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Journal articles on the topic 'Newsroom culture'

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1

Porcu, Ornella. "Exploring innovative learning culture in the newsroom." Journalism 21, no. 10 (2017): 1556–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884917724596.

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Culture has been viewed as the biggest obstacle to change in the legacy media newsroom. Older as well as recent literature points out that professional culture typically hinders newsroom innovation processes, and newsrooms in transformation often seem to find culture clashes on their path. These transformational problems, however, appear to be viewed predominantly from a management point of view. By looking at journalism culture from the broader perspective of a learning culture which fosters innovation, including both management and newsroom workers, a more nuanced picture can be presented. I
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El Gody, Ahmed. "Convergence and divergence of ICTs in Egyptian newsrooms: A longitudinal approach." Journal of African Media Studies 13, no. 1 (2021): 53–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jams_00033_1.

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The convergence of information communication technologies (ICTs) in news-making processes has changed the nature of news production in post-Arab Spring Egypt. Several newsrooms have integrated ICTs into their daily routines to develop their content and reconnect with their audiences. Although on the surface this seems a positive development, it appears that today, just a few years after integrating ICTs, Egyptian newsrooms are lagging behind. This study examines the utilization of ICTs – especially social media – in three Egyptian newsrooms. Three waves of questionnaires in 2012, 2014/2015 and
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Steensen, Steen. "What is the matter with newsroom culture? A sociomaterial analysis of professional knowledge creation in the newsroom." Journalism 19, no. 4 (2016): 464–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916657517.

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This article presents a study of what affects professional knowledge creation when journalism students have their periods of internship in legacy, yet highly digitized newsrooms. A total of 16 Norwegian j-students are interviewed and 30 internship reports analysed in order to detect the different actors – both humans and non-humans – that matter when students learn through practice in such newsrooms. Through this analysis, this article aims at understanding some of the tensions between legacy and digital culture that many newsrooms today are marked by and how these tensions affect professional
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North, Louise. "‘Blokey’ Newsroom Culture." Media International Australia 132, no. 1 (2009): 5–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0913200103.

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This paper seeks to address the gap in Australian media studies and feminist media scholarship relating to the way newsroom culture is embodied. How does the numerical dominance of men in journalism, particularly in decision-making roles, affect newsroom culture? How do male and female journalists understand this inequality? The paper first briefly attends to research into occupational culture and feminist theories of the body to address the central question ‘How is newsroom culture embodied?’ It then engages with this question more thoroughly via an analysis of my own interviews with 17 Austr
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Novak, Anette. "Designing a Renaissance for Digital News Media." Media and Communication 6, no. 4 (2018): 115–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/mac.v6i4.1769.

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User participation in the journalistic context has theoretically been possible since the emergence of the Internet. The few interface formats which have been developed to link newsrooms and citizens have, however, not followed the same explosive development as other parts of the media landscape. One reason often referred to by the scientific community is the defensive newsroom culture. This essay presents an alternative interpretation and argues that bridging the gap between interaction design research, media and communications research, and practitioners within digital news media, could shed
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Assmann, Karin. "We’ve Got a Union, Now What?" Journalism & Communication Monographs 26, no. 2 (2024): 84–153. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15226379241246667.

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Precarious economic conditions, low pay, layoffs, and dwindling job security motivated journalists to organize in record numbers in the 2010s and 2020s. Cohen and De Peuter’s 2020 research on newsworkers’ motives and organizing strategies in digital newsrooms finds that economic, political, and cultural factors play a role. Pay equity, a more diverse and inclusive newsroom, and a voice in editorial and strategic decision-making are often cited as arguments for union membership. This monograph asks how newsworkers assess the effect of unionization and guild membership on their work, working con
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Bunce, Mel, Kate Wright, and Martin Scott. "‘Our newsroom in the cloud’: Slack, virtual newsrooms and journalistic practice." New Media & Society 20, no. 9 (2017): 3381–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444817748955.

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Virtual newsrooms have enormous potential: enabling journalists around the world to pool their knowledge, skills and perspectives within joint projects, such as the Panama Papers. These virtual newsrooms are supported by Online Collaborative Software (OCS), the most popular of which is Slack. But although many of the world’s top news organisations now use Slack, there is no empirical research examining its impact on workplace processes or culture. This article presents the results of a year-long ethnographic study of a global digital news outlet, whose remote journalists collaborate, almost ex
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Mayo-Cubero, Marcos. "A multivariable analysis on news production in Spain: digital newsroom profile, polyvalent journalists and gender perspective." Communication & Society 35, no. 3 (2022): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.15581/003.35.3.1-14.

