1st Edition
Digital Journalism in Latin America
1. Introduction
Eugenia Mitchelstein and Pablo J. Boczkowski
2. Re-Digitizing Television News: The Relationship between TV, Online Media and Audiences
Víctor García-Perdomo
3. The Personal Is the Political? What Do WhatsApp Users Share and How It Matters for News Knowledge, Polarization and Participation in Chile
Sebastián Valenzuela, Ingrid Bachmann, and Matías Bargsted
4. Protecting News Companies and Their Readers: Exploring Social Media Policies in Latin American Newsrooms
Summer Harlow
5. Stronger and Safer Together: Motivations for and Challenges of (Trans)National Collaboration in Investigative Reporting in Latin America
Lourdes M. Cueva Chacón and Magdalena Saldaña
6. The Mechanisms of "Incidental News Consumption": An Eye Tracking Study of News Interaction on Facebook
Adrián Vergara, Ignacio Siles, Ana Claudia Castro, and Alonso Chaves
7. Between Attack and Resilience: The Ongoing Institutionalization of Independent Digital Journalism in Brazil
Sarah Anne Ganter and Fernando Oliveira Paulino
Biography
Eugenia Mitchelstein is Associate Professor and Chair of the Social Sciences Department the University of San Andrés in Buenos Aires, Victoria, Argentina, and Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Media and Society in Argentina (MESO). She has authored two books, one edited volume, and more than thirty journal articles.
Pablo J. Boczkowski is Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Northwestern University, USA. He is the author of six books, four edited volumes, and more than sixty journal articles. His latest book (forthcoming) is To Know Is to Compare: Studying Social Media Across Nations, Media and Platforms (with Mora Matassi).
This is a timely and thoughtful collection, which addresses an important gap: digital journalism in Latin America. The contributions go beyond the contemporary concerns of the Global North about fake news, misinformation and disinformation. Instead, they broaden the debate by examining case studies from Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica and the whole region, as well as by -crucially- highlighting other pressing and equally important discussions. The collection is aimed not only at those who look at Latin America: it should be read by everyone interested in digital journalism and everyone wanting to subvert the global hierarchies of knowledge that dominate academia.
César Jiménez-Martínez, Cardiff University, UK
Eugenia Mitchelstein and Pablo J. Boczkowski have not only moved forward Communication Research about Latin America but also inspired authors from our region to do the same. The sparkling set of studies in this volume pays close attention to issues such as the impact of digital technologies on journalism, the opportunities for creating a more diverse media landscape, and the singularities of information sharing in polarized settings. This far-reaching, insightful, and illuminating reading demonstrates the complexities of our societies and how cases beyond Western Europe and the United States can contribute to our broader literature.
Francisco Paulo Jamil Marques, Federal University of Paraná, Brazil
Why are findings that stem from Global North contexts assumed to be universal whilst the South is treated as exotic? How can we deal with the lack of representativeness, reflexivity, decentering and cosmopolitanism that still – problematically - characterizes our field? This volume asks these and other key questions, challenging the persistence of ethnocentrism in journalism, audiences, and media studies in general. From Chile to Mexico and from TV to WhatsApp, the issue offers a very welcome contribution to a more equitable and multi-centric intellectual field.
Andrea Medrado, University of Westminster, England






