. News Consumers (and Non- Consumers): A News Repertoire Approach to
Understanding Audiences in a High- Choice Media Environment
* Stephanie Edgerly
* 8. Understanding Collaborative Journalism with Digital Trace Data and
Crowdsourced Databases
* Yee Man Margaret Ng
* 9. The Business of Digital News: Understanding the Cross- Functional
Orchestra
* Damon Kiesow
* 10. The Business of Journalism and Studying the Journalism Business
* Nikki Usher and Mark Poepsel
* Part III. Journalism Research's Hidden Challenges
* 11. Rebuilding Trust through Journalism Education: Teaching
Multimedia Reporting with Local Communities
* Rachel R. Mourão and Soo Young Shin
* 12. What Is Data Literacy? And Why Should We Count on It Changing the
News?
* Jan Lauren Boyles
* 13. Engaging the Academy: Confronting Eurocentrism in Journalism
Studies
* Brian Ekdale
* 14. Beyond Ferguson: Re- Examining Press Coverage of Protests of
Police Brutality
* Danielle K. Kilgo
* Part IV. Journalism Practice Matters
* 15. How Academics Can Work with Journalists (Hint: They Already Have)
* Chase Davis
* 16. Would We Do It Again? Opportunities in Journalism and Academic
Collaboration
* Jennifer Moore
* 17. What Journalism Researchers Should Be Doing
* Derek Willis
* Conclusion: Betrothed or Belligerent: What Type of Engagement Do We
Need?
* Matt Carlson
* Bibliography
* Index
* Contributors
* Introduction: Improving Journalism with Academic Research
* Valérie Bélair- Gagnon and Nikki Usher
* Part I. The Research-Practice Gap
* 1. Recovering the Midwestern Ethos of Journalism Research
* Jane Yeahin Pyo and Nikki Usher
* 2. Groundwork for the Public: How Grey Literature Is Shaping What We
Know about Local News
* Jesse Holcomb
* 3. Advocating for Journalism Studies' Impact on Policymaking
* Matthew S. Weber
* 4. Sharing Research Amidst the Cat Videos and Clickbait: You'll Never
Believe What Happens Next
* Benjamin Toff
* 5. Critiquing Ethnocentrism and Hierarchy in International
Journalism: Critical Research for More Equitable Practice
* Lindsay Palmer
* Part II. Answering the Crisis in Journalism: Key Research Areas
* 6. Why News Literacy Matters
* Melissa Tully
* 7. News Consumers (and Non- Consumers): A News Repertoire Approach to
Understanding Audiences in a High- Choice Media Environment
* Stephanie Edgerly
* 8. Understanding Collaborative Journalism with Digital Trace Data and
Crowdsourced Databases
* Yee Man Margaret Ng
* 9. The Business of Digital News: Understanding the Cross- Functional
Orchestra
* Damon Kiesow
* 10. The Business of Journalism and Studying the Journalism Business
* Nikki Usher and Mark Poepsel
* Part III. Journalism Research's Hidden Challenges
* 11. Rebuilding Trust through Journalism Education: Teaching
Multimedia Reporting with Local Communities
* Rachel R. Mourão and Soo Young Shin
* 12. What Is Data Literacy? And Why Should We Count on It Changing the
News?
* Jan Lauren Boyles
* 13. Engaging the Academy: Confronting Eurocentrism in Journalism
Studies
* Brian Ekdale
* 14. Beyond Ferguson: Re- Examining Press Coverage of Protests of
Police Brutality
* Danielle K. Kilgo
* Part IV. Journalism Practice Matters
* 15. How Academics Can Work with Journalists (Hint: They Already Have)
* Chase Davis
* 16. Would We Do It Again? Opportunities in Journalism and Academic
Collaboration
* Jennifer Moore
* 17. What Journalism Researchers Should Be Doing
* Derek Willis
* Conclusion: Betrothed or Belligerent: What Type of Engagement Do We
Need?