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This article explores how the main Spanish newsrooms structure news production in the digital convergence from a quantitative approach. The data come from a nationwide survey applied to 30 editors-in-chief of Spain’s leading newspapers, radios, televisions, and digital natives. We study the newsroom size, news sections weight, freelancers, news agencies, and gender with multivariable analysis. We found that the gender gap has been overcome, and women are mostly in newsrooms (61%). Despite progress, women continue to have higher levels of unemployment and keep facing a glass ceiling in accessin
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Lakshmi, Aiswarya. "Study on Data Journalism in Tamilnadu & the Challenges." International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology 5, no. 6 (2020): 1105–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt20jun715.

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When Digital technology brought online journalism and new practices into newsrooms that made a huge impact on Indian newsrooms articles that lead to different perspective stories which gave a lot of space for creativity, this allowed every citizen to become online journalist that was a great milestone in digital evolution. But, when the news credibility in online journalism gradually fell, many journalist and publishers worried that admired principles of news reporting, experience and intuition might decline or even disappear. On the other hand, they fail to realise that this will empower jour
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McElroy, Brittany Pieper. "Experimenting with interaction: TV news efforts to invite audiences into the broadcast and their effects on gatekeeping." Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 25, no. 3 (2017): 449–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354856517736975.

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This article examines the concept of interactive and participatory journalism in news through the lens of gatekeeping theory. It aims to shine a light on newsrooms that have been early adapters in the trends and technologies of interactive content between journalists and their audiences. It explores what the managers and employees of those newsrooms believe has been successful, what has not been successful, and what other journalists can learn from their experiences. It also examines how these efforts have affected the process of gatekeeping in these newsrooms. The researcher employed in-depth
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Saado, Kovan Hussein, and Abdulsamad Qadir Hussein. "From laboratory life to newsroom practice: The use of actor-network theory and community of practice to explain newsroom practice and culture: Kurdish Network News as case study." Journal of University of Raparin 7, no. 2 (2020): 686–705. http://dx.doi.org/10.26750/vol(7).no(2).paper29.

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This paper focuses on the impacts of technological changes in the newsroom practices, taking both Actor-Network Theory (henceforth ANT) developed by Latour, 1992; Callon, 1992 and Law, 1992), as well as the Community of Practice (henceforth COP) developed by Wenger, 1998 and Lave, 1991) in newsroom practices and news-making processes inside the newsroom of (KNN) a Kurdish news channel. The paper argues that both models provide a strong basis of understanding the situation of news practice and constructing a better environment of learning, shared projects, problem solving, focal actor roles, an
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Aziz, Ayu Abd. "TRANSFORMASI PRAKTIK RUANG REDAKSI MEDIA ALKHAIRAAT ONLINE PALU." KINESIK 9, no. 1 (2022): 109–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.22487/ejk.v9i1.276.

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This research aims to uncover and interpret the process of media transformation through the practice of Palu's online Alkhairaat media newsroom (MAL). This research uses qualitative methods with ethnographic approaches. Research data is obtained through interviews, documentation and field records. Allows researchers to experience routines and interact with journalists in the newsroom. Data analysis is focused on the process of transformation by applying media convergence, particularly to work culture in newsroom practice. The results showed that the transformation process that took place in th
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Gade, Peter J., and Earnest L. Perry. "Changing the Newsroom Culture: A Four-Year Case Study of Organizational Development at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 80, no. 2 (2003): 327–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769900308000207.

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This longitudinal case study of change at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch measured newsroom employee perceptions of organizational development, newsroom restructuring (from beats to teams), and public journalism during Cole C. Campbell's tenure as editor, 1996–2000. Results indicate initial optimism about change faded within a year. Over the course of the study, respondents failed to see a connection between change initiatives and producing a better newspaper. Journalists did not experience empowerment associated with team-based systems.
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Wirawan, Wirawan. "Buddhism Inside The Newsroom: An Ethnographic Study of DAAI TV." Ultimacomm: Jurnal Ilmu Komunikasi 13, no. 1 (2021): 23–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.31937/ultimacomm.v13i1.1779.

