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Journal articles on the topic 'Online journalism'

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1

Rohimah, Iim. "Etika dan Kode Etik Jurnalistik dalam Media Online Islam." KOMUNIKA: Jurnal Dakwah dan Komunikasi 11, no. 2 (April 13, 2018): 213–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.24090/komunika.v11i2.1054.

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Online media is a new world’s phenomenon which produce the mass communication subjects which is not only institutionalized but also individuals, famously known as citizen journalist. However, this new type of journalist is considered as not professional as mainstream journalists. This phenomenon is also happened in islamic online media, which the subject of this communication could be an institution, or either individuals. These subjects are often violating journalism rule and ethics on the internet. The ideology of this writer and institution could be expressed on a discriminative and unfair journalism product. On the other hand, religious sentiment could also be a factor when a journalism products tend to accused a person before the law. This condition has to be evaluated, it is due to the islamic media on the internet could be an image of Islamic world as a whole. Moreover as a moslem, we are not only pay attention to the journalism code but also on Islamic value. There are many Islamic rule which stated that journalism activities linked with taqwa concept. Each of journalism activites on the media has to be based on the fairness, carefulness and critique-constructive concept. With that, it could strengthen moslem activities on holding not only towards journalism code of ethics but also Islamic religious faith.
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Garini, Tsana, and Abie Besman. "Praktik Jurnalisme Kloning di Kalangan Wartawan Online." Mediator: Jurnal Komunikasi 11, no. 1 (June 29, 2018): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.29313/mediator.v11i1.2736.

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The practice of cloning journalism is one of the most interesting phenomenon in the world of journalism. This practice has been considered as a common thing among journalists, especially online journalists. Whereas the practice of cloning journalism is closely related to plagiarism which is clearly incompatible with the ethics of journalism. Through this research the writer will discuss about the reasons behind this practice and what ethics have been violated by journalists who did it. The writer also discuss what ethics have been violated by journalists who do cloning journalism and why is this practice rife among online journalists using an autoetnography research method. The result of this research shows that the practice of cloning journalism among journalists is done because of several factors that include cooperation and solidarity among fellow journalists, the demand of online journalists’ work to write as many news as possible in the shortest period of time, the performance of journalists as an individual, regulation of mass media company, and the development of technology. The practice of cloning journalism is proven to be incompatible with the ethics of journalism because it is a form of plagiarism in the realm of mass media. It is also incompatible with regulations about accuracy and verification.
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Engelke, Katherine M. "Online Participatory Journalism: A Systematic Literature Review." Media and Communication 7, no. 4 (December 17, 2019): 31–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/mac.v7i4.2250.

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This article presents a systematic literature review of 378 studies (1997–2017) on online participatory journalism, i.e., audience participation in the professional news production process. Participation can challenge established understandings of journalism and affect the relationship between journalists and audience members as peripheral actors due to the increasingly blurred boundaries between these actors and the renegotiation of authority and power. The review captures research practices regarding the theoretical, conceptual and empirical approach as well as results pertaining to the impact participation has on the journalist–audience relationship and is both interdisciplinary and global in nature. The results show that research mostly focuses on journalism in Europe and North America and examines participation in the interpretation stage rather than in the formation or dissemination stage of the news production process. Longitudinal and comparative studies, examinations of regional and local participation, in-depth audience studies as well as analyses of participation in all three production stages are rare. 121 studies explicitly deal with participation’s impact on the journalist–audience relationship and produce conflicting results: 51% see journalists retaining control over news production process; 42% see shared power; and 7% see mixed results. Notably, power structures differ depending on the examined world region, production stage, and actor perspective. The review illustrates the status quo of research practices as well as the role the audience as peripheral actors play in the news production process and concludes with five observations about the field as well as future avenues to close identified research gaps.
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Thi Vi, Phuong, Sabahudin Hadžialić, and Adamkolo Mohammed Ibrahim. "Vietnam’s Online Newspaper Development Trend in the Context of Social Media." Studia i Analizy Nauk o Polityce, no. 1 (June 27, 2023): 57–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/sanp.14663.

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According to statistics from the Ministry of Information and Communications, as of December 2022, the whole country has 127 news agencies; 670 journal agencies (there are 327 journals of political theory and science, 72 journals of literature and art); 72 radio and television agencies. Personnel operating in the field of journalism are about 41,000 people, of which the radio and television sector is approximately 16,500 people. Compared with 2021, personnel is relatively stable and the number of personnel granted journalist cards increases significantly. There have been 19,356 cases of being granted journalist cards. It is easy for the public to check the names of long-term online newspapers and major readers such as “VnExpress,” “Dan Tri,” “Vietnamplus,” “VietNamNet,” etc. The emergence of multimedia journalism is an important step towards shaping the new type of digital storytelling and the future of journalism. In the process of renovation, the Vietnamese press is also gradually transforming and approaching new media products (Long-form/E-Magazine/Megastory) that show long, in-depth stories and multi-purpose writing, photos, audio, video, photographers, etc. According to “Vietnamplus” – a press agency leading this trend, when you first bring this type of work to the public, it is unexpected that these works are received more strongly than other types of media. We use questionnaires to build public perceptions and observations as journalists working for five major online newspapers in Vietnam. The data is taken from in-depth interviews with journalists, editors, editorial staff, and editors-in-chief of five major online newspapers in Vietnam. We choose the sample according to the sampling method of the case. In the context of social media, Vietnam’s online newspapers have developed and changed significantly. These findings will enrich and have a typical impact by clarifying two main contradictions that exist in Vietnam’s online newspapers. Those are conflicts between news products, regular articles and media products, e-magazines, megastory and conflicts in organizations producing online newspapers. From there, the article looks at how Vietnam’s online newspaper is going to grow, how it uses visual reporting, and how excited journalists and press managers are about it.
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Nurlatifah, Mufti, and Irwansyah Irwansyah. "FACT-CHECKING DAN JURNALISME KOLABORATIF PADA PLATFORM MEDIA ONLINE." Jurnal ILMU KOMUNIKASI 18, no. 1 (June 1, 2004): 67–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.24002/jik.v18i1.1871.

