Community Journalism Midst Media Revolution

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Ballarat Courier
Broadband Connectivity
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Citizen Journalism
Citizen Journalism Sites
citizen media studies
Citizenship Journalism
Community Area Networks
Community Journalism
Community Journalism Midst Media Revolution
Community Journalists
digital community information flows
digital news ecosystems
Digital Technology
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Geosocial Journalism
geosocial networks
Globalization
Jante Law
John III
Kibera Residents
Li Ne
local media transformation
media ethics research
Norwegian Journalists
Online News Users
participatory journalism
Patch Editors
Patch Sites
Private Telecommunications Companies
Public Journalism
Reciprocal Journalism
Significant Main Effect
Small News Outlets
Transforming Neighborhoods Initiative
Virtual Space
Web Sphere
Wider Social Space
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138305038
  • Weight: 270g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This edited volume documents the changes taking place globally in local community practices. Digital technologies and globalization have forced evolutions in how we go about producing and consuming journalism, and these essays empirically and theoretically advance the scholarly conversations about those trends. What does it mean to serve the information needs of a community in a digitized social world where so many of our ties – weak and strong – are at least partially maintained in virtual worlds?

With authors and data from all over the world, this work celebrates a fundamental connectedness to citizens and their community and renews the emphasis on home as a mandate for any locally focused news organization. The contributions to this volume explore the "flows" within both digital spaces and geographic places that are an important foreground to any conversation about what is community today. Several terms are coined and explored in the volume, including "geosocial journalism" and "reciprocal journalism" that account for the essentiality of information sharing in global public realms to inspire feelings of community belonging. Other chapters include a review of Patch.com – one of the largest grassroots, digital platforms for journalism – a survey of how Norwegian community media organizations are adapting to digital worlds, how Swedish citizen sites operate, and the ethics of community journalists to advocate for their citizenry regarding digital matters.

Venturing towards both optimism and dismay, the collection argues that understandings of communal borders have expanded. So even if journalists cannot reach the current locals (such as in Africa as one chapter relates) or globally transient locals, digital technologies can help relocate fractured community into a less problematic, virtual space. This requires commitment on the part of both journalists and citizens to preserve those connections, utilize those technologies, and exercise those fundamental principles of community journalism that go back more than half a century.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Journalism Practice.

Sue Robinson (Ph.D., Temple University, 2007) researches digital journalism, civic engagement, and information authority at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s School of Journalism & Mass Communication, USA. She left the newsroom after 13 years to teach and publish. Her work can be found in Journal of Communication, New Media & Society, Mass Communication & Society, Journalism, Journalism Studies, Journalism Practice and other venues.