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This ethnographic study aimed to explore the interrelationship between Buddhist values and journalism practice in DAAI TV Indonesia. The findings were derived from the participatory observation inside the newsroom of DAAI TV from August to November 2019. Related informants were interviewed and several documents, such as photos and journalists’ handbook, were collected. The results revealed that Buddhism, especially which is taught by Master Cheng Yen as the founder of Tzu Chi, is reflected in the newsroom of DAAI TV. Furthermore, the journalism practice actualises the Buddhist-oriented journal
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Al-Mosawy, Hussen Ali Nnoor, and Afnan Mohammed Shaban. "THE ROLE OF LEADERSHIP AND EFFECTIVE STRATEGIC PLANNING FOR NEWS MANAGERS IN RADIO AND TELEVISION IN ENHANCING PERFORMANCE AND RAISING THE EFFICIENCY OF WORKERS IN NEWSROOMS." Iraqi Journal of Market Research and Consumer Protection 15, no. 1 (2023): 157–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.28936/jmracpc15.1.2023.(14).

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The research deals with the role of leadership and effective strategic planning for news managers in radio and television in enhancing performance and raising the efficiency of newsroom workers. Leadership in establishing a culture of creativity, and the study was conducted on a sample of (123) workers in media institutions operating in Iraq and registered with the Media and Communication Commission. Respondents, as for the axis of measuring and managing creativity and raising efficiency by the administration of newsrooms, which encourages individual work and the participation of cadres in mak
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Mulrennan, Danni, and David Robie. "NOTED: Dreaded word culture 'like a newsroom hand grenade'." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 12, no. 1 (2006): 190–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v12i1.857.

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They try everything, to gnaw at us, to drain us,' said the Haitaian broadcst journalist Jean Dominique. He was an enormously popular 'Mr truth' to his grassroots listeners. 'It's been going on for 50 years, and why should it stop? 'They can still try to crush us; to machinegun us; to ignore, slander bully and seduce is; to deflate, empty and distort us.'
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Wilke, Ju¨rgen. "The history and culture of the newsroom in Germany." Journalism Studies 4, no. 4 (2003): 465–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670032000136569.

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Aşık, Ozan. "The Fall of the Public and the Moral Contestation in the Journalistic Culture of Turkey." Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication 10, no. 1 (2017): 69–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18739865-01001005.

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The deepening social polarization and increasing state pressure in Turkey undermines the participation of journalists as the custodians of public interest in the public sphere based on the principle of common good. Using the data of my ethnographic fieldwork in newsrooms, I explore the features of legitimate journalistic activity without normative connection to the public. The Islamic-based ruling party (AKP) attempts to transform the public into its own intimate, family-like sphere. Journalists are compelled to either totally merge with the AKP-friendly family that dominates the public, or re
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Gravengaard, Gitte, and Lene Rimestad. "Socializing Journalist Trainees in the Newsroom." Nordicom Review 35, s1 (2020): 81–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2014-0105.

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AbstractIn the present article, we investigate socialization practices in the newsroom. The analyses demonstrate how journalist trainees are socialized into this particular professional culture and community of practice. Theoretically, we combine traditional news ethnography with linguistic anthropology, conversation analysis, and theories of profession in order to investigate and interpret social and cultural (re)production in the routinized practice in the newsroom. The units of analysis are interactions between journalist trainees and their editors concerning ideas for news stories. These i
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de Smaele, Hedwig, Eline Geenen, and Rozane De Cock. "Visual Gatekeeping – Selection of News Photographs at a Flemish Newspaper." Nordicom Review 38, s2 (2017): 57–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/nor-2017-0414.

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Abstract As ethnographic studies of the visual gatekeeping process at newsrooms are scarce and the increasingly digitised news era demands for reconsideration, this article focuses on the results of a qualitative study at the photo news desk of a Flemish newspaper in Belgium. Our aim has been to provide an update and a broadening of previous studies on visual gatekeeping processes, and the findings are based on observations, in-depth interviews and reconstructions of the visual selection process. Our results show that routine and organisational influences as the ‘newsroom culture’ and the ‘rhy
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Porcu, Ornella, Liesbeth Hermans, and Marcel Broersma. "Unlocking the Newsroom: Measuring Journalists’ Perceptions of Innovative Learning Culture." Journalism Studies 21, no. 10 (2020): 1420–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2020.1758956.