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War against hoaxes in Indonesia was dominated by social movements. Digital journalism make innovation against hoaxes by identifying and reporting false information through fact-checking journalism. This practice not only needs collaboration between journalist and news source, but also involves machine as journalist partner to verify information and build the news. This study aims to determine the form of fact-checking journalism practices carried out by Tirto.id and Kompas.com. This research uses qualitative content analysis to compare both content media and to elaborate fact-checking journalism as a form of collaborative journalism between humans and machines.
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Luo, Yumeng, and Teresa M. Harrison. "How citizen journalists impact the agendas of traditional media and the government policymaking process in China." Global Media and China 4, no. 1 (March 2019): 72–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2059436419835771.

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“Citizen journalism” is a term used to refer to ordinary individuals who act as journalists during some part of the process of creating content for mainstream journalism coverage. In China, besides ordinary citizen journalists, some professional journalists have been regarded as citizen journalists if they write stories online that would otherwise not be publishable in traditional media. Unfortunately, since the real name registration system was launched on the Internet in 2012, the activities of both professionals and average citizens in China are frequently limited. So, is citizen journalism a role that can only be practiced in very limited ways in China? This article adopts a broader definition of citizen journalism, in which, through the use of social media to discuss and comment on news and social issues, ordinary citizens in China act as collective citizen journalists, which insulates them against individually targeted criticism for their opinions. We applied agenda-setting theory to explain citizen journalist contributions to the content of traditional media and the policymaking process in China. Using several forms of Chinese media and rank-order cross-lagged correlations, we found that online public opinions in social media influenced the agenda of traditional commercially oriented media, but not the agenda of traditional government-sponsored media. The policy agenda was partially influenced by the online public. The online public acted collectively to influence and contribute to the content of the traditional media and policies the government considers, thus changing the nature of journalism and public sphere.
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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 (July 10, 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 journalists to use numbers to tell stories with fewer anecdotes, more reliability and to cover challenging invisible stories. Journalism has always involved numbers and data analysis was also a part of it. Then a new practice, “Data journalism” sparked in the newsroom that involves data to find a story and create visualizations which are not a very easy process in the newsroom. Howard (2014) in his study mentioned that 21st century was a change for mobile computing that lead to increases in online connectivity, access, speed and an explosion in data creation that completely changed the landscape for computer-assisted reporting. Another study by Parasie and Dagiral (2012) argued that data journalism comes into light because of hacker culture, initially, the hackers deal with the open-source and open government with some political values, which injects a new culture into the newsrooms. When we look at the national context there are many challenges to adapt in India newsrooms and confusion about its role and importance in the field of journalism. The major focus of this research is to find the complications faced by journalists while incorporating data into their news organization. The sample consisted of data journalists from various parts of India
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Cohen, Elisia L. "Online Journalism as Market-Driven Journalism." Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 46, no. 4 (December 2002): 532–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15506878jobem4604_3.

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9

Aladdine, Rana. "Journalism: As Seen in the Eyes of Current Journalism and Digital Media Students." Žurnalistikos tyrimai 16 (December 30, 2022): 108–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/zt/jr.2022.4.

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The world of journalism is complex, multifaceted, and intricate. No consensus exists on the definition of journalism or its characteristics, skill set, and career choices. Differing perceptions stem from journalism’s shifts to new forms, practices, and ways of thought. The digital revolution has drastically transformed the understanding and definition of journalism. Journalists, journalism educators, and even social critics have all offered varying notions on the field. However, the students, a key element, are often neglected in this equation. This paper explores how students view journalism. The current generation is arguably highly equipped with digital media through regular practice, consumption, and exposure to digitization. Journalists-to-be are considered to be the future shareholders and may be the directors of the profession. The study focused on how journalism and digital media students specifically classified journalism characteristics, the educational background they found necessary for journalists, as well as their work aspirations. As journalism is evolving and, in particular, digital journalism is a key factor in the study, the student sample was limited to those registered in the Journalism and Digital Media department at Al Maaref University. Al Maaref University has been categorized as one of the first universities in Lebanon to include the term “digital media” in their journalism degree in hopes of reflecting the fast-changing industry. This study used a quantitative approach based on a survey questionnaire administered online to all students enrolled in the above-mentioned department. Findings showed that the majority of students considered the top characteristics of a journalist to include traditional journalism skills before any digital journalism skills. Students also expressed areas of study at times consistent with those skills and other times consistent with their career choices. Moreover, a majority of current journalism students aspire to work in front of the camera.
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10

Steensen, Steen. "ONLINE FEATURE JOURNALISM." Journalism Practice 3, no. 1 (February 2009): 13–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17512780802560716.

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Farid, Ahmad Salman. "Changing the Paradigm of Traditional Journalism to Digital Journalism: Impact on Professionalism and Journalism Credibility." Journal International Dakwah and Communication 3, no. 1 (June 13, 2023): 22–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.55849/jidc.v3i1.374.

