2nd Edition

The Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies

594 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

594 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

594 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This second edition of The Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies offers a truly global and groundbreaking collection of essays addressing the key issues and debates shaping the field of digital journalism studies today. Journalism has arguably faced unprecedented disruption and reconceptualization since the first edition of this Companion was published. Questions over what role... Read more

List of Contributors

 

Introduction: new trends, old threads in the digital journalism field

David Cheruiyot, Sandra Banjac and Joëlle Swart

 

Section 1  Digital journalism (studies): theories and concepts revisited

 

1 Where is and isn’t Digital Journalism Studies: a meta-analysis of an emerging field

Manfred Antwi Kofi Asuman and Brian Ekdale

 

2 Hybrid journalism, its logic, and its mess 

Sergio Splendore

 

3 Explaining variation in changing news practices

David Ryfe

 

4 Degradation and ‘desertification’ of digital local news ecosystems

Kristy Hess and Alison McAdam

 

5 Rationalizing journalistic mistakes and failures: digital press criticism and the defense of autonomy

Danford Zirugo and David Cheruiyot

 

6 Transparency in digital journalism

Kyle Heim

 

7 Dark participation in digital journalism 

Johanna Klapproth and Thorsten Quandt

 

8 Ambivalent disruption: journalistic fields, critical incidents, and Egyptian digital journalism

Hanan Badr

 

Section 2  Citizens, audiences, and publics

 

9 Digital journalism and “radical audience studies”: toward a cultural sociology of news use

Johan Lindell

 

10 News for all? Inequalities between news audiences in digital journalism (studies)

Joëlle Swart

 

11 “Digital Snappers”: citizens, camera phones and photojournalism

Stuart Allan

 

12 Digital audiences and evolving news repertoires

Chris Peters, Kim Christian Schrøder, Julie Vulpius, and Josephine Lehaff

 

13 News literacy and digital journalism

Melissa Tully and Patrick R. Johnson

 

Section 3  Technology, data, and information

 

14 The value(s) of journalistic ‘innovation’: developing a critical conceptualization and research agenda

Frank Harbers

 

15 News recommender systems

Juliane A. Lischka, Laura Laugwitz, and Nadja Schaetz

 

16 Metrics-driven news: the impact of data analytics on journalism

Ramón Salaverría

 

17 Taking control over analytics in journalism

Kenza Lamot and Steve Paulussen

 

18 Always just around the corner? How fact-checkers view capabilities and challenges in the emerging field of automated fact-checking

Lucas Graves, Mark Stencel and Kate Wilkinson

 

19 From positivism to complexity: the need to rethink data journalism scholarship after more than a decade of research on the field

Eddy Borges-Rey

 

Section 4  Revisiting journalism’s platforms and economies

 

20 Digital gatekeeping: new platforms, producers and complexities

Peter Bro and Lisa Merete Kristensen

 

21 Platform business poses risks for news publishers

Oscar Westlund, Merja Myllylahti and Sherwin Chua

 

22 Grant-funded journalism: how foundations and governments realign incentives for news production

Magda Konieczna

 

23 Newspaper paywalls and value creation

Ragnhild Kr. Olsen

 

24 Mobile News 

Dawn Wheatley

 

25 Nonprofits/Humanitarian journalism in a digital age 

Matthew Powers

 

Section 5  Digital Practices and Practitioners

 

26 Peripheral actors and journalistic boundaries

Aljosha Karim Schapals

 

27 Storytelling structures in data journalism: introducing the water tower structure

Bahareh Heravi

 

28 Peripheral actors in lifestyle journalism 

Folker Hanusch and Kim Löhmann

 

29 Digital sourcing

Ansgard Heinrich and Pashcalia (Lia) Spyridou

 

30 News practices in deep media convergence in China

Joyce Y.M. Nip and Ting Su

 

31 Community radio in a digital age

Tanja Bosch

 

32 Podcasting and diversity: developing an open-border policy for podcast studies

Amanda Brouwers

 

Section 6  Societal and global challenges

 

33 Seasonal journalism and climate change

Henrik Bødker

 

34 Digital journalism and affective proximity in reporting wars and revolutions

Omar Al-Ghazzi

 

35 Safety of journalists: the symbolic violence and double burden of marginalized journalists

Sandra Banjac

 

36 Navigating the dangers of mainstream visibility for marginalized communities through an ethic of solidarity in digital journalism

Anita Varma

 

37 Emotions in digital journalism

Johana Kotišová

 

38 Digital networks and collaborations: addressing violence against journalists and building resilience  

Jeannine E. Relly, Celeste González de Bustamante and Sheila B. Lalwani

 

39 Images as moral objects: humanitarian photography and the limits of image circulation

Lilie Chouliaraki and Richard Stupart

 

40 Digital hate: normalization in management of online hostility

Gregory P. Perreault

 

Section 7  Political and ideological Challenges

 

41 Digital journalism and populism

Lena Frischlich

 

42 Open-source investigations and the new assemblages of digital investigative journalism

Philip Di Salvo

 

43 From studios and advocates to brand practitioners: tracing the influence of political and commercial interests on digital narrative journalism

David O. Dowling

 

44 Countering political disinformation

Kevin C. Mudavadi and Dani Madrid-Morales

 

45 Populist rhapsody: struggle for trust in Czech public service media in a fragmented media environment

Klára Smejkal

 

46 Digital surveillance and the transformation of journalism practice in the digital age

Allen Munoriyarwa

 

47 Digital tabloidization in an age of populism

Khulekani Ndlovu

 

Section 8 – Methods for/in digital journalism studies

 

48 X journalism: a concept and an observational tool for tracing the evolution of the field

Julius Reimer and Wiebke Loosen

 

49 Advancements in experimental research approaches

Esther Greussing

 

50 Researching information exposure using computational methods

Lisa Merten

 

51 Revisiting the ethnography of digital journalism

Hayes Mawindi Mabweazara and Wambui Wamunyu

 

52 Reassembling digital journalism through arts-based methods

Sander Hölsgens

 

53 Methodological challenges in audience research

Anna Sophie Kümpel and Luise Anter

 

54 Will the center hold? Relocating journalism in the digital

Marcel Broersma and Scott A. Eldridge II

 

Index

 

Biography

Scott A. Eldridge II, PhD, is an associate professor with the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. His research explores the changing journalistic field, interloper media, and peripheral journalistic actors. He is the author of numerous studies on digital journalism, including Online Journalism From the Periphery (2018).

David Cheruiyot, PhD, is an assistant professor with the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. His research focuses on digital media/press criticism, journalistic accountability, and global conflict reporting.

Sandra Banjac, PhD, is an assistant professor with the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. She is also affiliated with the Journalism Studies Centre, University of Vienna. Her research focuses on the changing relationship between journalists and audiences, and critical intersectional approaches to exploring inequalities within journalism.

Joëlle Swart, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Centre for Media and Journalism Studies, University of Groningen, The Netherlands. Her research focuses on changing everyday news use and how people develop habits, skills, and knowledge around news and journalism. She is a member of the editorial board of Digital Journalism.