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Rao, Shakuntala, and Ylva Rodny-Gumede. "Gazing past the glass ceiling: Indian and South African female journalists’ perceptions of their role and power in the newsroom." Global Media and Communication 16, no. 1 (2020): 57–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1742766519899116.

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This article analyses female journalists’ perceptions of their own role, their power in the newsroom, their influence over the news agenda and the challenges they face on a daily basis in two large media-saturated countries and emerging democracies, India and South Africa. India and South Africa are both nations that are trying to overcome historical legacies of patriarchal structures and gendered attitudes about women’s role. The authors conclude that female journalists articulated their experiences of newsroom culture as hegemonically masculine. While it appears that female journalists belie
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Hao, Li. "The plight of China’s journalism education - From the perspective of the sociology of education." Technium Social Sciences Journal 23 (September 9, 2021): 675–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.47577/tssj.v23i1.4388.

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China’s journalism education has been changing all the time to meet new demands brought by the political and economic reforms over the last two decades in the 21st century. However, the covert wars between ideology and practice, between classrooms and newsrooms have caused the “split personality” and general confusion among China’s journalism educators and students. Several educational and practical problems thus arise as a result of the tug-of-war between economic and ideological demands. The problems of China’s journalism education are not only from its complex social and economic environmen
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Mohammed, Wunpini Fatimata. "Journalistic griots: The marginalization of indigenous language news and oral epistemologies in Ghana." Radio Journal:International Studies in Broadcast & Audio Media 17, no. 2 (2019): 235–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/rjao_00007_1.

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This study examines news production and newsroom culture in radio stations in Ghana’s Northern Region. It explores the dynamics of news production and delivery in indigenous language newsrooms. Through in-depth interviews with eight indigenous language news presenters and journalists, the study critically explores the intricacies of news production, drawing attention to how news production is contextualized within this society. Through an oral epistemological approach, I argue that news journalists and presenters draw on orature and oral epistemologies to build their news-presenting personas a
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Li, Ke. "Convergence and de-convergence of Chinese journalistic practice in the digital age." Journalism 19, no. 9-10 (2018): 1380–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884918769463.

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The existing literature broadly suggests that newsrooms are adapting to the media convergence world at the cost of traditional quality journalism. However, based on my ethnographic study of the Beijing News, I propose a convergence and de-convergence model of journalistic practice. The model explains how one Chinese newspaper preserves the legacy of critical journalism, on the one hand, while negotiating the challenges of adapting to the converging trends on the other. I argue that a well-established organizational culture and a working routine are crucial in the newspaper’s transformation, wh
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Xiaoming, H., Cherian George, and Shi Cong. "Job satisfaction of journalists: Professional aspirations, newsroom culture and social context." Media Asia 40, no. 1 (2013): 73–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01296612.2013.11689952.

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Priyonggo, Ambang, and Hamedi Mohd Adnan. "Digitising Newspaper Content in Indonesia: The Challenge of Enforcing the Culture of Immediacy." Jurnal Komunikasi: Malaysian Journal of Communication 37, no. 2 (2021): 257–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/jkmjc-2021-3702-16.

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This research is aimed at examining how the culture of immediacy is implemented in a newspaper undergoing digital transformation. This paper is written based on the case of Harian Kompas, the most influential newspaper in Indonesia, that just officially launched its paywall-based digital site, kompas.id as an alternative platform. Within this context, the daily implemented the digital-first strategy to put the priority of rapid digital news production prior to its slow-pace print edition. Through ethnography fieldwork in the daily’s newsroom, relying on in-depth interviews and participant obse
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Silaban, Martha Warta, and Rizka Septiana. "Glass ceiling pada Jurnalis Perempuan di Newsroom Media Online." Jurnal InterAct 9, no. 2 (2021): 110–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.25170/interact.v9i2.2234.

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 The arrival of the internet has no doubt affected the media business. As of now, the amount of online media outnumbers print media. However, the presence of female journalists across online media newsrooms has not shown significance, especially in decision-making levels. This study examines female journalists working in online media. The glass ceiling theory is used in this study and coupled with the concept of jender and organizational communication. Phenomenology will be the methodology used to examine the journalists’ experience to reach the editorial leader level, edit
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Alem, Febri Sonni, Hijjang Pawennari, Tahara Tasrifin, and Iqbal Sultan M. "The Contestation of Power Between Newsrooms and Media Owners in Television Stations in Indonesia." International Journal of Global Community I, no. 3 (2018): 245–60. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1572992.