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The development of information technology and the internet has significantly transformed the landscape of media and journalism. Traditional journalism, which relied on print and electronic broadcasting, has evolved into digital journalism supported by online platforms. This change has had a profound impact on the professionalism and credibility of journalists. This research aims to analyze the paradigm shift from traditional journalism to digital journalism and explore its impact on journalistic professionalism and credibility. The methods used in this study are literature review and comparative analysis. In the literature review, we examine the relevant literature on the paradigm shift in journalism and its impact on journalistic professionalism and credibility. Comparative analysis is carried out by comparing the characteristics of traditional journalism and digital journalism and analyzing the changes that have occurred. The results of the study indicate that the paradigm shift from traditional journalism to digital journalism has changed the role of journalists in gathering, editing and delivering news. Digital journalism provides greater freedom and flexibility for journalists in creating content, but it also brings new challenges related to the validity and credibility of information. Journalists today are faced with demands to adapt to new technologies, master algorithms, and build a strong online presence. The results of the study indicate that the paradigm shift from traditional journalism to digital journalism has changed the role of journalists in gathering, editing and delivering news. Digital journalism provides greater freedom and flexibility for journalists in creating content, but it also brings new challenges related to the validity and credibility of information. Journalists today are faced with demands to adapt to new technologies, master algorithms, and build a strong online presence.
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Atul Insaroh, Fadhilah Korik, and Rohayati Rohayati. "PARTISIPASI CITIZEN JOURNALISM DI MEDIA ONLINE TRIBUN PEKANBARU." Jurnal Riset Mahasiswa Dakwah dan Komunikasi 3, no. 5 (February 14, 2022): 278. http://dx.doi.org/10.24014/jrmdk.v3i5.10360.

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Citizen Journalism kerap ikut andil dalam menyampaikan aspirasi di media massa. Hal ini serupa dengan Citizen Jounalism yang ada di meda online Tribun Pekanbaru, mereka mengirimkan peristiwa yang terjadi disekitar lingkungan ke media Tribunpekanbaru.com guna untuk menginformasikan kepada masyarakat. Permasalahan dalam penelitian ini adalah Partisipasi Citizen Journalism di Media Online Tribun Pekanbaru. Bertujuan untuk mengetahui Bagimana Partisipasi Citizen Journalism di Media Online Tribun Pekanbaru. Metode yang digunakan adalah deskriptif kualitatif dengan pengumpulan data wawancara, dokumentasi dan observasi. Hasil penelitian ini dapat diketahui bahwa Tribun Pekanbaru menyediakan tempat untuk Citizen Journalism yaitu topik Citizen Report di laman Citizen Journalism, yang bertujuan untuk menyampaikan aspirasi-aspirasi maupun informasi yang ada di lingkungan sekitar. Dengan adanya tempat penyampaian aspirasi untuk Citizen Journalism kini media online Trbibun Pekanbaru memuat 250-300 berita pertahun khusus berita yang dikirim oleh Citizen Journalsm
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Christi, Hana Elga Januari, and Farid Farid. "Analisis Kode Etik Jurnalistik Pemberitaan Keberagaman di Media Online." Koneksi 4, no. 1 (March 22, 2020): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.24912/kn.v4i1.6495.

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The press as a deliver of information not only has the right of freedom of the press but also has a responsibility to apply the ethics journalism to every news presented to the public. Implementing an ethics journalism is something that must be done and considered by every journalist in presenting news specifically about diversity. In Indonesia, an ethics journalism that is often used is a journalistic code of ethics established by the Indonesian Press Council. Therefore this research is about the application of ethics journalism in reporting the issue of diversity on the famous Indonesian online media that is called, detik.com. The purpose of this research is to show the application of ethics journalism among journalists. Applying ethics journalism is important among journalists because that is kind of a guide for journalists in carrying out their work. This research’s instruments in this thesis are from coding sheet, the coding sheets filled by two coder. The choice of the coder is based on educational background who takes journalistic studies. The results of this research indicate that detik.com has implemeted the journalistic code of ethics, but 13 of 40 news stories that have been posted, have no element of balance. Pers sebagai penyampai informasi tidak hanya memiliki hak kemerdekaan pers tetapi juga memiliki tanggung jawab dalam menerapkan kode etik jurnalistik pada setiap berita yang disajikan kepada masyarakat. Menerapkan kode etik jurnalistik adalah sebuah hal yang wajib diperhatikan dan dilakukan oleh setiap wartawan dalam menyajikan pemberitaan khususnya pemberitaan mengenai keberagaman. Di Indonesia, kode etik jurnalistik yang sering digunakan ialah kode etik jurnalistik yang ditetapkan oleh Dewan Pers. Maka dari itu, penelitian ini mengangkat tentang penerapan kode etik jurnalistik pada pemberitaan isu keberagaman pada portal berita online, detik.com. Penelitian ini menggunakan pendekatan kuantitatif dengan sifat deskriptif dan analisis isi sebagai teknik analisis data. Tujuan penelitian ini adalah untuk menunjukkan penerapan kode etik jurnalistik di kalangan wartawan. Menerapkan kode etik jurnalistik adalah hal yang penting di kalangan wartawan karena kode etik jurnalistik adalah pedoman bagi wartawan dalam melaksanakan pekerjaanya. Instrumen yang digunakan pada penelitian ini berupa lembar coding yang diisi oleh dua orang coder. Pemilihan coder berdasarkan latar belakang pendidikan yaitu menempuh studi jurnalistik. Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa detik.com telah menerapkan kode etik jurnalistik, namun masih ada berita yang tidak memiliki unsur keberimbangan.
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Cui, Xi, and Yu Liu. "How does online news curate linked sources? A content analysis of three online news media." Journalism 18, no. 7 (August 8, 2016): 852–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916663621.

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This article examines journalists’ curatorial practices with regard to linked and embedded sources on three news media platforms: the online version of a legacy news medium, a native online explanatory news medium, and an online citizen news medium. Our goal is to explore the curatorial practices in online journalism, and the continuity and changes in journalistic gatekeeping in the online environment. Our results demonstrate that established journalistic traditions are still prevalent in online news. Meanwhile, links to digital archives are widely used to contextualize news subjects. Explanatory journalism and citizen journalism do exhibit characteristics of what Herbert Gans calls ‘multiperspectival’ news, which covers a wider variety of social institutions. We discuss differences in the prevalence of the curatorial treatments of various types of linked sources in relation to journalists’ views of their roles, and the online news media’s organizational and technological natures.
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Belair-Gagnon, Valerie. "News on the fly: journalist-audience online engagement success as a cultural matching process." Media, Culture & Society 41, no. 6 (November 22, 2018): 757–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0163443718813473.