* Matt Carlson
* Bibliography
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Introduction: Improving Journalism with Academic Research
* Valérie Bélair- Gagnon and Nikki Usher
* Part I. The Research-Practice Gap
* 1. Recovering the Midwestern Ethos of Journalism Research
* Jane Yeahin Pyo and Nikki Usher
* 2. Groundwork for the Public: How Grey Literature Is Shaping What We
Know about Local News
* Jesse Holcomb
* 3. Advocating for Journalism Studies' Impact on Policymaking
* Matthew S. Weber
* 4. Sharing Research Amidst the Cat Videos and Clickbait: You'll Never
Believe What Happens Next
* Benjamin Toff
* 5. Critiquing Ethnocentrism and Hierarchy in International
Journalism: Critical Research for More Equitable Practice
* Lindsay Palmer
* Part II. Answering the Crisis in Journalism: Key Research Areas
* 6. Why News Literacy Matters
* Melissa Tully
* 7. News Consumers (and Non- Consumers): A News Repertoire Approach to
Understanding Audiences in a High- Choice Media Environment
* Stephanie Edgerly
* 8. Understanding Collaborative Journalism with Digital Trace Data and
Crowdsourced Databases
* Yee Man Margaret Ng
* 9. The Business of Digital News: Understanding the Cross- Functional
Orchestra
* Damon Kiesow
* 10. The Business of Journalism and Studying the Journalism Business
* Nikki Usher and Mark Poepsel
* Part III. Journalism Research's Hidden Challenges
* 11. Rebuilding Trust through Journalism Education: Teaching
Multimedia Reporting with Local Communities
* Rachel R. Mourão and Soo Young Shin
* 12. What Is Data Literacy? And Why Should We Count on It Changing the
News?
* Jan Lauren Boyles
* 13. Engaging the Academy: Confronting Eurocentrism in Journalism
Studies
* Brian Ekdale
* 14. Beyond Ferguson: Re- Examining Press Coverage of Protests of
Police Brutality
* Danielle K. Kilgo
* Part IV. Journalism Practice Matters
* 15. How Academics Can Work with Journalists (Hint: They Already Have)
* Chase Davis
* 16. Would We Do It Again? Opportunities in Journalism and Academic
Collaboration
* Jennifer Moore
* 17. What Journalism Researchers Should Be Doing
* Derek Willis
* Conclusion: Betrothed or Belligerent: What Type of Engagement Do We
Need?
* Matt Carlson
* Bibliography
* Index
* Contributors
* Introduction: Improving Journalism with Academic Research
* Valérie Bélair- Gagnon and Nikki Usher
* Part I. The Research-Practice Gap
* 1. Recovering the Midwestern Ethos of Journalism Research
* Jane Yeahin Pyo and Nikki Usher
* 2. Groundwork for the Public: How Grey Literature Is Shaping What We
Know about Local News
* Jesse Holcomb
* 3. Advocating for Journalism Studies' Impact on Policymaking
* Matthew S. Weber
* 4. Sharing Research Amidst the Cat Videos and Clickbait: You'll Never
Believe What Happens Next
* Benjamin Toff
* 5. Critiquing Ethnocentrism and Hierarchy in International
Journalism: Critical Research for More Equitable Practice
* Lindsay Palmer
* Part II. Answering the Crisis in Journalism: Key Research Areas
* 6. Why News Literacy Matters
* Melissa Tully
* 7. News Consumers (and Non- Consumers): A News Repertoire Approach to
Understanding Audiences in a High- Choice Media Environment
* Stephanie Edgerly
* 8. Understanding Collaborative Journalism with Digital Trace Data and
Crowdsourced Databases
* Yee Man Margaret Ng
* 9. The Business of Digital News: Understanding the Cross- Functional
Orchestra
* Damon Kiesow
* 10. The Business of Journalism and Studying the Journalism Business
* Nikki Usher and Mark Poepsel
* Part III. Journalism Research's Hidden Challenges
* 11. Rebuilding Trust through Journalism Education: Teaching
Multimedia Reporting with Local Communities
* Rachel R. Mourão and Soo Young Shin
* 12. What Is Data Literacy? And Why Should We Count on It Changing the
News?
* Jan Lauren Boyles
* 13. Engaging the Academy: Confronting Eurocentrism in Journalism
Studies
* Brian Ekdale
* 14. Beyond Ferguson: Re- Examining Press Coverage of Protests of
Police Brutality
* Danielle K. Kilgo
* Part IV. Journalism Practice Matters
* 15. How Academics Can Work with Journalists (Hint: They Already Have)
* Chase Davis
* 16. Would We Do It Again? Opportunities in Journalism and Academic
Collaboration
* Jennifer Moore
* 17. What Journalism Researchers Should Be Doing
* Derek Willis
* Conclusion: Betrothed or Belligerent: What Type of Engagement Do We
Need?
* Matt Carlson
* Bibliography
* Index