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This article describes the contest for power and influence that goes on behind the scenes of Indonesian television broadcasting stations. There is a dynamic relationship between agent and structure – journalists and media owners – in news broadcasting in Indonesian television stations. The newsroom was previously idealised as an independent, neutral space free from intervention, but its independence has been eroded by political contestations involving media owners. Politics relies greatly on the dissemination of information to rally support from constituents. Television is currentl
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Gray, Samantha. "American anti-intellectualism and the female genius in the work of Aaron Sorkin." Northern Lights: Film & Media Studies Yearbook 20, no. 1 (2022): 53–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/nl_00031_1.

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Anti-intellectualism in America not only has a long and established history but has seen an increasing rise in recent years. The figure of the ‘genius’ archetype on popular television has frequently been presented through a lens of anti-intellectualism, leading intellectualism to be read as an illness or disorder. The works of Aaron Sorkin have taken a different position, and, rather than distancing the audience from these geniuses by presenting their differences as traits that need to be corrected, the genius in works such as The Newsroom (2012‐14) is held up as the ideal for society at large
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Hollifield, C. Ann, Gerald M. Kosicki, and Lee B. Becker. "Organizational vs. Professional Culture in the Newsroom: Television News Directors' and Newspaper Editors' Hiring Decisions." Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 45, no. 1 (2001): 92–117. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15506878jobem4501_7.

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Topić, Martina, and Carmen Bruegmann. "“The Girls at the Desk”: Timeless Blokishness in the Newsroom Culture in the British Press?" Journalism Studies 22, no. 1 (2020): 77–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2020.1854620.

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Dmitriev, Oleg, and Hussin J. Hejase. "Multimedia Planning Strategies as a Tool for International Journalism and Alternative Media Studies." Journal of Business Theory and Practice 11, no. 3 (2023): p46. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/jbtp.v11n3p46.

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News development is currently affected by digitalization. Therefore, media scholars using digital means to cover the news must develop the so-called “multimedia mindset” among professional journalists and media students. It is not enough to teach the technology—the scholars have to embrace new journalism tools to incorporate them with the story planning activities. This article aims to look into how the aforementioned planning activities are used in the curriculum for Russian media students and professionals in the field of international journalism. The paper is qualitative and descriptive bas
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Nygren, Gunnar. "Multiskilling in the newsroom – de-skilling or re-skilling of journalistic work?" Journal of Media Innovations 1, no. 2 (2014): 75–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.5617/jmi.v1i2.876.

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Multiskilling in a journalism context is not a case of “de-skilling” as the profession. There are problems concerning related to the quality in newsrooms adapting that are adapting multiskilling strategies, but in general multiskilling is more correctly to defined as a re-skilling or an up-skilling. This is thea conclusion from result from a survey to of 1,500 journalists in Poland, Russia and Sweden and interviews with 60 journalists in these three countries. Multiskilling in journalism gives more space room for creativity and more power to the individual journalist, according to those with e
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Melin-Higgins, Margareta. "Fly eller fäkta. Kvinnliga journalisters överlevnadstaktiker." Tidskrift för genusvetenskap 24, no. 2 (2022): 53–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.55870/tgv.v24i2.4156.

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The main objective with the artide is to discuss the different choices of tactics female journalists make to survive everyday life in the newsroom. The discussion is based on a study of 33 British journalists that were interviewed about their professional and personal lives in 1992 and again in 2002. The study is made from a combination of feminist and cultural studies perspective, which enriches the research theoretically and methodologically. In the theoretical discussion of the article, I have chosen to discuss the main concepts relevant to the article: Pierre Bourdieu's social field and do
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Ewart, Jacqui. "Changing Newsroom Culture by Putting Readers First: How Australian Journalists Reacted to a Corporate Change Program." Media International Australia 125, no. 1 (2007): 15–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0712500104.

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This article explores the attitudes of journalists towards the introduction of a corporate-change program in the newsrooms of 14 regional daily newspapers in Australia. It draws data from a survey of journalists working for one of Australia's largest regional media corporations, Australian Provincial Newspapers. The article examines the journalists' attitudes towards the change effort, a year and a half after its introduction. The program had two over-arching aims. The first was to bring about a change in the relationship between journalists and their communities; the second was to get the jou
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Ewart, Jacqui. "Changing Newsroom Culture by Putting Readers First: How Australian Journalists Reacted to a Corporate Change Program." Media International Australia 125, no. 1 (2007): 15–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0812500104.