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Looking at web analytics in newsrooms, journalism studies scholarship has explored the notion of success in using web analytics and metrics in measuring journalist-audience engagement. Scholars have looked at the role of organizational structures, cognition, and emotion in defining success with analytics. This article analyzes how journalists interpret journalist-audience engagement success using web analytics and what this reliance on web analytics might mean for contemporary news production. Using direct observation of newsrooms and interviews with news media workers, this article argues that media workers interpret success in audience engagement using web analytics as a process of cultural matching between web analytics companies, media workers, and audiences. This article shows that analytics in journalism have highlighted some of the shared values and practices across the matchers and revealed the challenges of measuring success in audience-journalist engagement.
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Roselyn Du, Ying. "What is Needed versus What is Taught." Asia Pacific Media Educator 24, no. 2 (December 2014): 225–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1326365x14555285.

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This article reports on a survey of journalism students’ perception of what is taught in online journalism classrooms and what instructors perceive to be important for students to be work-ready for online newsrooms. The results show that online journalism education is still defined by traditional journalism, for instance, in tasks specialization, when future journalists are required to be well versed in multiple aspects of journalism and technology. The survey finds that people skills and communication abilities have become a must in this new media age, and that instructors’ previous online journalism experience may make a crucial difference in classroom instruction. For online journalism educators and programme administrators, this article may help in developing the appropriate curriculum to prepare students to work in the changing media industry.
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Vobič, Igor, and Ana Milojević. "“What we do is not actually journalism”: Role negotiations in online departments of two newspapers in Slovenia and Serbia." Journalism 15, no. 8 (December 10, 2013): 1023–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884913511572.

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This study offers insights into articulations between the normative and the empirical in online journalists’ self-negotiations concerning their roles in people’s assimilation of information, the daily provision of news and their institutional status in online departments. In-depth interviews with online journalists from two leading newspapers, Delo in Slovenia and Novosti in Serbia, are used to investigate their negotiations with respect to their societal role. The analysis reveals troubled negotiation processes among interviewed online journalists when they consider what is regarded as “true” journalism, news production requirements and their institutional status. This indicates that rearrangements of political–economic relations in both post-socialist societies have increased journalism’s responsibility to the media owners and power holders and surpassed its normatively defined responsibility to the public. Both case subjects are compared through the prism of the processes of negotiation of normative principles of journalism in the social, national and institutional contexts of the two newspapers.
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Adams, Catherine. "Dual Control: Investigating the Role of Drone (UAV) Operators in TV and Online Journalism." Media and Communication 8, no. 3 (July 27, 2020): 93–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/mac.v8i3.2980.

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At a time when TV and online journalism embraces more moving images filmed from drones than ever before, this article seeks to explore the thoughts and actions of those who produce them. It builds on earlier research into how aerial images impact on the viewer through the lens of ‘quality journalism’ (Adams, 2018). It investigates how drone operators are involved in the journalistic process, what meanings and effects they seek and who controls their work in a market-driven environment. Qualitative analysis was carried out of seventeen in-depth interviews with drone operators, journalists and editors working in UK and around the world. Data revealed a high degree of creative freedom among the operators, a passion for using drones and some desire to immerse and impress the viewer. It showed that aerial images have become paramount in video journalism amid market pressures to find ever more sophisticated and ‘cinematic’ shots. Interviewees felt drones had been “good for journalism,” by providing raw data, exciting new perspectives, context and story-telling techniques and “space to think.” The article explores the significant yet often unplanned contribution to the journalistic process of the drone operator and recommends more is done to increase understanding between journalist and pilot, such as providing training courses designed to teach quality drone journalism, as the media approaches ‘peak drone.’
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Robie, David. "Online journalism at USP." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 5, no. 1 (March 1, 1999): 107–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v5i1.659.

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The universities of the South Pacific and Papua New Guinea have played pioneering roles in the development of media education resources in the South Pacific. One student training newspaper was the first online publication in the region and another, Wansolwara, was the first online newspaper in Fiji.
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Radovanovic-Sarenac, Dejana. "Specificity of online journalism." Politea 2, no. 3 (2012): 257–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/pol1203257r.

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Planchon, Cécile. "ANGLICISMS AND ONLINE JOURNALISM:." Belas Infiéis 3, no. 2 (February 3, 2015): 43–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.26512/belasinfieis.v3.n2.2014.11281.

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Grosser, Katherine M. "Trust in Online Journalism." Digital Journalism 4, no. 8 (January 26, 2016): 1036–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2015.1127174.

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Zeng, Li, Dharma Dailey, Owla Mohamed, Kate Starbird, and Emma S. Spiro. "Detecting Journalism in the Age of Social Media:Three Experiments in Classifying Journalists on Twitter." Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media 13 (July 6, 2019): 548–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v13i01.3352.

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The widespread adoption of networked information and communications technologies (i.e. ICTs) blurs traditional boundaries between journalist and citizen. The role of the journalist is adapting to structural changes in the news industry and dynamic audience expectations. For researchers who seek to understand what, if any, distinct role journalists play in the production and propagation of breaking news, it is vital to be able to identify journalists in social media spaces. In many cases, this can be challenging due to the limited information and metadata about social media users. In this work, we use a supervised machine learning model to automatically distinguish journalists from non-journalists in social media spaces. Leveraging Twitter data collected from three crisis events of different types, we examine how profile information, social network structure, posting behavior and language distinguish journalists from others. Additionally, we evaluate how the performance of the journalist classification model varies by context (i.e. types of crisis events) and by journalism outlets (i.e. print versus broadcast journalism), and discuss challenges in automatic journalist detection. Implications of this work are discussed; in particular we argue for the value of such methods for scaling analysis in journalism studies beyond the capacity of human coders. Employing classification methods in this context allows for systematic, large-scale studies of the role of journalists online.
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Murcott, Toby H. L., and Andy Williams. "The challenges for science journalism in the UK." Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment 37, no. 2 (January 11, 2013): 152–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309133312471285.