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This article explores the attitudes of journalists towards the introduction of a corporate-change program in the newsrooms of 14 regional daily newspapers in Australia. It draws data from a survey of journalists working for one of Australia's largest regional media corporations, Australian Provincial Newspapers. The article examines the journalists ‘attitudes towards the change effort, a year and a half after its introduction. The program had two over-arching aims. The first was to bring about a change in the relationship between journalists and their communities; the second was to get the jou
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Valentinavičius, Vytautas. "The Influence of Business and Government Structures on the Autonomy of Lithuanian Online Media." Žurnalistikos Tyrimai 10 (May 22, 2017): 52–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/zt/jr.2016.10.10698.

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This article is aimed at presenting a complex approach to the media autonomy concept, with particular focus on the most real aspects of journalistic activity and the factors affecting them. The paper actualizes the notion of media and professional autonomy, introduces the Western tradition of journalistic culture and considers the decisions being made and how they affect professional independence in Lithuanian newsrooms. The practical research part of this piece mostly focuses on newsrooms operating online. Based on the findings of the research conducted on the relationships of business and go
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MacLeod, Alan. "Manufacturing Consent in Venezuela: Media Misreporting of a Country, 1998–2014." Critical Sociology 46, no. 2 (2018): 273–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0896920518820934.

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This article assesses Western news media coverage of Venezuela between 1998 and 2014. It found that the major newspapers in the UK and US reproduce the ideology of Western governments, ignoring strong empirical evidence challenging those positions. The press portrayed Venezuela in an overwhelmingly negative light, presenting highly contested minority opinions as facts while barely mentioning competing arguments, as Herman and Chomsky’s (2002) propaganda model would predict. After conducting interviews, it is clear that a small cadre of pre-selected journalists is immersed into a highly antagon
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Vajbarová, Daniela. "A Gender Perspective on Newsroom Culture and Working Conditions: The Case of a Regional Czech Television News Desk." Czech Sociological Review 53, no. 1 (2017): 51–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.13060/00380288.2017.53.1.302.

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Ananda, Sofiari. "Cultural Shock for Journalists Transitioning from Print to Online Media." KomunikA 20, no. 02 (2024): 01–08. http://dx.doi.org/10.32734/komunika.v20i02.17543.

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The emergence of a new culture also occurs in the era of digital disruption. Digital media makes journalism undergo a transformation. In this context, technology can affect journalism in four ways, namely: a) the way journalists work in finding information; b) the nature of the news content; c) the organizational structure of the media in the newsroom; and d) the nature of the relationship between the media, reporters and a number of publics such as audiences, competitors, news sources, sponsors, and regulations that can control the press. In addition to the competence of journalists, organiza
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Ndlovu, Khulekani. "Understanding the B-Metro’s production of child abuse reportage: A hierarchy of influences perspective." Journal of Applied Journalism & Media Studies 00, no. 00 (2022): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ajms_00085_1.

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Drawing on the hierarchy of influences perspective as analytical lens, this article examines the macro-, meso- and micro-level dynamics that attend the B-Metro’s mediation of child abuse in Zimbabwe. In-depth interviews with B-Metro staff revealed that journalists’ identities, professional ideologies, political meddling, resourcing challenges and a gendered newsroom culture shape the news discourse. Additionally, strategic considerations about the credibility of the news report and the economics of news gathering have led to an overreliance on court sources. Consequently, the reportage is domi
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Nassanga, Goretti Linda, Linje Manyozo, and Claudia Lopes. "ICTs and radio in Africa: How the uptake of ICT has influenced the newsroom culture among community radio journalists." Telematics and Informatics 30, no. 3 (2013): 258–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tele.2012.04.005.

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Harb, Zahera. "Ethics in British Journalism: A reflective overview." Recherches en Communication 54 (December 14, 2022): 29–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.14428/rec.v54i54.67233.

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Preparing for my MA dissertation project in 2000, I expressed to my tutor my interest in investigating the state of journalism ethics in the UK. He dismissed it as an outdated topic. He referred me to the belief the British journalism industry held at the time that ethics is engrained in their journalism culture and there had been no serious shortcomings. Fast forward to 2011 and journalism ethics found its way quick and fast into almost every single UK newsroom editorial team discussion. The story of the News International phone hacking scandal tainted British press with a dark shadow. The sc
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Wabwire, Jonai. "The Challenges of Communicating Research Findings: A Journalist’s Perspective." Journal of Healthcare Ethics & Administration 8, no. 2 (2022): 13–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.22461/jhea.8.7165.