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Science journalists in the UK face a number of significant challenges, some shared by journalists in general and some specific to the reporting of science. The world of journalism is changing rapidly as online media grow, squeezing resources and putting pressure on journalists to produce maximum output on minimum resources. The effect is to threaten to shift the role of science news production away from science journalists to public relations (PR) professionals, and to reduce the essential democratic role of the journalist holding the spenders of public money to account. Evidence for this is offered from recent research into the state of science journalism in the UK, and from a BBC-commissioned report into the impartiality of new science coverage in the UK by the state broadcaster.
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Emeraldien, Fikry Zahria, Rahma Sugihartati, Dwiki Iqbal, Qhoirun Annisa, and Putri Ardelia. "The Implementation of Prophetic Values to Maintain Journalist Professionalism." Proceedings of International Conference on Da'wa and Communication 3, no. 1 (November 11, 2021): 1–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.15642/icondac.v3i1.482.

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Campus journalism is a place for students to develop their potential in the journalism field. Students who are agents of change not only provide quality news but also provide moral value in the news production process. Quality news can be raised through the role of a journalist in writing news (information). Prophetic journalism is a journalistic concept taken from the nature of the prophets. In this paper, we examine the application of the concept of prophetic journalism –journalism that imitates the prophetic characteristics of the Prophet Muhammad– among campus journalists. Prophet Muhammad is known for his four characteristics: siddiq (delivering accurate information), amanah (trustworthy as a source of information), tabligh (delivering information in its entirety), fathanah (a journalist is required to be smart in revealing the truth of the news). The data from this study is the result of observations from the daily life of the researcher when carrying out the news production process with other campus journalists ranging from electronic media (radio & television), print, and online. The results of this study indicate that campus journalists at UIN Sunan Ampel Surabaya apply prophetic journalism well. By implementing the prophetic characteristics of the Prophet Muhammad when carrying out journalistic activities, journalists can maintain the professionalism of journalists. By using ethnographic research methods or commonly referred to as field research, researchers make observations as the main data and are equipped with in-depth interviews with several campus journalists. We also propose the nature of Prophet Ibrahim to be incorporated into the concept of prophetic journalism as well. Prophet Ibrahim is known for the story of his courage to seek the truth and reveal it when everyone was against it. This courage is important in supporting journalistic activities among students and professionals.
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Laor, Tal. "Is the Agenda Alive and Kicking and Is Objectivity Dead? Journalistic Culture on Social Networks in Israel." social-issues in israel 30, no. 1 (2021): 205–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.26351/siii/30-1/7.

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Independent journalism on social media networks appears to be changing the world of journalism. Building on Bourdieu’s field theory, the present study looked at journalists’ perceptions of values expressed in their online activities as compared to traditional news values. In-depth interviews were conducted with leading journalists active on traditional and online platforms in Israel in order to better understand journalists’ perceptions of the journalistic culture on the two kinds of platforms. The study found that by strongly emphasizing autonomy, online platforms empower journalists to embrace new values, including public service and immediacy. A public service ideology has expanded into online efforts to actively promote diverse issues that are not necessarily covered by traditional media. Immediacy is now dictated by the features of social media, which force journalists to respond in real time to all events relevant to their cause. Two values in the model of journalistic culture were found to be incompatible with the features of journalists’ online operations, and the ethics and objectivity of traditional journalism have been completely replaced by the online journalists’ orientation towards promoting their personal opinions, ideologies and agendas.
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Lestari, Rani Dwi, Ana Nadhya Abrar, and Md Shahidul Haque. "Collaborative Newsroom of Local Journalists in Investigative Coverage on Online Media." Komunikator 16, no. 1 (May 30, 2024): 28–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.18196/jkm.21655.

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Investigative reporting in the digital era faces challenges due to the presence of online and social media. Long reporting times, limited budgets, and minimal editorial resources increasingly undermine the sustainability of investigative journalism. The competition for rapid news coverage further pressures investigative reporting. Several journalists in Yogyakarta and other regions address these challenges by practicing collaborative journalism through collaborative newsrooms. This research aims to describe how journalists in the field use collaborative newsrooms to produce investigative reports. It explores collaborative journalism practices as a middle ground to deliver credible, public-interest reporting using data and investigative journalism principles. The study employs a case study method, involving in-depth interviews with journalists and the analysis of published news data. The findings show that journalists in Yogyakarta use a temporary and separate model for their collaborative newsrooms, focusing on short-term collaboration on a single topic. These newsrooms leverage technology to facilitate communication and data sharing. Tasks are divided among participants to ensure comprehensive, in-depth, data-driven reporting. The reports are published in online media, serving as a strategic approach to presenting investigative journalistic work often constrained by limited media space.
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AŞKIN, Ahmet Cevdet. "DİJİTALLEŞME BAĞLAMINDA DEĞİŞEN GAZETECİLİK VE GAZETECİ TANIMLARI: TARTIŞMA ÖNERİLERİ." SOCIAL SCIENCE DEVELOPMENT JOURNAL 7, no. 33 (September 15, 2022): 471–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.31567/ssd.685.

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The possibilities offered by digital technology cause significant changes and transformations in the media sector. The circulations and revenues of legacy print media are falling rapidly, newspapers are closing, and journalists are losing their jobs. People follow the news online, especially on mobile devices rather than on print media. This upheaval process also reflects in the definitions of journalism and journalist. Today, there is an ongoing debate about which activity can be described as journalism and who can be described as a journalist. In this study, after pointing out the origins of the differences in the definitions of journalism and journalist, the approaches of various professional organizations are examined, and some suggestions thought to contribute to the healthy conduct of the discussions are also included. As a result, taking into account the possibilities of digital technology, which forces change and transformatüion in the field of communication as in the other fields, it is argued that the discussions should be based on whether the journalistic activity is carried out in accordance with its functionality and universal journalistic standards. Keywords: Journalism, journalist, print media, freedom of speech, democracy
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Carpenter, Serena. "An Application of the Theory of Expertise: Teaching Broad and Skill Knowledge Areas to Prepare Journalists for Change." Journalism & Mass Communication Educator 64, no. 3 (September 2009): 287–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769580906400305.

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How to educate journalism students for the online world is controversial. For journalism students to become well-rounded journalists, lifelong learners, and experts, journalism education should weave skills with theoretical training, based on Hatano's theory of expertise. To determine to what extent employers are seeking such applicants, this study examined online media job ads. Results show employers want people with a broad and specific background.
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Widodo, Yohanes. "Menyoal Etika Jurnalisme Kontemporer: Belajar dari OhmyNews." Jurnal ASPIKOM 1, no. 1 (January 9, 2017): 41. http://dx.doi.org/10.24329/aspikom.v1i1.7.

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This article explores journalism ethics, credibility and objectivity on contemporary journalism platforms (blog, online journalism and citizen journalism) by case study of Ohmynews— a citizen journalism developed in South Korea. To answer the challenge of citizen journalism in relation with credibility and objectivity on contemporary journalism, at least there are three solutions. First, by developing education and training for citizen journalism. Second, by building collaboration between professional journalism and citizen. Third, in their task, journalist must based on nine journalism elements. So, media idealism as social control and education for society can be practiced
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Mikosz, Joanna. "POLISH ACADEMIC ONLINE JOURNALS CONNECTED WITH JOURNALISM AND MEDIA. THE CHARACTERISTICS OF JOURNALISM GENRES." Studies in Linguistics, Culture, and FLT 05 (2017): 46–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.46687/silc.2019.v05.004.

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Eldridge, Scott A. "“Thank god for Deadspin”: Interlopers, metajournalistic commentary, and fake news through the lens of “journalistic realization”." New Media & Society 21, no. 4 (November 11, 2018): 856–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444818809461.

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Interlopers are a class of digital-peripheral journalists and outlets who position their work as journalism, but who have struggled to be recognized as such. While we have long acknowledged journalism’s place online, as digital-peripheral journalists interlopers face challenges when it comes to appreciating their work as news and their contributions as journalism. This article argues their contributions warrant further evaluation as the journalistic field continues to confront change and engage new approaches to journalism, and as interlopers continue to produce news. Using Deadspin’s coverage of the Sinclair Broadcast Group as an exemplar of such contributions, this article details an approach which accounts for interlopers’ unique approaches to news, locating in broader news discourse measures of “journalistic realization” as a legitimating discourse. Its findings tentatively suggest a weakening of historically hardened boundaries between journalism’s core and its periphery, and argue for continued, nuanced exploration of the nature of the journalistic field.
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Sporiş, Valerica. "Lexical Creativity – A Salient Phenomenon in Current Romanian TV and Online Journalism." Lucian Blaga Yearbook 21, no. 1-2 (December 1, 2020): 263–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/clb-2020-0018.

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Abstract The article aims to examine an aspect pertaining to lexical neology, i.e. the lexical creativity as reflected in recent TV and online journalism. Lexical creativity articulates interdisciplinarity, the latter represents a ‛bridge‛ between the facts of language and those of style. Newly words are created by journalists to serve different purposes ranging from ludic, spontaneous, occasional to deliberate, conscious. Lexical creativity is influenced by different factors such as: analogy, imitation, calque, subjectivity, sensitiveness, context, etc. The language of the media is characterized by dynamics, novelty and accessibility. Through their novelty, words contribute to an enrichment of expressiveness. The newly coined structures are often artificial, the examples analysed in our paper are created by small groups of journalists or by one journalist. The journalists’ intention is to impress, to draw the audience’s attention. I chose to explore the phenomenon of affixation and I selected as lexical bases some neologisms recently borrowed into Romanian from other languages. The corpus comprises recent examples selected by the author from Romanian TV and online journalism, where the phenomenon of lexical creativity is highly displayed. I chose the transcription of new words in accordance with the phonetic-phonological principle specific to the Romanian language and with the current rules pertaining to plurals forms and use of articles.
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Antonopoulos, Nikos, Agisilaos Konidaris, Spyros Polykalas, and Evangelos Lamprou. "Online Journalism: Crowdsourcing, and Media Websites in an Era of Participation." Studies in Media and Communication 8, no. 1 (March 26, 2020): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.11114/smc.v8i1.4734.

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The era of journalism and the participation of the readers on online media websites have changed online journalism. The research interest is now focused on removing the distinction between the publisher/entrepreneur and the journalist/user, with the ultimate goal of actively involving citizens in the journalistic process but also in the web presence of media websites. The evolution of technology, the deep media crisis and the growing dissatisfaction of the citizens, create the conditions for journalism to work with citizens, and in particular through citizen journalism and journalism crowdsourcing. This concept is a form of collective online activity in which a person or a group of people volunteer to engage in work that always involves mutual benefit to both sides. The main research question of this research concerns the analysis of the current situation regarding crowdsourcing, co-creation and UGC and the adoption of best practices such as crowdcreation, comments from the users, crowdwisdom, instant-messaging applications (MIMs) and crowdvoting used by media websites around the world. Very few media have tried to apply even nowadays, the proposed model of journalism, which this study is going to research. The results of the study shape new perspectives and practices for online journalism and democracy.
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Darmanto, Nova, and Santi Delliana. "Citizen Journalism as Postmodern Journalism." Jurnal Ilmiah Publipreneur 5, no. 1 (August 31, 2020): 13–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.46961/jip.v5i1.60.