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Science reporting is not a daily routine in most media houses in Kenya and worldwide at large. Unlike sports, politics, business, arts and culture, Science reporting is generally placed on the fringes of mainstream journalism. A critical analysis of media operations, shows that there are various deep-rooted factors that tend to keep science at the bottom of newsgathering, packing and dissemination. The beginning point is journalism schools that traditionally avoid admitting students with science backgrounds or strong interest in science reporting, preferring those excelling in literature, lang
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Fajriyah Ningrum, Afiaty, and Justito Adiprasetio. "Broadcast Journalism of Private Radio in Cirebon, Indonesia, in the Convergence Era." Asian Journal of Media and Communication 5, no. 1 (2021): 19–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.20885/asjmc.vol5.iss1.art2.

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Convergence is a deep integration of knowledge, tools, and all relevant areas of human activities. As an inevitable condition, convergence has also changed a lot of aspects of mass media at the international, national, and local levels. This study elaborates how the local radios in Cirebon, namely Sindangkasih FM, Suara Gratia FM, and Cirebon Radio, are adapting to the convergence culture. This study seeks to demonstrate how the convergence culture can affect private broadcast media, which are not in the epicentrum of media in Indonesia. This study indicates that these three private radios in
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Parmett, Helen Morgan, and Scott Rodgers. "Re-locating media production." International Journal of Cultural Studies 21, no. 1 (2017): 3–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367877917704479.

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It was arguably easier in the past to pin down media production in medium- or content-specific locales, such as the studio, the newsroom or the set. Contemporary processes of media convergence have dramatically opened up the ‘what’ and ‘where’ of media production to include all manner of quotidian practices and ephemeral places. This special issue, however, pushes back against the idea that contemporary landscapes of media production have been flattened. Each of the articles collected here accounts for significant transformations in media practices near to those that we would conventionally as
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Ekström, Mats, Amanda Ramsälv, and Oscar Westlund. "Data-driven news work culture: Reconciling tensions in epistemic values and practices of news journalism." Journalism 23, no. 4 (2021): 755–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/14648849211052419.

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This study investigates the epistemological implications of the appropriation of audience analytics in a data-driven news culture. Focussing on two central aspects of epistemology, epistemic value and epistemic practices, we ask two overall questions (1) How are audience metrics balanced and reconciled in relation to other standards in the justification of news as valuable knowledge? How are different practices of research and presentation, truth-seeking and truth-telling, prioritized in a news organization marked as a data-driven news work culture? The study presents a case study of a Scandin
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Sara Anwar, Saman Rukh Khan, Tanveer Nasir, and Nusrat Azeema. "The AI Revolution in Media, Redefining Journalism Education and Professional Practice from Classroom to Newsroom in Pakistan." Annual Methodological Archive Research Review 3, no. 4 (2025): 340–54. https://doi.org/10.63075/4t3nmg72.

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) has transformed almost every field including journalism reshaping both journalism education and its professional practices. Classroom and Newsroom both is undergoing through the revolutionary phase transforming from classical practices to the modern approaches driven by artificial intelligence. AI has redefined journalistic practices and academic culture in various aspects across the globe. This study’s Population is precisely focused on mass communication, journalism, media students and practitioners. Six research questions and five research hypotheses directed th
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El Takach, Ali, Farah Nassour, and Hussin Jose Hejase. "Digital Transformation of Media Companies in Lebanon from Traditional to Multiplatform Production: An Assessment of Lebanese Journalists’ Adaptation to the New Digital Era." Žurnalistikos tyrimai 16 (December 30, 2022): 152–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/zt/jr.2022.6.

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This research aims to assess Lebanese media organizations’ and journalists’ readiness and adaptation to the new digital era requirements. Journalism has always been affected by technology. Adopting new information and communications technology has obliged changes in journalistic practices and led to new business models and journalistic practices. For example, implementing Newsroom Computer Systems (NRCs) in media companies has led to radical changes in the departments of these organizations, and in particular in the newsrooms. The journalists in newsrooms are the human factor that is considere
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