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The rise of Citizen Journalism cannot be separated from the emergence of new genres in the media;the State of Citizen Journalism is inseparable from technological developments. The presence of online media currently characterizes the rapid growth of information and communication technology. The internet is a digital media that has become a symbol in the advancement of computerized era knowledge that gave birth to new media. The emergence of the internet, technology with the basis of this communication had a significant impact on the rapid pace of development in aspects of information, including points of reportage and journalism. Establishment of Citizens Journalism is born for the emergence of online Journalism. Online journalism has developed the necessaryfoundation of the concept of citizen journalism where the activities of citizen journalism are carried out using technology Digital technology is a technology that no longer uses human or manual power. Digital systems are the development of analog systems. Digitalization tends to be an automatic operating system with a format that can be read by computers. The term postmodern journalism is a reaction to modern journalism. A shift is not always formed from the revolution. The change from contemporary to postmodernism is a gradual evolution, in a process that is continuous through various periods and times. Postmodernism criticizes modernism, which has resulted in the centralization and universalization of ideas in many fields of science and technology.
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Rodny-Gumede, Ylva. "Peace journalism and the usage of online sources." Communicare: Journal for Communication Studies in Africa 31, sed-1 (October 17, 2022): 57–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.36615/jcsa.v31ised-1.1653.

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This article looks at reporting practices in the South African news media with regard to onlinesources and the realisation of peace journalism. Based on data collected from questionnairesand interviews with journalists, media scholars and media monitors in South Africa, the articleexplores their responses to suggestions that Internet sources are more politically biased thanare traditional sources and determines both the extent to which journalists use them and theextent to which they should rely on online sources. The discussion around online sources andpotential bias and even hate speech is linked up with normative ideas and debates around peacejournalism in the South African news media and the promise of peace journalism through theusage of alternative news sources.
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Kirshin, Boris N. "NETWORK JOURNALISM: PRACTICAL ASPECT." Sign problematic field in mediaeducation 49, no. 3 (November 30, 2023): 76–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.47475/2070-0695-2023-49-3-76-80.

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The transformation of media and journalism in the digital world needs to be understood not only scientifi cally, but also in practical terms. What roles are there for young journalists in new media? Will there be a place there for all representatives of traditional journalism? These questions from journalism students and current professionals served as the impetus for considering the practice of one of the leading regional media - the Internet portal 74.ru. His publications over the past ten years were studied, in the preparation of which the tools of online journalism identifi ed by media researchers were used. The author believes that the experience of the Internet portal 74.ru, which serves as a kind of reference point for colleagues, can eventually be used by other regional media.An analysis of his publications showed the real involvement of regional journalists in the processes of digital transformation of the media. They successfully master many tools of online journalism, which allows them to achieve impressive creative results. Materials that have the characteristics of online journalism are the most informative and attractive among other portal publications. Involving user content to prepare problematic materials, the visual language of online publications, extracting relevant meanings from an endless variety of disparate information on the Internet helps them solve serious problems of Russian society: establish modern journalism as a public good, connect the public to the discussion of important public issues, and formulate a consistent picture of the world. All this allows the author of the article to express confi dence in the demand for the eff ective practice of the 74.ru Internet portal, and to give a positive answer to questions about the prospects of the new generation of journalists.
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Aborisade, Olubunmi P., Caroline Howard, Debra Beasley, and Richard Livingood. "Citizen Journalism." International Journal of Strategic Information Technology and Applications 2, no. 2 (April 2011): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jsita.2011040101.

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Recent national and international developments are demonstrating the power of technology to transform communication channels, media sources, events, and the fundamental nature of journalism. Technological advances now allow citizens to record and instantly publicize information and images for immediate distribution on ubiquitous communication networks using social media such as Twitter, Facebook, and Youtube. These technologies are enabling non-journalists to become “citizen reporters” (also known as “citizen journalists”), who record and report information over informal networks or via traditional mass media channels. Against the background of media repression in Nigeria, the article reports on a study that examined the impacts of technology on the journalism business as a way of understanding how citizen-reporters impact the journalism business in Nigeria. Specifically, the focus of the study was on Nigerian citizen-reporters (bloggers, social media, online news, and online discussion groups), their roles, and the impacts on Nigeria’s political struggle, free press, and free speech.
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Dimas Rachmatsyah and Askurifai Baksin. "Jurnalisme Data dalam Media Online." Bandung Conference Series: Journalism 3, no. 2 (July 28, 2023): 130–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.29313/bcsj.v3i2.8329.

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Abstract. Data journalism is becoming more up-to-date along with the flood of data on the internet which is often called big data, which triggers the development of tools for collecting and analyzing data. One of the media that provides in-depth news information and uses data journalism in it is Bandungbergerak.id. Media Bandungbergerak.id in their work focuses on data and in-depth reporting, with a focus on issues, one of which is education. This research focuses on data journalism activities on the online media Bandungbergerak.id in terms of making news that uses data on data analysis activities in general in relation to data journalism. Based on that, the writer is interested in researching Data Journalism in Online Media. This study uses a type of qualitative research with a case study approach modeled by Robert K. Yin. The results of the study found that Bandungbergerak.id in its data articles there is a comparison of data with scientific journals. Bandungbergerak.id in the process of making its news prioritizes marginalized issues. Abstrak. Jurnalisme data menjadi lebih mutakhir seiring dengan banjirnya data di internet yang kerap disebut big data, yang memicu perkembangan tools untuk mengumpulkan dan menganalisis data. Salah satu media yang menyajikan informasi berita secara mendalam serta menggunakan jurnalisme data didalamnya yakni Bandungbergerak.id. Media Bandungbergerak.id dalam kerjanya berfokus pada data dan reportase mendalam, dengan fokus terhadap isu salah satunya pendidikan. Penelitian ini berfokus pada aktivitas jurnalisme data pada media online Bandungbergerak.id dari segi pembuatan berita yang menggunakan data pada kegiatan analisis data secara umum dalam kaitannya dengan jurnalisme data. Berlandasan dari itulah penulis tertarik meneliti mengenai Jurnalisme Data Dalam Media Online. Penelitian ini menggunakan jenis penelitian kualitatif dengan pendekatan studi kasus model Robert K. Yin. Hasil penelitian menemukan bahwa Bandungbergerak.id dalam artikel datanya terdapat pembandingan data dengan jurnal ilmiah. Bandungbergerak.id dalam proses pembuatan beritanya mengedepankan isu-isu terpinggirkan.
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Hågvar, Yngve Benestad. "Labelling Journalism." Nordicom Review 33, no. 2 (December 1, 2012): 27–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2013-0012.

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Abstract The present article explains why it is important to consider newspapers’ formats and content sections in discourse analyses. It performs a comparative analysis of the choice and naming of content sections in the print and online editions of three major Norwegian newspapers published in 2010. The concept of paratexts is stressed and used as an analytical tool through a four-dimensional framework. The analysis shows that sections that appear across paper brands and platforms refer quite conventionally to specific topics and genres, whereas sections that appear solely online rather tend to highlight social functions, social roles and social actors. Through their paratexts, the online-specific sections answer questions of who and why instead of what. In this sense, there seems to be a discursive development in the principles underlying text classification and navigation, turning towards a more dialogical and person-oriented discourse online.
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Wiesslitz, Carmit, and Tamar Ashuri. "‘Moral journalists’: The emergence of new intermediaries of news in an age of digital media." Journalism 12, no. 8 (June 14, 2011): 1035–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884910388236.

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The article examines how online journalism fosters new models of journalism that challenge journalistic values associated with modern era journalism. It focuses on the shift from ‘objective’ journalism to an ethical journalistic practice that aims to publicize a reality of suffering that is marginalized or even denied. We argue that the digital platforms facilitate the emergence of a new journalistic model – the model of the ‘moral journalist’. Unlike the ‘objective’ journalist who (supposedly) remains outside of events and reports only ‘facts’, and unlike the ‘advocate’ journalist who aims to bring about change by reporting on events in which they take part, the ‘moral journalist’ witnesses events that involve the suffering of others with the aim of changing the witnessed reality. The claims will be grounded in an analysis of one case study: the online journalistic activities of the members of ‘Machsom Watch’ – an all female organization whose members act to monitor the human rights of Palestinians at checkpoints set up by the Israeli army and post their reports on their website.
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Sukmono, Filosa Gita, and Fajar Junaedi. "Citizen Journalism and Online Community Media: A Case Study of pwmu.co." Jurnal The Messenger 11, no. 2 (July 30, 2019): 198. http://dx.doi.org/10.26623/themessenger.v11i2.1173.

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<p><em>One of the most prominent online community media in Muhammadiyah is pwnu.co (</em><em>https://pwmu.co/</em><em>) that published by the Regional Office of Muhammadiyah (PWM) East Java. This article departs from an interest of the writing team to find out how citizen journalism-based media management works in the online community media, especially pwmu.co. This study itself uses a case study method by collecting data using in-depth interviews, then selecting informants using purposive sampling or criterion-based selection. In this study, informants were pwmu.co editors, while observations were made by looking carefully at the pwmu.co editorial room. The result demonstrates that community media management executed by pwmu.co accentuates citizen journalism principles and voluntarily actions to resolve their works relating to collecting news. Journalists and reporters in this community are citizen journalist that comes from Muhammadiyah people and they are trained through a series of the workshop by the editors of pwmu.co.</em></p>
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Frey, Elsebeth. "Renegotiating Online News." Nordicom Review 34, no. 1 (July 1, 2013): 17–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2013-0040.

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Abstract Online journalism is negotiated and renegotiated in the newsroom of Journalen, the training website for students in journalism at Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences. Using quantitative and qualitative methods, the paper examines three spring terms of online news production by journalism students, particularly looking at sources, links and their multimedia news production. The findings are compared to the students’ professional peers in four news sites in the same period. All five sites are moving towards a convergent news modality. But the students tend to use more sources than their professional peers.
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Nasser, N. Alotaibi. "Interactivity in Saudi online journalism." Journal of Media and Communication Studies 6, no. 11 (November 30, 2014): 165–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.5897/jmcs2014.0409.

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Hartley, Jannie Møller, and Christoph Houman Ellersgaard. "Mapping Online Journalism in Transition." Nordicom Review 34, s1 (March 13, 2020): 43–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/nor-2013-0103.

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AbstractBy operationalising Pierre Bourdieu’s concepts of field, capital and positions of autonomy and heteronomy, and applying a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) to data gathered from a large content analysis, the article explores the relations between online newspapers and their corresponding print or broadcast versions within a constructed Danish “field of news” by graphically presenting the data as maps of the changes in these relations. First, mapping transformations graphically shows that the online newspapers have gained autonomy from their “parent platforms”, but we see that in the same period they have increased their dependence on news agency stories. Furthermore, the mapping demonstrates how the online newspapers differ in terms of news productions strategies and in their relation to their parent platforms, meaning they take up different positions in the field according to their “strength” based on a number of indicators.
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Sup Auh, Taik. "Online Journalism: Opportunities and Challenges." Media Asia 27, no. 3 (January 2000): 129–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01296612.2000.11726614.

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Bradshaw, Paul. "Online Journalism: The Essential Guide." Digital Journalism 3, no. 5 (December 13, 2014): 794–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2014.987546.

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Thurman, Neil. "The globalization of journalism online." Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism 8, no. 3 (June 2007): 285–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884907076463.

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Yuan, Elaine J. "ONLINE JOURNALISM IN SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONS." Journalism Studies 14, no. 1 (February 2013): 78–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2012.679861.

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Dahlgren, Peter. "ONLINE JOURNALISM AND CIVIC COSMOPOLITANISM." Journalism Studies 14, no. 2 (April 2013): 156–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1461670x.2012.718544.

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